Prosecutors In Wyoming Considering Charging Librarians For Stocking Books
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) â" Prosecutors in Wyoming are evaluating whether to file criminal charges against officials at a public library for stocking books some say are obscene in sections for children and teenagers.
For weeks, Campbell County Public Library officials have been facing a local outcry over the books and for scheduling a transgender magician to perform for youngsters, an act canceled amid threats against the magician and library staff.
After reviewing the case involving five nonfiction books having to do with sex education and LGBTQ issues at the library in Gillette, local prosecutors will ask for a special prosecutor to also weigh in on the case, County Attorney Mitchell Damsky announced Friday.
The book dispute has âgotten contentious and out of handâ when it may have been resolvable by putting the books among material for adults, Damsky said.
Now that the matter is in his office, prosecutors want to make sure they can get a âconsensus opinionâ with help from a prosecutor outside Campbell County before announcing whether they will pursue charges, he said.
âPersonally, as a parent, I find the material to be just inappropriate for children and disgusting. But as a lawyer Iâm sworn to uphold the Constitution and thatâs why we are dealing with it with a fine-toothed comb,â Damsky said.
Library officials, including Executive Director Terri Lesley, didnât immediately return a phone message Friday seeking comment.
The books are âThis Book is Gayâ by Juno Dawson, âHow Do You Make a Babyâ by Anna Fiske, âDoing Itâ by Hannah Witton, âSex is a Funny Wordâ by Corey Silverberg, and âDating and Sex: A Guide for the 21st Century Teen Boyâ by Andrew P. Smiler, according to Susan Sisti, a local pastor who has been raising concerns about those and other books in the library.
âItâs really easy to go into the library and look around a little bit and find a filthy book that should not even be in a public library,â said Sisti, pastor of Open Door Church in Gillette. âThese books are absolutely appalling.â
Sisti has been working with Hugh and Susan Bennett, who went to the Campbell County Sheriffâs Office on Wednesday with concerns that the five books may have violated state child-sex laws. Sheriffâs officials reviewed the complaint and referred the case, which was first reported by the Gillette News Record, to prosecutors.
âItâs very challenging to imagine how a child whoâs sexually immature, physically immature, if thereâs any reasonable purpose for exposing them to sexual behavior thatâs far beyond their physical and mental and emotional and intellectual abilities to understand,â Hugh Bennett said.
He called the books âhard-core pornography to children.â
âThis Book is Gay,â Sisti pointed out, includes illustrations of male and female genitalia and descriptions of oral and anal sex. But child access to all kinds of material on the internet might be pertinent to the case, suggested Damsky.
âWhat 9-year-old kid today canât access Pornhub or whatever they want, you know what I mean?â Damsky said.
The library already faced protests and threats last summer over plans for a performance by a transgender magician. The magician canceled the show due to the threats.
The furor over the magician and the books prompted Wyoming Equality, a statewide LGBTQ advocacy group, to talk with local officials about the threats and offer support to library staff, the groupâs executive director, Sara Burlingame, said Friday.
âTheyâre being treated so poorly and with such violence and lack of goodwill,â Burlingame said. âTheyâve had threats. Folks have showed up and said menacing things about the library and librarians.â
AdvertisementLocal leaders had left her hopeful the rancor over the library would tone down, Burlingame said.
âIt seemed like there was some kind of opportunity to put the brakes on this and can we talk to each other,â Burlingame said. âIt seems like the train has jumped the tracks.â
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