Sodomy Laws:
Institutionalized
Oppression
Against Sexual Minorities
Talking
Points
Sodomy
laws were once on the books in all 50 states and Puerto Rico, but they have been
repealed or struck down by courts in 32 states. Recently, in 2003, the United
States Supreme Court voided all sodomy laws; the court concluded that the
government has no place in the private bedrooms of consenting adults and that
all people should be treated with fairness, equality and respect.
YFFN
will be working with a coalition of other progressive organizations in Idaho to
request the state legislature to repeal this antiquated law.
Although
the U. S. Supreme Court has made Idaho’s sodomy law unenforceable for private
consensual sex, it is still retained on the books and can be used for
increasing the penalty for forced or public sex.
We do not condone either of these acts and feel that maintaining the
sodomy law on Idaho’s books will result in unequal punishments being applied
to gay men as they traditionally have been.
Consider
that public sex between a heterosexual couple, not engaged in oral or anal sex
will receive a lesser sentence than a homosexual couple caught in a similar
situation. The latter may be
charged with a felony and face a sentence of over five years in prison!
Rape,
male rape, lewd conduct with minors, as well as public sexual behavior, all
carry separate and serious criminal penalties; it is not necessary to continue
the "infamous crime against nature" to prohibit these offenses.
Background
Sodomy
statutes generally prohibit oral and anal sex, even between consenting adults.
While most sodomy laws (including Idaho's) apply to both heterosexual and
homosexual sexual acts, and they are rarely, if ever, prosecuted, they are
nevertheless used to deny lesbians and gay men a range of other rights.
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