Sodomy law
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A sodomy law is a law which makes certain sexual acts into sex crimes. The term sodomy has in the past been used to refer to any deviant sexual act, often deemed so because such does not lead to procreation Template:Ref. That inclusive interpretation includes oral sex, and bestiality, but the predominant understanding of sodomy relates it to anal sex.
Most sodomy laws originally emerged from cultural and religious beliefs. Supporters also claim that the laws have a basis in concern for public health: the tissue lining the rectum is the most absorbent of all the body's tissues, suggesting that they may have an increased risk of transmitting sexually transmitted diseases[1].
While many other parts of the world have, or had, laws against sodomy or other sexual practices, the term sodomy law has mainly been used when discussing the sodomy laws of the United States which were struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2003 (See: Lawrence v. Texas)
Following Sir William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England [2], the crime of sodomy has often been defined in the past only as the abominable and detestable crime against nature, or some variation of the phrase. This language led to widely varying rulings about what specific acts were encompassed by its prohibition.
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Overview of sodomy laws and their impact
A common misunderstanding is that sodomy laws only target gay people. Most sodomy laws target both heterosexual and homosexual acts, including oral sex and anal sex. Although these acts are not exclusively homosexual, the laws against them are selectively enforced primarily against homosexuals.
Frequently, religious beliefs are responsible, if not cited, for the existence of sodomy laws. Some sodomy laws include all homosexual or all non-coital sex, including oral sex, frottage, tribadism, and masturbation. Historically, heterosexuals have not been prosecuted for acts covered under sodomy laws. In England, Henry VIII introduced the first legislation against homosexuals with the Buggery Act of 1533, making buggery punishable by hanging, a penalty not lifted until 1861.
After the publishing of the Wolfenden report in the UK, many western governments, including the United States, have repealed laws specifically against homosexual acts while retaining sodomy laws. In June 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Lawrence v. Texas that state laws criminalizing private, non-commercial sexual activity (including homosexual activity) between consenting adults on the grounds of morality are unconstitutional since there is insufficient justification for state interest in such conduct.
This trend among Western nations has not been followed in all other regions of the world, where sodomy often remains a serious crime. Homosexual acts remain punishable by death in Afghanistan, Mauritania, Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen, and by life in prison in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Guyana, India, Maldives, Nepal, Singapore, and Uganda.
Along with alleged communists, homosexuals were investigated by the notorious Senator Joseph McCarthy in the U.S., who chaired a committee that produced a report entitled "Employment of Homosexuals and Other Sex Perverts in Government".
Sodomy laws by country
Brazil
Brazilian criminal law does not punish any consensual sexual act performed by consenting adults, but allows for prosecution, under statutory rape laws and children's protection act, when one of the participants is under 14 year of age and the other an adult.
United Kingdom
The UK has historically had similar laws, but the offence is known as buggery, not sodomy, and is usually interpreted as referring to anal intercourse between two males or a male and a female. Buggery was made a felony by the Buggery Act in 1533, during the reign of Henry VIII. In 1885, Parliament enacted the Labouchere Amendment [3], which prohibited gross indecency between males, a broad term that was understood to encompass most or all male homosexual acts. It was under this law that Oscar Wilde was convicted and imprisoned. Following the Wolfenden report, sexual acts between two adult males, with no other people present, were made legal in England and Wales in 1967, in Scotland in 1980 and Northern Ireland in 1982.
In the 1980s and 1990s, attempts were made by gay rights organizations to equalize the age of consent for heterosexuals and homosexuals, as the age of consent for homosexuals was set at 21, while the age of consent for heterosexuals was 16. Efforts were also made to modify the "no other person present" clause so that it dealt only with minors. In 1994, Conservative MP Edwina Currie introduced an amendment to Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill which would have lowered the age of consent to 16. The amendment failed, but a compromise amendment which lowered the age of consent to 18 was accepted. The age of consent remained 18 until the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 2000 which further reduced it to 16, and the "no other person present" clause was modified to "no minor persons present". Today, the universal age of consent is 16 in England, Scotland, and Wales. The age of consent for both heterosexuals and homosexuals remains at 17 in Northern Ireland.
Canada
Before 1859, Canada relied on British law to prosecute sodomy. In 1859, Canada repatriated its buggery law in the Consolidated Statutes of Canada as an offence punishable by death. Buggery remained punishable by death until 1869. A broader law targeting all homosexual male sexual activity ("gross indecency") was passed in 1890. Changes to the criminal code in 1948 and 1961 were used to brand gay men as "criminal sexual psychopaths" and "dangerous sexual offenders." These labels provided for indeterminate prison sentences. Most famously, Everett Klippert, a homosexual, was labelled a dangerous sexual offender and sentenced to life in prison, a sentence confirmed by the Supreme Court of Canada. He was released in 1971.
Canadian law now permits anal sex by consenting parties above the age of 18, provided no more than two people are present. Its sodomy laws were repealed in the 1960s by Pierre Trudeau who famously stated that "the government has no place in the bedrooms of the nation". In the 1995 Ontario Court of Appeal case R. v. M. (C.), the judges ruled that the relevant section (section 159) of the Criminal Code violated section 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms when one or both of the partners are 14 to 18 years of age; this has not been tried in court again.
A similar decision was made by the Quebec Court of Appeal in the 1998 case R. v. Roy.
Australia
Australia inherited the United Kingdom's sodomy laws on colonisation in 1788. These were retained in the criminal codes passed by the various colonial parliaments during the 19th century, and by the state parliaments after Federation.
Following the Wolfenden report, the Dunstan Labor government introduced a consenting adults in private type defence in South Australia in 1972. This defence was initiated as a bill by Murray Hill, father of former Defence Minister Robert Hill, and repealed the state's sodomy law in 1975. The Campaign Against Moral Persecution during the 1970s raised the profile and acceptance of Australia's gay and lesbian communities, and other states and territories repealed their laws between 1976 and 1990. The exception was Tasmania, which retained its laws until the Federal Government and the United Nations Human Rights Committee forced their repeal in 1997. The details are given in the book Living out Loud: A History of Gay and Lesbian Activism in Australia.
Since 1997, the states and territories that retained different ages of consent or other vestiges of sodomy laws have tended to repeal them. Western Australia did so in 2002, and New South Wales and the Northern Territory did so in 2003. In 2004, Queensland is the only Australian jurisdiction that enforces a sodomy law, with the age of consent for anal sex being 18 as compared to 16.
China
Sodomy laws have been abolished since the early 1990s in the People's Republic of China. Yet there is no clear statute towards consenting parties above the age of 18. If someone under 18 is involved, the adult partner will be prosecuted. In a notable case in 2002, a man who had anal intercourse with a teenager was sentenced to three and a half years in prison.
France
Since the French Revolution, France has not had laws punishing homosexual conduct per se between over-age consenting adults in private. However, other qualifications such as "offense to good mores" were occasionally retained in the 19th century (see Jean Jacques Régis de Cambacérès). Furthermore, the age of consent for homosexual sex was kept to the age of the legal majority (21 then 18), above the age for heterosexual sex (15), until 1981.
In 1960, a parliamentary amendment by Paul Mirguet added homosexuality to a list of "social scourges", along with alcoholism and prostitution. This prompted the government to increase the penalties for public display of a sex act when the act was homosexual. Transvestites or homosexuals caught cruising were also the target of police repression.
In 1982, under president François Mitterrand, the last measures against homosexuality were repealed: one, dating from 1942 (Vichy France), making the age of consent for homosexual sex higher than for heterosexual sex, the other, dating from the 1960s, making homosexuality an aggravating circumstance for public indecency.
Germany
Paragraph 175, which punished "fornication between men", was eased to an age of consent of 21 in East Germany in 1957 and in West Germany in 1969. This age was lowered to 18 in the East in 1968 and the West in 1973, and all legal distinctions between heterosexual and homosexual acts were abolished in the East in 1988, with this change being extended to all of Germany in 1994 as part of the process of German Reunification.
In modern German, the term Sodomie has a meaning different from the English word "sodomy": it does not refer to anal sex at all, but solely to acts of bestiality.
Hungary
Homosexuality in Hungary was decriminalized in 1962, Paragraph 199 of the Hungarian Penal Code from then on threatened "only" adults over 18 who engaged themselves in a consensual same-sex relationship with an underaged person between 14 and 18. In 1995 a kind of domestic partnership was introduced for same sex couples, on September 3, 2002 the ruling of the Hungarian Constitutional Court abrogated Paragraph 199, since then the age of consent for both sexes and both for heterosexuals and homosexuals, is 14 years.
United States
Sodomy laws in the United States, laws primarily intended to outlaw homosexual acts were largely a matter of state rather than federal jurisdiction. By the last quarter of the 20th century, 46 out of 50 states had repealed any specifically anti-homosexual-conduct laws, and 36 had repealed all sodomy laws. The remaining anti-homosexual laws have been invalidated by the 2003 U.S. Supreme Court decision Lawrence v. Texas (see above). The United States Supreme Court also implied that the age of consent must be the same for heterosexuals and homosexuals when it ordered the Kansas courts to review the constititonality of the state's Romeo and Juliet law.
State laws at time of 2003 Supreme Court decision
At the time of the Lawrence v. Texas Supreme Court decision invalidating them, anti-homosexual laws in the fifty states and Puerto Rico stood as follows:
- Alabama -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (1 year/$2,000)
- Alaska (repealed through legislative action 1980)
- Arizona (repealed through legislative action 2001)
- Arkansas -- struck down by Jegley v. Picado, 80 S.W.3d 332 (Ark. 2001)
- California (repealed through legislative action 1976)
- Colorado (repealed through legislative action 1972)
- Connecticut (repealed through legislative action 1971)
- Delaware (repealed through legislative action 1973)
- Florida -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (60 days/$500)
- Georgia -- struck down by Powell v. State, 510 S.E.2d 18 (1998)
- District of Columbia (repealed through legislative action 1993)
- Hawaii (repealed through legislative action 1973)
- Idaho -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (5 years to life)
- Illinois (repealed through legislative action 1962)
- Indiana (repealed through legislative action 1977)
- Iowa (repealed through legislative action 1978)
- Kansas -- Same-Sex sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (6 months/$1,000)
- Kentucky -- struck down by Commonwealth v. Wasson, 842 S.W.2d 487 (Ky. 1992)
- Louisiana -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (5 years/$2,000)
- Maine (repealed through legislative action 1976)
- Maryland -- struck down by Williams v. State, 1998 Extra LEXIS 260, Baltimore City Circuit Court, January 14, 1999
- Massachusetts -- struck down by GLAD v. Attorney General, SJC-08539 (Mass. Supreme Judicial Ct. 2002)
- Michigan -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty =(15 years)
- Minnesota -- struck down by Doe v. Ventura, No. MC 01-489, 2001 WL 543734 (Minn. Dist. Ct 2001)
- Mississippi -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (10 years)
- Missouri -- Same-Sex sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (1 year/$1,000)
- Montana -- struck down by Gryczan v. Montana, 942 P.2d 112 (1997)
- Nebraska (repealed through legislative action 1978)
- Nevada (repealed through legislative action 1993)
- New Hampshire (repealed through legislative action 1975)
- New Jersey (repealed through legislative action 1979)
- New Mexico (repealed through legislative action 1975)
- New York -- struck down by People v. Onofre, 415 N.E.2d 936 (N.Y. 1980)
- North Carolina -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (10 years/discretionary fine)
- North Dakota (repealed through legislative action 1973)
- Ohio (repealed through legislative action 1974)
- Oklahoma -- Same-Sex sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (10 years)
- Oregon (repealed through legislative action 1972)
- Pennsylvania -- struck down by Commonwealth v. Bonadio, 415 A.2d 47 (Pa. 1980) and repealed by the legislature in 1995.)
- Rhode Island (repealed through legislative action 1998)
- South Carolina -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (5 years/$500)
- South Dakota (repealed through legislative action 1977)
- Tennessee -- Campbell v. Sundquist, 926 S.W.2d 250 (1996)
- Texas --Same-Sex sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = ($500)
- Utah -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (6 months/$1,000)
- Vermont (repealed through legislative action 1977)
- Virginia -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (1-5 years)
- Washington (repealed through legislative action 1976)
- West Virginia (repealed through legislative action 1976)
- Wisconsin (repealed through legislative action 1983)
- Wyoming (repealed through legislative action 1977)
- Puerto Rico -- All sodomy acts illegal. Penalty = (10 years)
Source: ACLU website June 9, 2003
Singapore
See Section 377 of the Singapore Penal Code
Notes
- Template:Note Lawrence v. Texas ruling - "Early American sodomy laws were not directed at homosexuals as such, but instead sought to prohibit nonprocreative sexual activity more generally"
See also
References
- Graham Willett, Living out Loud: A History of Gay and Lesbian Activism in Australia, 2000. ISBN 1864489499.
- Peter McWilliams, Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do, 1998. ISBN 0931580587.
External links
- International Lesbian and Gay Association World Legal Survey (2000)
- Sodomy Laws Around the World
- State Homophobia, world map, ILGA (2004)
- Where Having Sex is a Crime: Criminalization and Decriminalization of Homosexual Acts, IGLHRC (2003)
- Going Down Down South: Fighting Absurd Sex Laws
- The Accidental Legacy of a Homophobic Humanitarian — The Times, October 2, 2000zh:鸡奸法
de:Gesetze gegen Homosexualität es:Ley de sodomía nl:Sodomiewetgeving