May 25, 2013

Julian Assange wins right to pursue extradition fight

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(Phatforums News / BBC News) founder has won the right to petition the UK in his fight against extradition to Sweden.

He lost a High Court battle last month to be extradited over alleged sex offences, which he denies.

Judges refused Mr Assange permission to directly to the Supreme Court – but said his case raised “a question of general public importance”.

He can now directly ask the Supreme Court to look at his case.

However, Mr Assange, who was at the to hear the judges’ ruling, still has no automatic right to be heard by the highest court in the UK.

He was cheered by supporters as he left the Royal Courts of Justice and, alluding to an MPs’ debate later on calls for the of extradition rules, he said there were “many aggrieved families in the UK and other countries and in Europe struggling for justice”.

Speaking of his own case, he said: “I think that is the correct decision, and I am thankful. The long struggle for justice for me and others continues.”

‘Politically motivated’

Mr Assange, 40, is founder of the whistleblowing Wikileaks, which has angered the United States by releasing hundreds of thousands of classified documents.

The Australian faces extradition over accusations he raped a woman and sexually molested another in Stockholm in August last year. He denies the .

Legal process explained

No automatic right to be heard in UK’s highest court
Supreme Justices consider important points of law
Lower courts must first certify a point of general public importance
Appellant can then petition Supreme Court
It then decides whether to examine a case in full

Mr Assange was arrested in London a year ago on a (EAW) and has been living at the country estate of a supporter under stringent bail conditions. He claims his arrest was politically motivated and linked to the activities of Wikileaks.

District Judge Howard Riddle ruled in February that Mr Assange should be extradited to face investigation following a hearing at City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court in central London. The decision was upheld at the High Court last month.

Mr Assange attempted to appeal the decision on two grounds.

He argued the highest court should consider whether his extradition would be unlawful because the request was made by a “partisan prosecutor working for the executive” and whether he could be defined as “the accused” even though no decision has been taken to prosecute him.

‘Quickly as possible’

On Monday the High Court certified that the case raised the question of whether the Swedish prosecutor who issued the EAW against Mr Assange was a “judicial authority”. Mr Assange’s lawyers argue the prosecutor was not, and the warrant was therefore invalid.

Mark Summers, appearing for Mr Assange, said: “Public prosecutors should not, in any circumstances, be permitted to issue EAWs.”

One of the two judges, Sir John Thomas, told Mr Summers the court’s view was that it had “very little doubt that, as a matter of law, the prosecutor was within the scheme” for issuing warrants, and Mr Assange’s chances of success in the Supreme Court were “extraordinarily slim”.

But the judge said the court felt “constrained” to certify that the case raised a question of general public importance.

However, it would be left to the Supreme Court to decide whether to give Assange actual leave to appeal, it was ruled.

Sir John said: “If leave is granted by the Supreme Court we would, for obvious reasons, ask that the point is decided as quickly as possible.”

Outside the court Mr Assange’s lawyer, Gareth Peirce, said his legal team had 14 days to submit a written petition to the Supreme Court.

She told reporters that if the court refused to hear the request then Mr Assange would have exhausted all legal avenues in Britain.

Hawaii hopes same-sex civil unions spur tourism

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HONOLULU – For years, the Rev. Fay Hovey has held romantic ceremonies on the sand for gay partners who want to pledge their in Hawaii. The take photos and memories with them, but they lack a legal and binding recognition of their .

That will change when same- civil unions soon become law in the Rainbow State.

“They have that fantasy just like any other couple, to come and have a wedding and a honeymoon,” said Hovey, of Aloha Maui Gay Weddings, who hopes for an increase in commitment ceremonies. “When they come to Hawaii, everybody can relax in their spirits and feel included.”

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HAWAII: No. 1 non-U.S. mainland honeymoon destination

Hawaii lawmakers gave final approval to civil unions Wednesday and sent the legislation to Democratic Gov. Neil Abercrombie, who plans to sign it into law within 10 days. Civil unions would begin Jan. 1, 2012, making the state the seventh in the nation to grant virtually the same rights of to same-sex couples without authorizing itself.

The culturally diverse islands — with their swaying palm trees, picturesque sunsets and wind-swept sands — are already a welcoming place for gay tourists, including some who seek informal partnership ceremonies.

With civil unions, those ceremonies would come with a certificate that’s valid in other states with civil unions or same-sex marriage, depending on their local laws. Five states and the District of Columbia permit same-sex marriage.

Hawaii, known as one of the nation’s premier locations for destination weddings and honeymoons, also will allow gay couples to get civil unions even if they don’t come from states with compatible laws. This could provide a boost to the tourism-dependent islands that are trying to recover from the recession.

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IF YOU GO: Check out these Honolulu and Oahu attractions

“It will certainly drive more tourism and bring more people to us,” said Michael Waddell, general manager for the Maui Sunseeker, a resort catering to gay clientele. “They come here because they can be comfortable and they can be themselves.”

The Maui Sunseeker is expanding from 17 to 30 rooms by the end of the year, which will help it accommodate new visitors, he said.

Honeymoons and marriages made up nearly one-tenth of Hawaii vacations last year, with more than 600,000 tourists traveling for that reason out of a total of about 7 million annual visitors, according to preliminary state statistics.

“We don’t discriminate. We’re known for having tolerance and mutual respect for all,” said Mike McCartney, president for the Hawaii Tourism Authority. “Our natural beauty, people and spirit create an for romance.”

But the number of couples seeking civil unions may be somewhat modest, according to one study. Between 569 and 1,285 same-sex couples will enter civil unions in the first four years that registration is available, the Williams Institute on Law and Public Policy at UCLA estimated last June.

“A traditional wedding would tend to be marriage. The untraditional wedding would tend to be on the beach in paradise. That’s one of the strong advantages of Hawaii,” said the Rev. Mike John Hough of Kauai Island Weddings, who expects the number of ceremonies he performs to increase between 10% and 20%.

When the Hawaii Senate voted 18-5 to pass civil unions Wednesday, it sought to end nearly 20 years of thousands-strong rallies, election battles and passionate public testimony that have divided the Rainbow State.

Voters overwhelming passed the nation’s first “defense of marriage” constitutional amendment in 1998 in response to a state decision five years earlier that nearly made Hawaii the first state to legalize .

The amendment resulted in a law banning gay marriage in Hawaii but left the door open for civil unions.

Since then, 29 other states also have enacted defense of marriage amendments.

Opponents of civil unions say the partnerships could lead to same-sex marriage, likely through a court challenge based on the argument that gay couples aren’t truly being treated equally unless they’re allowed to be married.

Their fears may have grown when the Senate confirmed the state’s first openly gay Supreme Court justice, Sabrina McKenna, immediately before the civil unions vote.

McKenna pledged to be fair in her future rulings.

“As any judge, we bring to the judiciary our life experiences, but we rule based on the evidence and the law, and that’s what I’ve done for 17 years and will continue to do when seated on the Supreme Court,” said McKenna, who wouldn’t specifically discuss civil unions.

Gay marriage case back in California court, adds delay

8da66dbed85f22274d40eac49cbc8d4a Gay marriage case back in California court, adds delay

(Reuters) – The waded back into the marriage debate on Wednesday, adding about a year’s delay to a landmark case by agreeing to give guidance to federal judges considering the matter.

A California ban on gay marriage is the center of the federal case and one of several judicial and political battles over same- marriage, which is banned in most of the nation and legal in the District of Columbia and five states — Connecticut, Massachusetts, Iowa, and Vermont.

The California Supreme Court opened the way to same-sex weddings in the state in 2008, but voters months later approved a ban on gay marriage, called Proposition 8, and the matter has been winding its way through the courts.

It is expected eventually to be appealed to the Supreme Court, which would set national policy if it agreed to hear the case.

Last year, a federal district court ruled the ban was unconstitutional, but that ruling is on hold while the current by supporters of the gay marriage ban is considered.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals asked the California Supreme Court last month to weigh in on whether Prop 8 supporters had the authority under state to defend a ballot measure when public officials refuse to do so.

Then-Attorney General and now Governor Jerry Brown declined to sign on to the Prop 8 appeal. Then-Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger took the same stance.

On Wednesday, the California Supreme Court decided unanimously to decide the , saying oral arguments could be heard as soon as September. The court has 90 days after oral arguments to issue an opinion. Initial briefs are due in mid-March.

After the California top court issues its decision, the case will go back to the federal appeals court.

The case in the California Supreme Court is Perry v. Schwarzenegger, S189476.

(Reporting by Peter Henderson and Dan Levine; Editing by Peter Cooney)

N.J. Supreme Court to Hear Too Much Media, Blogger Case on Webcast

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FREEHOLD, N.J. — The State is set to hear oral arguments on Too Much Media’s long-running against blogger Shelle Hale during a webcast Tuesday Feb. 8 at 10 a.m. EST.

The before the court is whether Hale, who operated a she claimed was intended for investigative reporting on issues of public importance and who posted information about plaintiffs on another ’s bulletin board, a journalist entitled to the protections of New Jersey’s Shield Law and the First Amendment?

Hale, a state resident, was sued by Too Much Media over statements she posted on Oprano.com, accusing the company of fraud and “illegal and unethical use of technology,” violating New Jersey’s Identity Theft Protection Act.

Hale called herself a journalist and subject to New Jersey’s Shield Law when she was gathering information about an breach at the company. Hale posted on a website that Too Much Media failed to inform customers of a breach because she alleged it was making off of it.

Last April, an appellate division judge affirmed an earlier court ruling that the state’s shield law doesn’t apply to Hale and that she would have to disclose the identity of her sources at a deposition.

To listen to the hearing tomorrow, click here.

Iran Sentences 2 People to Death Over Porn Sites

73b7bb0143d2bba17c88790aaf95fbf2 Iran Sentences 2 People to Death Over Porn Sites

TEHRAN — Iranian courts have sentenced two people to death for running porn sites.

“Two administrators of porn sites have been sentenced to death in two different [court] branches and [the verdicts] have been sent to the for confirmation,” prosecutor general Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi said.

Last December, Iran-born Canadian resident Saeed Malekpour received a death sentence for allegedly designing a porn .

Malekpour, who was detained in Iran after returning in 2008 to visit his ailing father, was convicted of “designing and moderating content websites,” “agitation against the regime” in Tehran, and “insulting the sanctity of Islam,” according to an online campaign calling for his release.

Malekpour worked as a freelance web designer in and designed a software program for uploading photos onto websites, which the Campaign for Release of Saeed Malekpour said was used, unbeknownst to him, for the creation of a porn website.

His said Malekpour’s online profile was used to create the site without his permission.

In 2009, he admitted to running the site, which has since been taken down.

Canadian officials expressed concern over the “continued flagrant disregard of the Iranian authorities for the rights of Iranians” and have urged the Iranian to “respect its domestic and international obligations and ensure fairness and due process for all its citizens and others.”

Op-Ed It’s Protest Weekend, So Pick Your Rally

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PORN VALLEY—Spring is in the air—at least in Southern California—so what better time to get out in the fresh air (well, Inland Empire air, anyway) and sunshine and protest the people who are dedicated to sending this country down the tubes politically and culturally? Fortunately, no matter which coast they live on or near, activists and free speech supporters will have a choice of two major gatherings this Sunday and Monday.

The first, which this reporter will be attending,will take place on Sunday in Rancho Mirage, California, at a shopping center just opposite the Rancho Las Palmas Resort and Spa, where oil barons Charles and David Koch, who personally have donated millions to conservative causes, will be hosting dozens of other millionaires and billionaires in an attempt to garner even more (monetary) support for defeating progressive agendas and promoting failed conservative policies like the ones which resulted in the current recession cum .

According to the promotional material the Kochs released regarding their last such get-together, titled “Understanding and Addressing Threats to American Free Enterprise and Prosperity,” which occurred in Aspen, Colorado last June, among the meeting’s objectives were “Sharing best practices and opportunities to defend our free enterprise system from destructive public policies” (like national health care, legislation to head off global climate change and promote “green power,” and reining in Wall Street excesses), “Fashioning the message and building the education channels to reestablish widespread belief in the benefits of the principles of a free and prosperous society”—”principles” like allowing corporations and pressure groups like Dick Armey’s Americans for Prosperity to donate unlimited amounts of cash to political campaigns—and “Building principled, effective institutions that identify, educate and mobilize citizens in pursuit of a free and prosperous society.” (Those would be institutions like “The Family,” which supports the death penalty for gays in Uganda, and Family Council, which continues to oppose allowing gays to serve openly in the .)

As The Times noted, “The participants [at the Aspen gathering] included some of the nation’s wealthiest families and biggest names in finance: private equity and hedge fund executives like John Childs, Cliff Asness, Steve Schwarzman and Ken Griffin; Phil Anschutz, the entertainment and media mogul ranked by Forbes as the 34th-richest person in the country; Rich DeVos, the co-founder of Amway; Steve Bechtel of the giant construction firm; and Kenneth Langone of Home Depot… and former Attorney General Edwin Meese III.”

Previous speakers at the Koch-sponsored conferences have included Fox “News” commentator Glenn Beck, Supreme Court Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, Republican Govs. Haley Barbour and Bobby Jindal, Republican Sens. Jim DeMint and Tom Coburn, and (you guessed it) Republican Reps. Mike Pence, Tom Price and Paul D. Ryan.

In other words, some of the most vocal advocates for adopting laissez faire attitudes towards corporations, banks, hedge fund managers and stock brokers while also doing their best to thwart citizens’ privacy rights to obtain abortions, watch material and communicate between themselves without the government tapping their phones and reading their emails.

Sound like people you might want to protest? The rally will be held from 1:30-3:30 p.m. at The River Parking Lot at the intersection of Rancho Las Palmas Dr. and Bob Hope Dr., opposite 41000 Bob Hope Drive, in Rancho Mirage, 92270. Those with further questions can call 213-252-4552. (It’s expected to be sunny and warm, so bring lots of water and sunscreen.)

On the other hand, if you’re on the “Right Coast,” you’ll have a chance on Monday to protest one of the most egregious acts of censorship to have taken place in the District of Columbia in recent years (excluding, of course, the trial of Evil Angel owner John Stagliano).

At 1 p.m. on January 31, ART Positive, a New York-based art action group, will be protesting outside the Smithsonian’s Board of Regents meeting to demand the dismissal of Smithsonian Secretary G. Wayne Clough. The group is outraged over Clough’s refusal to return the David Wojnarowicz video he removed in November from the National Portrait Gallery’s Hide/Seek exhibition and his disturbing defense of that act of censorship. Along with the termination of Clough, ART Positive calls for the Regents to return to the show the video, “A in My Belly,” one of whose images was a depiction of Christ’s body covered with ants.

Hide/Seek is a ground-breaking exhibition exploring themes of and in mainstream American art over the last 100 years. As readers know, after an anti-gay religious group and conservative politicians charged that the Wojnarowicz video was offensive, Clough summarily removed it from the exhibit. While the act of censorship sparked outrage across the country, Clough remained silent about it for seven weeks. He now says the piece never should have been in the show to begin with and denies that removing it was censorship.

According to ART Positive, Clough has lost the confidence of the American art world, which the group says is already pulling art and funding from the Smithsonian.

“His censorship, stonewalling and self-serving justification are a clear threat to the largest cultural institution in the country,” the group declared. “The Board of Regents has an opportunity to repair some of the damage by returning the video to Hide/Seek and immediately replacing Clough with a leader who will uphold the Smisthsonian’s ethical standards and its mission.”

That rally will be held on Monday beginning at 1 p.m. in front of “The Castle,” the Smithsonian’s turreted administrative headquarters, 1000 Jefferson Drive SW, , D.C., just opposite the National Mall.

MENTAL FLOSS columns are editorials expressing the opinions of AVN Senior Editor and Legal Analyst Mark Kernes, and should not be taken as necessarily reflective of AVN magazine, AVN.com, its owners or staff. This is a found contribution – we credit AVN for the article.

Study: No higher mental health risk after abortion

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Having an abortion does not increase the risk of problems, but having a baby does, one of the largest studies to compare the aftermath of both decisions suggests.

The by Danish scientists further debunks the notion that terminating a can trigger mental illness and shows postpartum depression to be much more of a factor.

Abortion in has been legal since 1973 — the same year the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Roe v. Wade, which established a right to abortion.

The Danish study included 365,550 teenagers and who had an abortion or first-time delivery between 1995 and 2007. None had a history of psychiatric problems that required hospitalization. Through various national registries, researchers were able to track mental health counseling at a hospital or outpatient facility before and after an abortion or delivery.

During the study period, 84,620 had an abortion while 280,930 gave birth.

Researchers compared the rate of mental health treatment among women before and after a first abortion. Within the first year after an abortion, 15 per 1,000 women needed psychiatric counseling — similar to the rate seeking help nine months before an abortion.

Researchers say women who seek abortions come from a demographic group more likely to have emotional problems to begin with. Statistics show that a large percentage struggle economically and they have above-average rates of unintended pregnancies.

While first-time mothers had a lower rate of mental problems overall, the proportion of those seeking help after giving birth was dramatically higher. About 7 per 1,000 women got mental health help within a year of giving birth compared with 4 per 1,000 women pre-delivery.

The most common problems among women in both the abortion and the delivery groups were debilitating anxiety, severe stress and depression.

“A should know that her risk of having a psychiatric episode is not increased” after an abortion, said Trine Munk-Olsen of Aarhus University, who led the study.

Results were published in Thursday’s Journal of Medicine. The study was funded by grants from the Danish Council and the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, which supports abortion rights organizations and projects.

The study did not examine why a pregnancy was terminated. Researchers also only studied mental problems serious enough to warrant admission to a hospital or outpatient clinic and did not look into the role of mild depression and other lesser symptoms.

In a previous study, published in 2006, Munk-Olsen found new mothers faced increased risks for a host of mental problems, not just postpartum depression.

Changes in hormone levels, sleep deprivation and other demands associated with having a baby could trigger mental problems, experts say. By contrast, women who have an abortion don’t experience similar changes.

“Anyone who’s ever had a baby knows it’s stressful. That stress doesn’t go away in a week or two” after delivery, said Dr. Robert Blum, who heads the department of population, family and reproductive health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The latest findings echo an extensive review by the American Psychological Association in 2008 that found no evidence that ending an unwanted pregnancy threatens women’s mental health.

A separate review by Blum and his colleagues found that the most rigorous research on the topic did not find a between abortion and long-term mental health problems. Previous studies that suggested such a connection were often poorly designed, had dropout rates or did not control for factors that could affect the conclusion.

Though the latest study was done in Denmark, Blum said it’s comparable to the U.S. Access to abortion is similar in both countries though Denmark tends to be more conservative.

Abortion rates are lower in Denmark — about 13 abortions per 1,000 women in 2008, compared to almost 20 per 1,000 U.S. women that same year, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which studies reproductive-rights issues.

Afghan parliament opens after Karzai delay plan fails

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Afghan President has opened parliament, after failing to win a delay to allow September’s disputed elections to be investigated.

Mr Karzai had wanted a special election court to investigate fraud .

But the newly elected MPs argued that it was unconstitutional, and just a means to eject opponents of the president from their seats.

They were backed by the international community, which was worried the standoff could spill onto the streets.

Analysts say Mr Karzai is not happy with the results of the parliamentary poll, which has produced a lower house with a larger, more vocal and coherent opposition.

“Start Quote

We have been facing serious problems”

Hamid Karzai Afghan President

* Anger over ‘rigged’ election

The 249-member lower house of parliament – the Wolesi Jerga – was originally scheduled to open on Sunday.

The ’s Paul Wood in say the inauguration brings an end to a test of wills in which was the loser.

He had sought a further delay of at least a month to let his special election tribunal investigate the fraud allegations.

But the newly elected MPs cried foul, and were strongly backed by Western officials who were worried about the confrontation spilling onto the streets.

Opening the chamber in Kabul on Wednesday, Mr Karzai apparently could not resist getting in a dig at alleged Western meddling.

Analysis
Paul Wood BBC News, Kabul

President Hamid Karzai looked appropriately stony-faced as he walked down the to inaugurate the new Afghan parliament. He has emerged the clear loser from this tussle with parliament, his authority damaged.

The parliamentarians were backed by the international community, and in a private meeting Mr Karzai complained bitterly about what he called “foreign hands” trying to cause a crisis in Afghanistan.

On Wednesday though, everyone involved diplomatically referred to the outcome as a success for the rule of . And indeed the international community is relieved that the dispute did not end up as a confrontation on the streets.

However, Mr Karzai’s special court still exists and may eventually try to disqualify some MPs. The battle of wills will continue – even if the immediate threat of a political crisis has now been lifted.

“With regard to holding election, safeguarding the people’s votes, preventing abuse and foreign interventions, we have been facing serious problems,” he told MPs.

“Efforts have been made to show that the latest presidential election was illegitimate.”

Police on Wednesday closed off roads more than 1km (half a mile) from the parliamentary building.

Officers also surrounded the auditorium where the swearing-in-ceremony took place.

Winning candidates arrived wearing suits or dressed in traditional robes.

However, there is still no agreement about the powers of the disputed five-judge tribunal that President Karzai has appointed to investigate alleged fraud.

The panel’s judges say they have the authority to order recounts and even nullify the entire election if needed. They have said they intend to pursue cases against 59 winning candidates.

Disqualified

But election and international officials say the tribunal’s assertions are in breach of both the constitution and electoral law.
Afghan MPs after inauguration in Kabul on 26 January 2011 Wednesday’s inauguration opened with the national anthem and a recitation from the Koran

The special tribunal was set up by the to investigate allegations of fraud in the parliamentary elections.

About a quarter of the five million votes cast were thrown out and 24 early winners were disqualified.

The new chamber contains bigger groups of ethnic Tajiks and Hazaras, who could challenge the president’s traditional power base among Pashtuns, Afghanistan’s largest ethnic group.

Although it is largely seen as weak in comparison with the president and his , the legislature has successfully blocked many cabinet appointments and is a major dissenting voice in the country.

Drive-thru sex toy shop offers privacy in Alabama

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HUNTSVILLE, — Gabrielle Silva takes down a customer’s order from the drive-thru window, stuffs a bag full of products and passes it outside to the couple waiting in a car.

“Thanks, and I put some free condoms in there, too!” Silva chirps.

In this technology-savvy north Alabama city, visitors won’t just find burgers and prescriptions at the drive-thru window.

A “romance” store called Pleasures offers a rare convenience not only for these parts but nationally: a drive-through with adult novelties for sale. Business is brisk so far, with cars sometimes lining up three deep for vibrators, lubricants, lingerie and other risque items.

“It’s been doing well, and really well on nights when it’s cold or rainy,” said employee Toni Kennedy. “Discretion and the ease of it are big, and convenience. We’re Americans. We like everything convenient.”

Even toys, as much as elected officials in Alabama have tried to prevent them from being sold in the conservative, Bible Belt state.

Pleasures is owned by businesswoman Sherri Williams, who fought the state for almost a decade over what’s considered by free-speech advocates to be one of the country’s toughest anti-obscenity laws. Among other things, the 1998 banned the sale of products intended for sexual stimulation.

With two sex-toy stores in Alabama’s Tennessee Valley, Williams sued to overturn the law with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union. She won initially when a federal judge ruled in 1999 there was no rational basis for the law. But the state appealed and Williams lost, allowing the law to remain on the books even though it wasn’t enforced during the litigation.

The Supreme Court refused to hear the case in 2007, ending Williams’ challenge. Distribution of sex toys is a misdemeanor on the first offense with a maximum penalty of a $10,000 fine and one year in jail, although the law doesn’t ban possession.

But the law has a loophole that allows for the sale of sex toys that are needed for unspecified “medical, scientific, educational, legislative, judicial, or law enforcement” purposes, and Williams jumped through it. Customers buying toys — items that can be used for sexual stimulation — fill out an anonymous form with 10 questions including whether they or a partner have difficulty with sexual fulfillment.

In November, she held the grand opening for an expanded Pleasures store in an old bank building at a busy intersection. Williams first opened in the Tennessee Valley in 1993; this is her second expansion, and she has a smaller store in nearby Decatur.

It seemed like a waste not to use the old drive-thru window once run by bank tellers, so Silva and her co-workers now sell all sorts of adult products from the side of the building. Just like at a fast-food restaurant, there’s a brightly lit sign outside with products and prices — herbal “enhancement pills” are $8 per dose. Williams believes her drive-thru is the first in the country to offer adult novelties for sale.

The in one car wanted a rubber toy that spins and pulses. A couple in another vehicle stopped by for free condoms, which are advertised on a sign visible from University Drive, a main drag through town.

A few yards away from Pleasures, on the other side of a curb, workers at a neighboring McDonald’s restaurant dish out fries and burgers.

Williams runs what she calls an “upscale” adult store, and using an old bank building with a brick exterior and manicured shrubs outside doesn’t hurt the image.

“It actually has two vaults,” Williams said. “It has a full-blown vault upstairs, and the basement is poured concrete with a vault door. This was a 7,200-square-foot bank.”

Huntsville is a high-tech government and town, and Pleasures workers say their customers include soldiers and couples based at the Army’s Redstone Arsenal and workers from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center.

On a busy Thursday night, the clientele looks like the crowd at the mall down the street — young and old, singles and couples.

Inside, the shop has bright lights and royal-purple walls. The mood is mostly light, with friends giggling as they browse shelves full of rubber and plastic playthings.

But there’s a more serious side to the business, too.

“People come in and say, ‘I need something to save my marriage.’ I’ve had that a million times,” said Samantha Todd, who has worked at for 2 1/2 years. “I’ve had people come in and cry. It can be very serious.”

The store includes an “intimacy clinic” that opens next month and will offer sexual counseling to couples and groups, but there are no how-to classes; all the assistance is verbal. It also sells instructional videos, books and a few magazines.

Employees check the ID of everyone who enters the store — customers must be at least 18.

Police say they’ve had no complaints over Pleasures and don’t pay it more attention than other stores.

“Right now there’s not really anything for us to do with it,” said Mark Roberts, a spokesman with the Huntsville Police Department.

The head of a -based nonprofit group that campaigns for tougher anti-obscenity statutes wishes government officials would work harder to stamp out businesses like Pleasures, and sex toys.

“I liken it to a , a slow-moving … and law enforcement is ignoring it,” said Robert W. Peters Jr., president of Morality in Media Inc. “It’s been a battle going back to the 1960s.”

Williams said her store and drive-thru serve a need for couples and individuals who need a little extra spice or excitement in their sex lives.

“Also,” she said, “the police have already said they have a million other things to do.”

Obama recalls Roe vs. Wade, backs abortion rights

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President echoed his support for abortion rights , the 38th anniversary of the ’s pro-choice decision in Roe vs. Wade.

should not intrude on private matters,” Obama said in a statement, adding that he also supports policies to prevented “unintended pregnancies.”

The president made his statement as thousands of abortion opponents planned annual March for Life rallies, with many hoping that the new Republican-run House will enact new restrictions on the practice.

“We are seeing a cultural shift toward protecting life and rolling back the tide of unrestricted abortions,” said Charmaine Yoest, president of Americans United for Life.

Obama’s statement:

Today marks the 38th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that protects ’s and reproductive freedom, and affirms a fundamental principle: that government should not intrude on private family matters.

I am committed to protecting this constitutional right. I also remain committed to policies, initiatives, and programs that help prevent unintended pregnancies, support pregnant women and mothers, encourage healthy relationships, and promote adoption.

And on this anniversary, I hope that we will recommit ourselves more broadly to ensuring that our daughters have the same rights, the same freedoms, and the same opportunities as our sons to fulfill their dreams.