Our Properties: Gamasutra GameCareerGuide IndieGames Indie Royale GDC IGF Game Developer Magazine GAO
My Message close
Latest News
spacer View All spacer
 
February 10, 2012
 
Road to the IGF: Lucky Frame's Pugs Luv Beats
 
Analyst questions validity of unusual January NPD results [10]
 
Strong Tales of Xillia sales help Namco Bandai to Q3 profits [1]
spacer
Latest Features
spacer View All spacer
 
February 10, 2012
 
arrow Virtual Goods - An Excerpt from Social Game Design: Monetization Methods and Mechanics
 
arrow Principles of an Indie Game Bottom Feeder [20]
 
arrow Postmortem: CyberConnect 2's Solatorobo: Red the Hunter [1]
spacer
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
February 10, 2012
 
Audio Passes: Success Through Layering
 
What the current RPG can learn from Diablo 1
 
Double Fine's Kickstarter Windfall: Will Patronage Supplant Traditional Game Publishing? [8]
 
The Principles of Game Monetization
 
Did DoubleFine Just break the publishing model for good? [14]
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
February 10, 2012
 
Vicarious Visions / Activision
FX Artist-Vicarious Visions
 
Toys for Bob / Activision
Senior Programmer
 
Toys for Bob / Activision
Lead Programmer
 
Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC
Senior DevSuite Web Administrator
 
Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC
Senior Staff Software Application Engineer
 
Vicarious Visions / Activision
Tools Engineer-Vicarious Visions
spacer
Latest Press Releases
spacer View All     RSS spacer
 
February 10, 2012
 
Gala Networks Europe
augura un buon San
Valentino
 
Gala Networks Europe
herkesin Sevgililer...
 
Gala Networks Europe sort
le grand jeu pour les...
 
Gala Networks Europe
Sends Valentines to All
 
Gala Networks Europe
feiert Valentinstag
spacer
About
spacer Editor-In-Chief/News Director:
Kris Graft
Features Director:
Christian Nutt
Senior Contributing Editor:
Brandon Sheffield
News Editors:
Frank Cifaldi, Tom Curtis, Mike Rose, Eric Caoili, Kris Graft
Editors-At-Large:
Leigh Alexander, Chris Morris
Advertising:
Jennifer Sulik
Recruitment:
Gina Gross
 
Feature Submissions
 
Comment Guidelines
Sponsor
News

  Louisiana Senate Passes Video Game Violence Bill
by Jason Dobson [PC, Console/PC]
Post A Comment
Share on Twitter
Share on Facebook RSS
 
 
June 7, 2006
 
Louisiana Senate Passes Video Game Violence Bill

According to a report from website GamePolitics.com and a statement sent to Gamasutra by lawyer Jack Thompson, Democratic Representative Roy Burrell's HB1381 bill, covering violent video games, has been passed by the Louisiana Senate. The bill was passed by the Louisiana House of Representatives by an unanimous measure of 102-0 in May. The bill will now go to Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco to be signed into law.

The measure proposed by HB1381, which was drafted with the help of controversial Florida attorney and anti-game activist Jack Thompson, would allow a judge to rule on whether or not a video game meets established criteria for being inappropriate for minors and be subsequently pulled from store shelves. In the event the bill becomes a law, a person found guilty of selling such a game to a minor would face fines ranging from $100 to $2,000, plus a prison term of up to one year.

In a statement released by Jack Thompson, the lawyer commented: "The corrupted and corrupting video game industry will, of course, challenge this law once it is signed by Governor Blanco. The reason is that this industry, through the ESRB (Entertainment Software Rating Board), its developers' lobbyist, the ESA (Entertainment Software Association), and the retailers' lobbyist, IEMA (Interactive Entertainment Merchants Association) are involved in ongoing fraudulent conduct in marketing video games that contain adult material to children. The sale of video games containing sexual material harmful to minors is a criminal act. The Federal Trade Commission has this spring found that 42% of the time, Mature-rated video games are sold to kids under 17!"

His statement continued: "The "Hot Coffee" scandal last year revealed the industry's deception, and in fact the ESRB found just weeks ago that another game which it had not reviewed adequately Oblivion had to be given a Mature rating, after tens of thousands of Teen-rated copies were sold. The ESRB refused to recall this deceptively labeled game, despite the nudity and sexual material therein. These sales to kids constituted arguably criminal acts."

If signed into law, it seems likely that the measure will be immediately challenged by the ESA, which has been instrumental in the striking down of other bills on First Amendment grounds.

"We oppose HB 1381," commented ESA president Doug Lowenstein in response to the bill, "which would add video games containing violent content to the State's 'Harmful to Minors' statute, and is no different from other laws already stricken by the courts."

While being presented by Senator Craig Romero on behalf of Burrell, the report claimed that Senator Rob Marrioneaux attempted to amend the bill by “adding language” taken from another game-related bill, SB340, which recently passed the Senate, and which deals only with sexual content in games, not violence. The motion by Marrioneaux to amend the bill failed, however.
 
   
 
Comments


none
 
Comment:
 




 
UBM Techweb
Game Network
Game Developers Conference | GDC Europe | GDC Online | GDC China | Gamasutra | Game Developer Magazine | Game Advertising Online
Game Career Guide | Independent Games Festival | Indie Royale | IndieGames

Other UBM TechWeb Networks
Business Technology | Business Technology Events | Telecommunications & Communications Providers

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Contact Us | Copyright © UBM TechWeb, All Rights Reserved.