''Lady Chatterley's Lover'' trial The first noted prosecution under the Obscene Publications Act was of
Penguin Books in
R v Penguin Books Ltd. [1960] for publishing ''
Lady Chatterley's Lover''. The book, which contained the use of the words "fuck" and "cunt" multiple times, along with sexual scenes, was banned completely in England and Wales until the conclusion of the trial; by the mid-1980s, it was on the school syllabus. Penguin Books relied on Section 4's "public good" defence, with academics and literary critics such as
E. M. Forster and
Helen Gardner testifying at the trial that the book was one of literary merit. The trial at the
Old Bailey eventually ended with a not guilty verdict, allowing the book to be openly published and sold in England and Wales for the first time since it was published in 1928. This trial and its verdict is seen as heralding "a new wave of sexual 'morality' for which the 1960s is now famous".
Graham Lord wrote that the case "was the first trumpet call of the
permissive society, the moment many believe that British morality, manners and family life began seriously to deteriorate".
Stass Paraskos trial In 1966 an exhibition at
Leeds College of Art of paintings by the
Cyprus-born British artist
Stass Paraskos, entitled
Lovers and Romances, was prosecuted by the
City of Leeds police and the
Director of Public Prosecutions under the Vagrancy Acts of 1828 and 1837, and the Obscene Publications Act 1959. When the exhibition opened it was allegedly visited by a local school group, the leader of which objected to an image depicting a woman performing
manual sex on a man. The exhibition was raided by the police and closed down. Despite luminaries of the art world speaking in Paraskos's defence, including
Herbert Read and
Norbert Lynton, and a message of support from Britain's Home Secretary
Roy Jenkins, Paraskos lost the trial and was fined twenty-five pounds. The case was later cited in the report of a working party convened in 1968, under the chairmanship of John Montgomerie, by the
Arts Council of Great Britain, to review the obscenity laws in England and Wales. In this report it was suggested the artist should not have been prosecuted in this case, even if the works of art were deemed obscene, as he was not the publisher as defined by the Obscene Publications Act.
Schoolkids Oz trial , which prompted the Oz obscenity trial. In 1971 the editors of
Oz were tried for publishing obscene materials, specifically the
Schoolkids Oz issue.
Oz was an underground magazine with a circulation of 40,000 which aimed to challenge the "older generation's outdated beliefs and standards of behaviour and morality". For its 28th issue, 20 teenagers were invited to contribute and edit it. The published version was 48 pages long, with the front consisting of a sheet from the French erotic book
Desseins Erotiques, which depicted four naked women performing sex acts. Inside were articles about homosexuality, sadism, and a cartoon strip of
Rupert Bear "ravaging" a "gipsy granny".
John Mortimer acted for the defence, and after the longest obscenity trial in English legal history the defendants were convicted. After a three-day hearing in the
Court of Appeal of England and Wales, this conviction was overturned; the Court of Appeal recognised 14 errors of law and a large number of errors of fact in the trial judge's summing up to the jury.
Later cases Later cases have included: • 1976: the
Inside Linda Lovelace obscenity trial (found not guilty) • 1991:
David Britton's
Lord Horror prosecution (not prosecuted - banned under the act, but later overturned) • 2009:
R v Walker where Darryn Walker was found not guilty under the Obscene Publications Act for posting a story entitled "Girls (Scream) Aloud", a fictional written account on an internet erotic story site describing the kidnap, rape and murder of pop group
Girls Aloud. • 2010: Gavin Smith who was charged after discussing his fantasies about spanking children. After the
Crown Prosecution Service appealed the judge's original ruling that there was no case to answer, he was subsequently convicted in 2012. • 2011: The
British Board of Film Classification refused to classify an uncut version of
Tom Six's
The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence), considering it "potentially obscene". • 2012:
R v Peacock where a man was unsuccessfully prosecuted for selling DVDs featuring
BDSM,
fisting and
urolagnia. ==Impact and assessment==