Nothing found in this site should be taken as legal advice. If
you want legal advice, find a lawyer. The law books contain much
more detail than has been included in this site. Many cross references
and important judicial decisions noted in those books clarify
the meaning of each law.
For helplines
and other legal advice please visit our legal
advice page.
Simple
Guide
Sex - legal over the age of 16 so long as it's mutually
consensual
Prostitution - legal (although many laws criminalise the
activities involved with it)
Porno - legal so long as it's sold in licenced premeises
Swinging - kind of legal
S/M - legal so long as no lasting wounds and no piercing
for pleasure
In Depth
Guide
Laws relating to each topic are written in brackets even though
they may seldom or ever be enforced (especially the older ones)
Introduction
Britain has dozens of laws restricting our sexual activities,
some dating back hundreds of years! Many of these laws contradict
each other. Quite a number are no longer regularly enforced but,
while they remain on the statute books, one never knows when someone
will get caught out. This is arbitrary and unfair.
You may wonder why these antiquated laws don't get repealed. It
is because no British politician has ever been courageous enough
to publicly appear pro-sex. They know that the majority of people
believe in "live and let live" but they prefer not to lose the
votes of the vociforous, grundyist, anti-sex minorities. More
importantly, British politicians live in fear of being exposed
for their secretly libidinous lifestyles, and go to great lengths
to appear po-faced in public. So what we get is more restrictive
laws, not less!
In the last few years we have gained some new freedoms. As a result
of a court case under the Human Rights Act, the British Board
of Film Classifiaction licenses hard-core porn. Another case (Whiplash
1996) made sex parties legal. Next we need a successful brothel
case, and a clear-cut successful S/M case, probably using the
Human Rights Act. What an idiotic way to get freedoms which governments
know most people want, but for which they will not introduce legislation.
The SFC has drafted a Sexual Freedom Bill but this has been ignored
by the Home Office. The Sexual Offences Act 2003 makes the law
more, rather than less restrictive. It includes a clause that
makes the male in heterosexual consensual intercourse with a female
under thirteen automatically guilty of rape (Clause 6) carrying
a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. The age limit for indecent
photos was raised from 16 to 18 despite the fact that the age
of consent for both hetero and gay sex is 16! Sixteen-year-olds
kissing in public would also be criminalised. Please!
We have tried to describe this legal mess as simply as possible
for you to digest. You may have noticed that restricive laws don't
seem to apply outside sex establishments. For example, you can
walk into Waterstones and purchase a magazine or book featuring
photos that would be illegal in a licensed sex shop because it
is subject to strict regulation. You can go to an art gallery,
the theatre, a conference, festival or workshop and see things
which are forbidden in licensed porn. This just goes to show how
perverse the British are. Still hypocrites at heart.
The SFC believes that the law has no business in what consenting
adults view or do between themselves. We also believe that the
laws should be the same for gay men as gay women and heterosexuals.
Sexual
Behaviour
SEX IN PRIVATE is legal except:-
where force or threat of force is used
when one of the parties has not consented (see date-rape drugs
and issues on consent, below
when the sex involves S/M - see below
when one or both partners is under the age of 16 for hetero
or lesbian sex and now also for gay sex (Sexual Offences Amendment
Act 2000)
when sex involves animals
SEX IN PUBLIC
PLACES is legal between heteros and lesbians (but not gay men)
if it does not cause alarm or distress - so "dogging" is legal
if it is in a secluded place. However, if you have sex in a place
where you are likely to be seen by the general public, for example
in the street, you would be contravening the Sexual Offences Act
because alarm would have been caused. There is always the risk,
however, of prosecution for "outraging public decency" (Common
Law Offence).
NUDE / TOPLESS
SUNBATHING on the beach and in parks is legal. Nudity is even
legal in Selfridges if it's art. Nudity in what is generally considered
to be inappropriate places, however, could be prosecuted under
the Indecent Displays Act and Sexual Offences Act.
EXPOSING
MALE GENITALS in public in order to shock is illegal, and can
be prosecuted under the Sexual Offences Act 2003 Section 66. However,
playful mooning would probably not be prosecuted unless someone
took offence. There is, however, the risk of prosecution for "outraging
public decency" (Common Law Offence).
SEX AT NIGHT
CLUBS became legal since the Whiplash Club was acquitted in 1996,
after being prosecuted under the Disorderly Houses Act of 1751.
However, councils are now requiring sex clubs, public houses,
lap dancing clubs and other venues showing nudity to purchase
an entertainment licence which can cost £30,000 per annum. Occasional
licences cost less, depending on the size.
The code of conduct of the strippers or performers has to be submitted
to the local authority which imposes conditions. The City of Westminster
insists that lap dancers wear g-string but the Borough of Camden
does not. Licences are granted if there are no objections upheld
from the local residents, but the council also takes into account
proximity to areas of highest levels of recorded crime and cumulative
adverse impact of sex-related licensed activities within the vicinity.
Conferences and workshop events do not require special licences
to include nudity or sexual activity. Lesbian and gay clubs have
been allowed freedom but may need an entertainment licence if
shows are staged.
Despite being legal, many citizens are afraid to go to sex or
fetish clubs for fear of being recognised - eg council workers
might loose their jobs.
SEX PARTIES
AT HOME are tolerated, but if you charge for entrance you may
need a an entertainment licence or be prosecuted for managing
a brothel. (The Disorderly Houses Acts make sex parties illegal
if run on a regular basis). Plus there is always the rist of prosecution
for "corrupting public morals" (Common Law Offence).
If you charge for drinks you will require a liquor licence.
LESBIAN,
GAY. BISEXUAL AND TRANSGENDER ISSUES
Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988 was repealed in Scotland
in 2000 and in the rest of Great Britain on 10th July 2003, so
that authorities can now "promote homosexuality". Lesbian, gay,
bi and transgender (LGBT) issues can now safely be addressed in
schools and libraries. Teachers can intervene against homophobic
bullying and abuse.
MALE GAY SEX is legal in private, between consenting men who are
16 or over (Sexual Offences Amendment Act 2000). It is no longer
limited to two people. Men may hold hands and kiss in public (Sexual
Offences Act 2003).
Cottaging (sex in toilets) and sex in public is illegal. The new
Sexual Offences Act makes sex in public lavatories with the door
closed lawful, although the same Act makes it illegal to peep
at this sex act through a hole in the cubicle!
LESBIAN SEX has no special legislation, other than the normal
criminal law of coercion, and age limits under the Indecency with
Children Act (now 18+ years thanks to the Sexual Offences Act
2003).
DATE RAPE
DRUGS are illegal under the Sexual Offences Act 2003
SEX WITH
ANIMALS is illegal in Britain. The courts view in recent times
has been that the individual needs help rather than punishment,
and a fine or community service is imposed.
BDSM - short
for Bondage Domination Sado Masochism. In other words, using power-play,
role-play, domination, submission and corporal punishment in sex.
It is legal so long as it is consensual, any marks or wounds last
no longer than 10 minutes, and there is no piercing for pleasure.
These limitations were decided after the notorious Spanner Case.
Three gay men were sentenced under the Offences Against the Person
Act 1861. The ruling was not overturned on appeal and they served
three years in prison. Later the case was taken to the European
Court and still not over turned.
Since the Spanner conviction, however, three other cases of marking
have been acquitted, one involving "bottom branding" between a
married couple. The Spanner Trust is working hard to get the statute
law changed to ensure there are no more prosecutions, and make
S/M acceptable in modern society.
INCEST is
illegal between siblings. The Criminate Law Revision Committee
recommended that incest between a brother and sister older than
20 should no longer be a crime, but Parliament has done nothing
to reform the law.
SEXUAL DISCRIMINATION
There are no specific laws against discrimination on the grounds
of sexual taste, orientation or gender modification, apart from
the ordinary laws against discrimination and unfair dismissal.
People are sometimes treated badly in work situations and even
fired because of sexual orientation. These issues can also effect
care of children.
The SFC supports gay marriages, which are not recognised in Britain,
even though in Denmark and Holland same sex couples can legally
marry just in the same way as heterosexual couples. The SFC feels
that any laws recognising relationships should include the full
range of long-term ones. In 2004, the Government gave a guarantee
that the new equality and human rights commission will cater for
the distinct needs of disabled people and that the programme of
legal reform will continue. This will include disabled people's
rights to be sexual beings.
CONSENT OF
PEOPLE WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES
The law is currently unclear and insensitive to the sexual needs
of people with learning disabilities. The question of valid consent
needs clarifying. Currently, the legal definition is that the
individual must be able to understand the nature of the sex act
and its consequences, there is no pressure used, and they are
able to communicate their decision to have sex. There are a few
guidance notes on what to look for when seeing if a relationship
is consenting or not. These include:
Is there a power imbalance in the relationship (authority,
intellect, physical ability, wealth, strength)?
Are any inducements being used to gain sexual activity?
Do both partners have the same expectations for the relationship
(i.e. just sex vs. loving relationship)?
Are there any actual or perceived threats to the person?
Are both parties able to effectively give consent (verbally and
non verbally) and can they appreciate the other partner's right
to refuse consent.
Do both partners understand the possible consequences of sexual
contact (pregnancy, STI's)
Is the person engaging in the act voluntarily, free from coercion?
Is the person able to protect themselves from harm, or
avoid situations where harm must occur?
Does the person have the assertiveness skills to stop sexual
contact/leave the relationship if they wanted to?
Is the person aware of appropriate times and places where
sexual activity can take place and what behaviours would be illegal?
Care Warkers including all paid and voluntary staff, may not legally
have sex with people with learning disabilities, even if they
have a learning disability themselves. (Sexual Offences Act 2003)
The Mental Incapacity Act which will become into effect in September
2005 has been subject to pre-legislative scrutiny by a Joint Parliamentary
Committee. The Committee published its report in November 2003
and the Government published its response in February 2004. see
: http://www.publications.parliament.uk/
pa/cm200304/cmbills/120/2004120.htm http://www.dca.gov.uk/menincap/mcbfactsheet.htm
http://www.mind.org.uk/News+policy+and+campaigns/Policy/Mental+Capacity+Bill.htm
Basic Issues:
In practice, there is no clear accepted definition of capacity
to sexual consent
There is no concensus of what people need to understand
about sex in order to consent to it
Duty of care may go beyond the legal capacity to consent
Capacity to consent can improve with experience. People
with learning disabilities should not automatically be given a
test and test results should not be laid down irreversibly in
clinical notes
Ongoing education / training and support is essential
Boundaries in school settings and residential homes need
to be formulated
All local authorities should have an expert on consent
to go to for help and advice.
Pornography
PORNO- POSSESSION
You are allowed to possess any porno so long as it doesn't contain
illegal acts (although this may change - see our report).
Possession of Indecent images of children under 18 is criminalised
by the Criminal Justice Act 1988 and Public Order Act 1994 and
also the Sexual Offences Act 2003. The latter raised the age limit
from 16 to 18. This includes computer imagery and simulated imagery,
but not drawings and paintings.
PORNO - IMPORTING
Customs and Excise are a rule unto themselves and have no published
guidelines, although they are supposed to follow the rules of
the British Board of Film Classification. All you can do is follow
the same rules as possession and hope for the best, which is a
shame as you will find much more interesting porn abroad. If they
stop you on entry into this country (or seize a parcel addressed
to you), your home could be searched and your porn collection
seized. The importation of porn is illegal under the Customs Consolidation
Act 1876.
PORN FOR
RESEARCH
Academics can claim justification for posession of prohibited
material for research purposes, ie indecent images of children.
MAKING PORN
It has always been legal to shoot hardcore, and edit pornographic
films in the UK. The restrictions are on selling and distributing
it. Illegal acts, such as actual rape, strong S/M, or sex with
children or animals would, however, make filming or photography
of them illegal.
WATCHING
PORN ON TV
The new Broadcasting Act still prohibits sexually explicit TV
shows and forbids the advertising of proscribed foreign sex satellite
services. Even pay-to-view channels broadcast within the UK are
not allowed to show explicit sex. The Independent Television Commission
(ITC) was replaced by Ofcom in December 2003. The SFC recommended
to Ofcom that it deregulate porn in 2004. Ofcom consulted the
public on "ALL aspects of broadcasting regulation" and in 2005
maintained the ban on R18/hardcore material.
PORN ON YOUR
COMPUTER
The Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1994 criminalises computer
porn. You are unlikely to be prosecuted unless visiting kiddie
porn sites. Since 1999 peope who have been found downloading indecent
photographs of children on their computers are being charged under
the Protection of Children Act 1978, following the Bowden precedent.
Downloading an image and possession of an image were defined in
the Fellows and Arnold case.
Pete Townshend was charged also with "incitement to distribute"
because he apparently asked for the images on the website. So
many persons have been found to have downloaded pictures from
paedophile sites, included prominent persons, that the police
have given up investigating every case. Many people investigated
for this offence have committed suicide, the latest being an admiral
in Gibraltar in January 2005.
All sexually explicit sites open with a warning and a statement
to ensure that the viewer is 18 or over, to prevent unsuspecting
adults and children from entering. However, you can enter a site
via a link and never see the home page with its warning.
PORNO - ACTING
is legal unless
the actor is under 18
the actor has not consented
illegal acts are performed eg with animals and/or children
PORNO - SELLING
Trading is legal so long as videos and DVDs have been certificated
by the Britsh Board of Film Classification. They are not certified
if they contain:-
images that involve people under the age of 18
sex with animals
acts involving shit or piss
female ejaculation if it looks like urination
S/M
Rape or simulated rape (to prevent a hateful and/or violent
impulse being aroused in the viewer).
Magazines
and books sold in licensed sex shops are legal unless they contain
the acts prohibited in videos. This is because the Crown Prosecution
Service and Customs follow the standards set by the British Board
of Film Claassification. Unlicensed premeses eg bookshops and
newsagents self-censor as they wish to avoid the risk having all
their stock seized.
The written word is now not prosecuted, but also may be self-censored
by publishers and distributors. There are no definitions of what
may and may not be described or shown lawfully in Britain. Swapping
amateur porn is classed as trading, under the Video Recordings
Act and therefore theoretically the material requires a licence
from the British Board of Film Classification, which costs around
£1,000 per film and the films should strictly speaking be traded
through a licensed sex shop . If you are selling to the public
in a sex shop, you need a sex shop licence.
For an erotic show at an exhibition centre, you need an Entertainment
licence from the Council, to which conditions will be attached,
eg no complete nudity. Either may cost as much as £20,000 a year.
Occasional licences for a one-off event costs less.
Newsagents have adopted a "top shelf" system to stop housewives
complaining about porn when searching for Women's Realm, and stop
children, people in wheelchairs and people of small stature being
able to reach the porn! In any event, such porn cannot be too
explicit, ie "hard" as this can only be sold in a licensed sex
shop. It must constitute less than ten percent of the total publictions
on sale in the shop. People must be over 18 in order to purchase
both soft and hard porn. The City of Westminster Act rigorously
suppresses unlicensed sex shops.
Galleries and art centres displaying erotic High Art and Low Art
are normally not prosecuted, even for hard-core material, unless
they contain indecent images of children under 18, or even innocently
naked children. Erotic art does get be seized by customs, which
sometimes means it cannot appear in the show it was being sent
over for.
It also remains an offense to send indecent items through the
mail (Post Office Act). Hard-core porno cannot be sold to the
public by mail order. It can only be purchased in a licensed sex
shop over the counter (Video Recordings Act).
PORNO IN
CINEMAS
Films
can only be shown if they have been certificated by the British
Board of Film Classification under the guidelines mentioned above.
R18 films and videos, ie hard core porn can only be show in cinema
clubs, not public cinemas. The audience must all be 18 or over.
(The Cinemas Act 1985 censors films to be shown in cinema clubs).
The first fully-licensed R18 cinema club opened in April 2003:
the Sunset Cinema Club in Brewer Street, Soho.
18-rated films as opposed to R18 films, can be shown in cinemas
but they do not usually contain hard core imagery unless it can
be 'artistically justified' (Cinema Act 1985). Art Film Theatres
with private membership can show any film they wish. These theatres
include the National Film Theatre which organises the Lesbian
and Gay Film Festival and the London Film Festival and the Institute
of Contempory Arts in London. Even in these venues, however, local
Councils can still try to stop screenings that they consider unsuitable
(eg Crash at the LFT).
Small cinema clubs such as The Willow in Old Street have recently
disappeared due to Hackney Council demanding large licence fees.
An erotic film festival planned at The Lux Cinema was banned in
2000 by Hackney Council hours before opening, following a "shock-horror"
exposé in the Hackney Gazette. Once the newspapers have shamed
a sex event, or there has been one single complaint, the Council
is likely revoke the necessary entertainment licences.
EROTIC DISPLAY
There are old Common Laws against the exhibition indecent activities,
pictures or things. They prevent sex shops displaying goods in
their windows, and advertising hoardings from being too explicit
or plain horny!
SEX EDUCATION
BOOKS
Books for adults can thankfully show images of what they are teaching
us - at last! But sex education books for children and teenagers,
however tame, are vulnerable to prosecution for obscenity, because
the young readers might be "corrupted". Sadly, the Learning and
Skills Act 2000 removed any local authority responsibility to
provide sex education.
GOVERNMENT
GRANTS are not given to people for projects which involved the
creation of pornography or other material for the sex trade (although
thankfully the National Lottery is not so restricted and gave
£359,291 to the UK Network of Sex Workers in February 2005). Job
Centres thus refuse to carry advertisements for vacancies in the
sex industry, eg lap dancers.
Performance
STRIPTEASE AND EROTIC PERFORMANCE
Most local councils now require an entertainment licence for striptease,
lapdancing and nude performance art, unless the show is part of
a conference or workshop event. When applying for a licence, the
venue (which may be a public house) is required to publish an
advertisement put up a notice inviting local residents to object.
In addition, the application may be rejected on Health and Safety
grounds. Licences can cost £30,000 per annum, although an occasional
licence costs less, depending on the size of the audience.
THEATRE PRODUCTIONS
The Theatres Act 1968 abolished theatre censorship but retained
the law against obscene performances. That can lead to revocation
of the necessary entertainment licence.
Prostitution
BEING A PROSTITUTE is legal - both hetero and gay, so long as
he/she is 18 or over. The problem for prostitutes is that most
things they need to do to earn a living are illegal, ie:-
explicitly advertising their services - although newspapers
now happily take "massage" adverts and many prostitutes now advertise
on the Internet.
soliciting in the street - which can mean as little as
walking along with a condom in your handbag - is outlawed by the
Street Offences Act 1959. Street walkers can also be prosecuted
under the Vagrancy Act 1824. Men can be prosecuted for "importuning",
whereas women cannot (Sexual Offences Act 2003).
hanging out in the street - some street workers are being
prosecuted for public order offences and receive ASBOs - Anti
Social Behaviour Orders. Local authorities use ASBOs out of context
to ban prostitutes from working in their area. There is also the
possibility of prosecution for "outraging public decency" (Common
Law). This has been used against "back-ally" sex workers including
those who give quick hand jobs.
cause alarm, distress or harassment - which could be from
just "being a prostitute" - under the Public Order Act 1986.
The Licensing Act 1964 prohibits landlords serving a prostitute
and the Town Police Clause Act of 1847 criminalises selling refreshments
to sex workers sitting together. The worry about the latter supposedly
defunct Act is that it could criminalise health workers and volunteers
who run drop-in centres.
prostitutes paying men to help them (although you may be
allowed to employ a female "maid"). The Sexual Offences Acts 1956
and 2003 criminalise men for living off immoral earnings, and
men and women for "controlling prostitutes".
working together in a flat, in a brothel, massage parlour
or for an agency is illegal under the Disorderly Houses Act 1751
and the Sexual Offences Acts. It is normally tolerated in practice,
so long as there are no drugs or underage people involved, and
the neighbours have not complained.
renting a flat is often difficult, as standard leases forbid
the premeses to be used for "immoral purposes" and this means
that a prostitute risks having her tenancy terminated.
as they are providing a service, prostitutes should strictly
speaking charge VAT if their earnings are over and above the relevant
limit. But clients don't want to be identified, let alone be handed
a VAT invoice. Prostitutes fear the Inland Revenue making extortionate
income tax assessments (eg the Lindi St Clair case). As prostitution
iteself is lawful, the income is taxable. Most sex workers thus
make the choice to either (a) work undercover, stating another
profession on their tax form. The Inland Revenue really don't
care what you call yourself, so long as you pay your tax. or (b)
work outside the tax system, in the black economy. To avoid suspicion
and keep their National Insurance up-to-date, many sign on at
the Job Centre for six months after which Jobseekers Allowance
ends.
sex workers have few legal rights and little protection
from the law. They find it very difficult to get police protection
or to take a case to court against a violent client for assault
and there are many violent clients. Technically, if a client refuses
to pay, that is rape because consent was a condition of payment.
Juries, however, rarely convict a man of raping a prostitute.
LIVING WITH
A PROSTITUTE
For men, this can be interpreted as living off immoral earnings,
and illegal under the Sexual Offences Acts 1965 and 2003, even
if you are her son or boyfriend. Two female prostitutes in the
same building constitutes a brothel and each (and the landlord)
are liable to prosecution.
PHONE SEX
is legal, but restricted by guidelines drawn up by the ICSTS under
the Telecommunications Act 1984 which criminalises indecent phone
conversations. Chatlines operating in Britain are therefore expensively
routed through foreign providers to avoid prosecution under British
regulation, which requires every phone call to be recorded and
the caller to be warned that this will happen, thus frightening
him off!
DOMINATION
AND FANTASY PARLOURS - grey area. If intercourse, oral or manual
sex takes place, they would come under the prohibitions regarding
prostitution. Dominatrices also need to stick to the regulations
for S/M enforced by the Offences Against the Person Act. Selling
services which include piss and scat counts as prostitution.
RUNNING AN
ESCORT AGENCY OR BROTHEL is illegal under the Sexual Offences
Acts because it is controlling prostitutes. The police tend to
turn a blind eye so long as there are no drugs or underage people
involved, and nobody has complained, but you cannot rely on this.
There are also prosecutions if the business is large-scale and
/ involves illegal immigrants. Yet the nicest Madams (and Monsieurs)
have been sent to jail in recent years. In 2003 Westminster Council
even obtained Compulsory Purchase Orders for houses being used
for prostitution, at 3 and 4 Peter Street, and 2 Berwick Street,
Soho. The Council want the houses to be used for residential purposes
only and the orders made eight prostitutes homeless.
CONTROLLING
A PROSTITUTE
The Sexual Offences Acts 1956 and 2003 are also used against agencies
and parlours and even drop-in staff and employed health workers.
BEING A CLIENT
is legal, unless you are kerb crawling. The government has indicated,
however, that it is considering the creation of a criminal offence
of paying a woman for sex (as is now the case in Sweden).
KERB CRAWLING
Offenders can be prosecuted under the Sexual Offences Act 1985.
The resultant publicity has caused some defendants to suffer loss
of employment and/or divorce.
Miscellaneous
ABORTION
Legal in England, Scotland and Wales up to 24 weeks of pregnancy,
but totally illegal in Northern Ireland.
CORRUPTING
MORALS
Society is "protected" by the Common Law against Conspiracy to
corrupt public morals but this offence has not led to a conviction
since the Oz trial in the 1960's.
WHAT TO
DO IF THE POLICE RAID YOUR HOME
see advice on http://www.spannertrust.org.uk
For helplines and other legal advice please visit our legal
advice page.