WASHINGTON β Several national publications reported this week on widespread concern among Free Speech advocates after U.S. Supreme Court Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas repeatedly invoked, during a hearing, the Comstock Act, an infamous law that was the cornerstone of U.S. censorship of sexual material from the 1870s until the 1970s.
With headlines like βAlito and Thomas kept bringing up Comstock. That scared abortion rights supportersβ (Washington Post), βFears grow over Comstock Act, Justices Thomas, Alitoβ (The Hill) and βTwo Supreme Court Justices Favor Zombie Law From 1873 to Ban Abortion β Justices Alito and Thomas just lent credibility to the Christian rightβs attempt to revive the Comstock Actβ (The National Review), the articles highlight worries about the dormant statute, which has never been formally repealed even though it has rarely been enforced in the modern era.
Alito and Thomas repeatedly invoked the Comstock Act on Tuesday during arguments about access to the abortion drug mifepristone, βpressing lawyers about whether the 1873 federal law should apply to abortion drugs sent through the mail today,β the Washington Post reported. βAlito rejected the Biden administrationβs argument that the law is obsolete β it has not been applied in nearly a century β with the conservative justice insisting that Food and Drug Administration officials should have accounted for the law when expanding access to mifepristone by mail in 2021.β
University of Michigan law professor Leah Litman told the Post, βWhen you hear the justices asking repeated questions, itβs definitely something that they are interested in,β and called it βoutlandishβ to propose that the Victorian-era Comstock Act should be enforced in 2024.
Alito, however, contended that the 151-year-old law is βa prominent provision; itβs not some obscure subsection of a complicated, obscure law,β The Hill noted
The Comstock Act, The Hill explained, βbanned the mailing of materials that were deemed βobscene, lewd, [or] lascivious,β which included things such as contraception, abortion drugs and pornography,β and legal experts like Litman βare concerned either Thomas or Alito β or both β could write a Comstock-focused opinion arguing the law is viable. Such an opinion could embolden a future GOP administration and anti-abortion groups to continue pressing forward with plans to enforce the Comstock Act in ways it hasnβt been enforced before.β
The National ReviewΒ offered context on why the Comstock Act is being revived by the two of the Courtβs most staunch conservative ideologues.
βAnti-abortion groups in recent years have repeatedly raised the issue of whether the Comstock Act implicitly outlaws the mailing of abortion medication in its blanket ban on the mailing of βobsceneβ materials,β the National Review explained, adding that the U.S.βs most notorious 19th-century morality law βis named for an anti-vice crusader who, in 1915, in the middle of a trial based on the law, died and was mocked over his anti-obscenity βcrusadeβ on the front page of The New York Times.β