DAN AARON POLSTER, District Judge.
This case involves a constitutional challenge to Ohio Administrative Code 4301:1-1-52, known as "Rule 52." Rule 52 prohibits the display of nudity and sexual behavior at establishments operating with a liquor license. Plaintiffs in this case are three Ohio strip clubs and a strip-club association. On February 17, 2004, Plaintiffs filed an action in this Court seeking to enjoin Defendants, the Ohio Liquor Control Commission, the Ohio Department of Public Safety and individual members of each agency (together the "State"), from enforcing sections (A)(2), (B)(2) and (B)(3)
From the start of this litigation, Defendants have defended Rule 52 primarily on the ground that it was enacted to combat the undesirable secondary effects that result when there is nude dancing at establishments that serve alcohol. In J.L. Spoons I, a divided panel of the Sixth Circuit found that "Rule 52 is a constitutional, content-neutral regulation of the undesirable secondary effects, including prostitution, drug trafficking, and assault, associated with nude dancing in an environment serving alcohol. It is not overbroad." 538 F.3d at 382. Following the panel's decision, Plaintiffs filed a new motion for preliminary injunction, asking the Court to rule on their as applied challenged. The Court declined to do so, concluding that the J.L. Spoons I decision
On December 27, 2012, the Sixth Circuit reversed the Court's dismissal of Plaintiffs' as applied challenge. The Sixth Circuit ruled that in J.L. Spoons I the prior panel had "simply accepted the established proposition that regulation targeting the secondary effects of strip clubs are presumed constitutional" and, therefore, it had not resolved Plaintiffs' challenge to the secondary effects evidence. J.L. Spoons II, 509 Fed.Appx. at 472. The panel explained that "[a]lthough laws targeted against secondary effects are presumed constitutional, it is a separate question whether, in a specific situation, there are secondary effects that need to be addressed." Id. at 471. The panel then discussed two Supreme Court cases in which the Court analyzed laws targeting adverse secondary effects associated with adult establishments; City of Renton v. Playtime Theaters, Inc., 475 U.S. 41, 106 S.Ct. 925, 89 L.Ed.2d 29 (1986) and City of Erie v. Pap's A.M., 529 U.S. 277, 120 S.Ct. 1382, 146 L.Ed.2d 265 (2000). Id. In Renton, "the [Supreme] Court held that a government may rely on any evidence that is `reasonably believed to be relevant'" in evaluating adverse secondary effects associated with adult establishments, including the experiences of "other cities." Id. (citing Renton, 475 U.S. at 51-52, 106 S.Ct. 925). In Pap's A.M., the Court's plurality opinion "reiterated that a government may reasonably rely on the experience of other jurisdictions relevant to the secondary-effects problem it is addressing." J.L. Spoons II, 509 Fed.Appx. at 471 (citing Pap's A.M., 529 U.S. at 297, 120 S.Ct. 1382) (O'Connor, J., plurality op.). The panel determined that "[t]hese cases establish that there is a general presumption that a government may regulate secondary effects associated with strip clubs by relying on a body of prior experience." Id. The panel then recognized that the Supreme Court has also laid out a procedure for plaintiffs who seek to rebut this presumption. Id. (quoting City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc., 535 U.S. 425, 453, 122 S.Ct. 1728, 152 L.Ed.2d 670 (2002)) (internal quotations omitted). The "procedure" that the panel referred to is the burden-shifting test, set forth by the Supreme Court's plurality opinion in Alameda Books, 535 U.S. at 453, 122 S.Ct. 1728. Id. at 472. Courts, including the Sixth Circuit, apply the test to determine whether a government has a substantial interest in enacting a regulation targeting secondary effects. Id. The burden-shifting test includes three steps:
Id. (citing Alameda Books, 535 U.S. at 438-39, 122 S.Ct. 1728) (O'Connor, J., plurality op.) (internal citations omitted). Because
Following the Sixth Circuit's decision remanding the case, the Court took testimony on three occasions. The first hearing, which took place on December 17, 2013 (hereinafter referred to as the "December 17 Evidentiary Hearing"), featured testimony from Dr. Daniel Linz, Dr. Richard McCleary and Agent Andrew Bouza. Prior to the hearing, Plaintiffs submitted an expert report from Dr. Linz, and the State submitted an expert report from Drs. McCleary and Wendy Rogeczi. Dr. Linz's report analyzes data from a study he conducted in which he attempted to gauge the impact that Rule 52 has had on adverse secondary effects in the cities of Dayton, Cleveland and Toledo. Dr. Linz testified that Rule 52 has had little to no effect in reducing adverse secondary effects. During his testimony, Dr. McCleary questioned the methodology that Dr. Linz used in his study, and he testified that his analysis of Dr. Linz's data shows that Rule 52 has reduced secondary effects crime.
During the December 17 Evidentiary Hearing, the State also presented evidence of crime occurring within adult cabarets.
At the April 14 Evidentiary Hearing, Plaintiffs presented the testimony of Greg Flaig and Jim StJohn. Messrs. Flaig and StJohn have experience working, on the management side, with adult entertainment businesses. Mr. Flaig is the Executive Director of the Owners Coalition (the "Coalition") in Ohio and the Secretary of the Buckeye Association of Club Executives
Both Messrs. Flaig and StJohn testified that they agree with most of Rule 52's prohibitions, and were only objecting to the portion of Rule 52 that prohibits the showing of the nipple and areola areas of the female breast. As a result, the Court asked Plaintiffs' counsel if Plaintiffs were only objecting to Rule 52's requirement that dancers wear, at a minimum, pasties. April 14, 2014 Evidentiary Hearing Transcript, Doc. # 121 ("April Hrg. Tr.") at 119. Counsel for Plaintiffs responded that while this was Plaintiffs' main objection to Rule 52, "and the thing that is most damaging to the plaintiffs and to their patrons," they were not abandoning their objection to Rule 52's other prohibitions. Id. at 123. At the end of the hearing, the Court directed counsel to advise the Court as to whether either side intended to introduce additional witnesses to address Rule 52's requirement that dancers wear pasties. Id. at 132.
On April 28, 2014, counsel notified the Court that Plaintiffs intended to call additional witnesses, including Dr. Judith Hanna, a cultural anthropologist and sociologist who researches and writes about art, dance, and society. The Court therefore scheduled a third, and final, evidentiary hearing for June 19, 2014 (hereinafter referred to as the "June 19 Evidentiary Hearing"). Prior to the hearing, Plaintiffs submitted an expert report from Dr. Hanna. At the June 19 Evidentiary Hearing, Plaintiffs called, in addition to Dr. Hanna, Judith Molter and Sue Russell, two entertainers who currently work at adult cabarets in Ohio. All three witnesses testified about the important expressive elements contained in dancing where the breast is fully exposed.
Although it falls within the "outer ambit of the First Amendment's protection," it is well-settled that nude dancing is expressive conduct that is protected by the First Amendment. J.L. Spoons I, 538 F.3d at 389 (quoting Pap's A.M., 529 U.S. at 289, 120 S.Ct. 1382). The Supreme Court has upheld laws restricting protected speech where the governmental interest in enacting the law is unrelated to the content of the speech. For instance, in Renton, the Supreme Court recognized that the government can enact content-neutral time, place and manner regulations that are aimed at ameliorating the deleterious secondary effects of sexually oriented establishments. Renton, 475 U.S. at 47, 106 S.Ct. 925. The Supreme Court held that content-neutral time, place and manner regulations of protected speech will survive constitutional scrutiny "so long as they are designed to serve a substantial governmental interest and do not unreasonably limit alternative avenues of communication." Id. (citations omitted). "[The Sixth Circuit] assess[es] the constitutionality [sic] of regulations that purport to ameliorate the deleterious secondary effects of sexually oriented establishments under the intermediate-scrutiny standard announced in City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, 475 U.S. 41, 106 S.Ct. 925, 89 L.Ed.2d 29 (1986)." Entm't Prods., Inc. v. Shelby Cnty., Tenn., 721 F.3d 729, 734 (6th Cir.2013) (citation omitted).
Rule 52 is a content-neutral regulation aimed at ameliorating the adverse secondary effects associated with nude dancing in an environment that sells liquor. See Renton, 475 U.S. at 47, 106 S.Ct. 925 (finding that the Renton ordinance is content-neutral because it "is
The Court first addresses Renton's second requirement, whether Rule 52 allows for reasonable alternative avenues of communication. The Sixth Circuit has recognized that "notwithstanding the reasonableness of the state's rationale, the statute must leave `the quantity and accessibility of speech substantially intact.'" Entm't Prods., 721 F.3d at 735 (quoting Alameda Books, 535 U.S. at 449, 122 S.Ct. 1728) (Kennedy, J., concurring in judgment). The Court finds that this requirement is satisfied. The "speech" in this case, the expressive messages that are conveyed by exotic dance where the female breast is fully exposed, is not in any way diminished by the absence of liquor. Plaintiffs' expert, Dr. Hanna, testified that the messages that are expressed by nudity in exotic dance are unrelated to the consumption or availability of alcohol on the premises:
June 19, 2014 Evidentiary Hearing Transcript, ("June Hrg. Tr.") at 32-33. Therefore, as the Sixth Circuit explained in J.L. Spoons I, "Rule 52 has a minimal impact on the marketplace of ideas because persons desiring to perform mainstream works of art involving nudity and sexual activity may do so in an establishment that is not licensed to sell liquor." 538 F.3d at 384.
Turning to the requirement that Rule 52 serve a substantial governmental interest, the Court, as discussed above, must apply the Alameda Books burden-shifting analysis. When a district court is faced with analyzing a regulation targeting adverse secondary effects, the regulation at issue is usually challenged just prior to, or immediately after, the effective date of the regulation.
Plaintiffs argue that "[t]he evidence on which [the State] rel[ies] is not sufficient
Under the first step of the Alameda Books burden-shifting analysis, the State must have a reasonable evidentiary basis for concluding that Rule 52 would ameliorate adverse secondary effects. Courts have recognized that "combating the harmful secondary effects associated with nude dancing [is] undeniably important," which include violent, sexual, and property crimes. Pap's A.M., 529 U.S. at 296, 120 S.Ct. 1382; see also Richland Bookmart, 555 F.3d at 524.
The Sixth Circuit has shed light on a state's burden for establishing that it has a reasonable basis to conclude that the regulation will combat adverse secondary effects. In Entm't Prods., the Sixth Circuit upheld a similar ordinance that requires "adult oriented establishments" to obtain a license and regulates the manner in which entertainment may be provided.
Here, the State has shown that the evidence it relied upon provided it with a reasonable basis for believing that Rule 52 would combat adverse secondary effects that result when there is nude dancing at establishments that serve alcohol. The State presented the Court with several types of evidence that it relied upon, both from a 2003 public hearing that the Ohio Liquor Control Commission (the "Commission") conducted before enacting Rule 52 and at the 2004 preliminary injunction hearing before the Court. The record shows that when promulgating Rule 52, the State relied on cases and a study regarding nudity in liquor-serving establishments and testimonials from people with experiences in these businesses.
Plaintiffs argue that the State has not relied on evidence that shows that covering the nipple and areola areas of the female breast, as required by Rule 52, will reduce adverse secondary effects. As noted above, at the April 14 Evidentiary Hearing, Plaintiffs' witnesses, Messrs. Flaig and StJohn, testified that their main objection to Rule 52 is the portion of the Rule that requires female dancers to wear, at a minimum, pasties. Specifically, Mr. StJohn testified that he does not think there is any evidence that establishes a connection between dancers at adult cabarets wearing pasties, as opposed to being fully topless, and criminal activity:
April Hrg. Tr. at 117. Following Mr. StJohn's testimony, Plaintiffs' counsel stated that, while his clients were not abandoning their objections to Rule 52's other prohibitions, this requirement "was especially indefensible as a matter of evidence and constitutional law." Id. at 127.
At the June 19 Evidentiary Hearing, Plaintiffs presented additional testimony concerning Rule 52's requirement that dancers at adult cabarets wear, at a minimum, pasties. Mss. Molter and Russell testified that covering the areola and nipple areas of the female breast takes away from the "beauty of breasts." June Hrg. Tr. at 42, 47. Ms. Molter also testified that wearing pasties distracts from the "sensual fantasy" she tries to create during her performances. Id. at 42. In addition, Dr. Hanna testified that she has counted "18 kinds of messages" that are conveyed by the nude breast; such as, honesty, independence, lack of pretense and eroticism. Id. at 26.
The Court credits the testimonies of Mr. StJohn, Mr. Flaig, Dr. Hanna, Ms. Molter and Ms. Russell; however, it finds that Rule 52's requirement that dancers at establishments that serve alcohol wear, at a minimum, pasties, passes constitutional scrutiny. First, in Pap's A.M., the Supreme Court found that the "requirement that dancers wear pasties and G-strings is a minimal restriction in furtherance of the asserted government interests, and the restriction leaves ample capacity to convey the dancer's erotic message." Pap's A.M., 529 U.S. at 301, 120 S.Ct. 1382 (internal citations omitted). Second, a plurality of the Court in Pap's A.M. rejected the dissent's view that the City of Erie must come forward with evidence showing that pasties and G-strings reduce crime:
529 U.S. at 300-01, 120 S.Ct. 1382 (internal citations omitted).
The evidence establishes that the State has met its burden under the first step of the Alameda Books burden-shifting analysis. The State passed Rule 52 to advance a government interest that the Supreme Court has recognized to be important. The State relied upon a variety of evidence that it reasonably believed demonstrated that establishments that serve alcohol and permit nude dancing are susceptible to adverse secondary effects. As the Supreme Court recognized in Pap's A.M., the government must be allowed a reasonable opportunity to experiment with solutions to address undesirable secondary effects
Turning to the second step of the Alameda Books analysis, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have not met their burden. The evidence put forth by Plaintiffs, the testimony of Dr. Linz and the study he performed, does not cast direct doubt on the secondary-effects rationale advanced by the State.
Dr. Linz's study involved analyzing criminal activity incidents occurring within a 500-foot radius of adult cabarets in the cities of Toledo, Cleveland and Dayton. 2013 Linz Expert Report ("2013 Linz Report"). In order to be included in the study, the adult cabaret had to be open for a period of 32 months, immediately before and after Rule 52 went into effect, and it had to be within a geographical area where police records existed. All of the adult cabarets satisfying these requirement were included in the study. As for the controls, they were comprised of non-adult establishments that served alcohol by the drink.
Dr. Linz separated the crime data into three categories: (1) "Person Crimes;" (2) "Property Crimes;" and (3) "Societal Crimes."
As an initial matter, in Entm't Prods., the Sixth Circuit found that Dr. Linz's work "is a minority viewpoint within the secondary-effects literature," and "federal court is simply not the appropriate forum for Dr. Linz and his colleagues to wage methodological combat with other studies on the secondary effects of adult speech." 721 F.3d at 738. Even taking Dr. Linz's study in the most favorable light, it fails to cast direct doubt on the State's contention
First, as Dr. Linz admitted during his testimony, much of his data for Dayton and Toledo is inconclusive. When Dr. Linz collected data from the police department in Dayton, there was only one adult cabaret that satisfied the requirements of his study. Dec. Hrg. Tr. at 60. Therefore, Dr. Linz testified that, because his data on Dayton is based on only one adult cabaret and control site, it is "the least reliable indicator." Id. As for Toledo, Dr. Linz admitted that his data on Person Crimes is also inconclusive. Dr. Linz's data on Person Crimes in Toledo shows that there was a dramatic increase in the number of Person Crimes that occurred in Toledo after Rule 52 went into effect, for both adult cabarets and non-adult establishments. Id. at 99. Dr. Linz admitted that the only conclusion that can be drawn from this data is that, after Rule 52 went into effect, there was an overall increase in the number of Person Crimes that were being committed in Toledo:
Dec. Hrg. Tr. at 99, 103-104.
Second, one can draw multiple conclusions from Dr. Linz's data, including conclusions that directly contradict Dr. Linz's. For instance, Dr. Linz concludes that "for the most part crime rates either remained constant or increased in the areas surrounding the adult businesses from the pre Rule 52 to post Rule 52 period." 2013 Linz Report at 7. However, if one were to ignore the data that Dr. Linz admitted is inconclusive,
Dec. Hrg. Tr at. 106-107. Therefore, similarly, the decrease in crime incidents around adult cabarets in the other categories also supports the conclusion that Rule 52 has had a positive impact on secondary effects crimes in these categories.
To refute Dr. Linz's report and conclusions, the State presented the testimony of Dr. Richard McCleary and a report he and Dr. Wendy Regoeczi authored. Drs. McCleary and Regoeczi disagree with the methodology that Dr. Linz used in his study. Their main criticism of Dr. Linz's study concerns his methodology for choosing control sites. They posit that Dr. Linz's analysis and conclusions are flawed because he did not carefully choose control sites. In their report, Drs. McCleary and
In addition, Dr. McCleary testified that his analysis of the crime data that Dr. Linz gathered shows that Rule 52 reduced crime by seven percent. Dec. Hrg. Tr. at 199. Dr. McCleary cautioned that due to the size of the study, the seven percent calculation has an error rate of eleven percent, which is above the five percent error rate that scholars strive to achieve in a well-conducted study. Id. at 200. Nonetheless, Dr. McCleary noted that "if you went to the legislature and told them that you had some program that would reduce crime in the State of Ohio by 7 percent, they would write a check." Id. at 207. Based on their analysis of Dr. Linz's data, Drs. McCleary and Regoeczi concluded that:
2013 McCleary Report at 13.
Similar to Entm't Prods., "[a]t best, the [Plaintiffs] have demonstrated that the [State] faced a choice between two reasonable alternative viewpoints when assessing the need for the challenged regulations." 721 F.3d at 738-39. As discussed above, the State has established that it relied on multiple evidentiary sources to support its rationale that enacting Rule 52 will combat adverse secondary effects. In response to that evidence, Plaintiffs attempt to "cast direct doubt" on the State's rationale by relying on Dr. Linz's report. However, despite his conclusions in his report, during his testimony, Dr. Linz admitted that much of his data is inconclusive. Dr. Linz also admitted that multiple conclusions can be drawn from his data, including a conclusion that supports the State's rationale for enacting Rule 52. "The [Plaintiffs] effectively ask [the Court] to second-guess the deliberative judgments of [the State]." Id. at 739. Like the court in Entm't Prods., the Court refuses to do so.
The State offered compelling evidence in support of Rule 52 through the testimony of Andrew Bouza under a related but distinct theory. Agent Bouza testified that, while working undercover in adult cabarets located in Toledo, he observed criminal
Mr. Bouza has worked as an Enforcement Agent for the Investigative Unit since July 2010. Dec. Hrg. Tr. at 150. The Investigative Unit is responsible for enforcing Title 43 of the Ohio Revised Code, the portion of the Code that deals with issues related to liquor permits. Id. Mr. Bouza generally handles cases dealing with "[u]nderage sales, underage drinking,... drug sales, prostitution, gambling, food stamps, [and] food stamp fraud" and has conducted undercover investigations in five adult cabarets located in or near Toledo.
Dec. Hrg. Tr. at 156-57. Mr. Bouza testified that during a "private dance," (a one-on-one dance between a patron and dancer typically in a private room or blocked-off area away from the general stage) "there were incidents where a female dancer would place her mouth over my clothed genitals, [and] either hum or blow hot air through [my] jeans." Id. at 168. Mr. Bouza even "paid two female dancers to perform oral sex on each other for additional money" and has also witnessed patrons engage in sexual acts with the dancers:
Id. at 169.
In addition, Mr. Bouza testified, in responding to questions from the State's attorney, that he has witnessed solicitation of prostitution and narcotics trafficking:
Dec. Hrg. Tr. at 162.
When asked whether he has observed dancers appearing to be intoxicated or impaired, Mr. Bouza responded that he has, and when asked how he could tell that they were intoxicated, Mr. Bouza stated that "they use chairs, tables, and walls to support themselves as they are walking. I had a dancer tell me that she was so intoxicated one night that she fell down and broke her tooth in the women's restroom." Id. at 158.
Mr. Bouza also testified about his experiences in establishments that do not offer nude dancing. Id. at 181. Mr. Bouza testified that he has never witnessed prostitution or dancers engaging in unlawful sexual activity at these establishments. Id. In establishments where Mr. Bouza has witnessed dancers engaging in unlawful sexual activity, cabarets where women were dancing fully nude, Mr. Bouza testified that the dancers consumed alcohol with the patrons and that every 10 to 15 minutes he was approached by a dancer or wait staff to buy the dancers a drink. Id. at 157-58. It is not surprising that when alcohol is consumed in an environment where there is nude or topless dancing, inhibitions of both dancers and patrons are lowered. This can lead to patrons and dancers engaging in unlawful sexual activity. Mr. Bouza's testimony, therefore, provides direct evidence that the product of nude or topless dancing and alcohol creates an environment conducive to unlawful sexual activity, prostitution and drug trafficking, criminal behavior that the State clearly has an interest in curtailing.
The report and testimony of Plaintiff's expert, Dr. Hanna, actually provides support for this conclusion. In her report, Dr. Hanna discusses the messages that are communicated by nudity in exotic dance, including, "messages of eroticism, temptation and allurement, pretense of sexual availability and longing." 2014 Hanna Expert Report at 8. In addition, at the June 19 Evidentiary Hearing, Dr. Hanna testified that the "whole notion" of adult entertainment businesses is to create the fantasy of intimacy that exists in the bedroom. June Hrg. Tr. at 27. These messages, which the nude dancers are trying to convey, when coupled with the lowering of inhibitions brought on by patrons and dancers consuming alcohol, increases the likelihood that the unlawful sexual contact and conduct that Agent Bouza discussed during his testimony will occur.
Mr. Flaig provided testimony about the adult entertainment businesses that were the subject of Agent Bouza's investigation and testimony. Mr. Flaig testified that, after being cited by the Commission, two of the adult cabarets that Agent Bouza investigated, Hush and Fantasy Land, joined the Coalition. April Hrg. Tr. at 24-25. Since joining the Coalition, the Commission has not issued any citations to Hush and it has issued only one citation to Fantasy Land. Id. at 25.
Mr. Flaig also testified about the process by which dancers are able to perform at adult cabarets. In Ohio, dancers are not employees of the adult cabarets where they perform. Rather, a dancer who wants to perform at a particular cabaret, will, prior to her performance, enter into a lease agreement with the cabaret's manager, the Entertainment Tenant Lease ("Lease Agreement"). Id. at 38-39. The Lease Agreement allows the dancer to lease space within the cabaret (the area in which the dancer is permitted to perform is limited to the space that she leases). Id. Mr. Flaig explained that "the lease itself is set up so that they have total autonomy and control over their own entertainment function." Id. at 39. For instance, nothing in the lease prohibits a dancer, when she's not performing on stage, from receiving and consuming an alcoholic beverage purchased by a customer. Id. at 43.
The Court finds that while Mr. Flaig's testimony is informative as to the efforts that adult entertainment businesses are making to comply with Rule 52, it is not sufficient to counter Mr. Bouza's testimony. First, Mr. Flaig testified that approximately sixty percent of the adult cabarets in Ohio are members of the Coalition. Id. at 35. Therefore, assuming that membership in the Coalition helps to prevent criminal activity that occurs within adult cabarets, nearly half of the adult cabarets in Ohio are not members of the Coalition. For the adult cabarets that are not part of the Coalition, Rule 52 is necessary to deter criminal activity that may be caused by the
Second, while Mr. Flaig's testimony establishes that the Coalition's Due Diligence Program is aimed at deterring criminal activity within adult cabarets, there is no evidence that the Program, in isolation, is adequate to deter this criminal activity. Mr. Flaig testified that sometime around 2010, after Rule 52 went into effect, he began tracking the number of adult cabarets that received liquor citations for unlawful sexual conduct. Id. at 65. According to Mr. Flaig, in the four-year period that Rule 52 has been in effect, the Commission has only issued twenty-four citations for unlawful sexual conduct. Id. at 80. Mr. Flaig testified that this is a relatively low number considering that there are "over 3,000 young ladies that entertain per night" at more than 100 clubs. Id. This suggests to the Court that as a result of various efforts, including Rule 52 and the Coalition's Due Diligence Program, criminal activity within adult cabarets has decreased. The Court posed this suggestion to Mr. Flaig:
Id. at 84-85. Mr. Flaig responded that he did not agree. Id. In explaining why he did not agree with the Court's conclusion, Mr. Flaig stated that "when it really boils down to Rule 52, Rule 52 is a superfluous law ... because if it didn't exist tomorrow, the very enforcement agencies, such as vice and all the others, would be able to arrest people and put them away when they break [the law]." Id. at 86. The Court comes to the opposite conclusion. As noted above, Agent Bouza's testimony established that the product of nude or topless dancing and alcohol creates an environment conducive to criminal activity. There is no evidence that in the absence of Rule 52 the Due Diligence Program would adequately deter this criminal activity. In addition, Mr. Flaig's response misses the point. Rather than "arrest people and put them away when they break [the law]," the State has decided to address the problem by eliminating at least one of the causes of the criminal activity that occurs within adult cabarets.
For the forgoing reasons, the Court finds that Rule 52 serves a substantial governmental interest. The evidence establishes that the State, when it promulgated Rule 52, had a reasonable evidentiary basis for concluding that nude dancing in adult cabarets leads to undesirable secondary effects. Dr. Linz's report and testimony concerning the impact of Rule 52 does not "cast direct doubt" on the State's secondary effects rationale. In addition, the State has presented evidence that the combination of nude dancing with the consumption of alcohol by dancers and patrons increases the likelihood of criminal activity within the premises of adult cabarets. Accordingly, the Court upholds Rule 52 and dismisses Plaintiffs' as applied challenge.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
OAC Ann. 4301:1-1-52.
ORC Ann. 2907.01.
Point Source Weighted Average Unweighted Average Adult Businesses (01/15/08-09/07/10) 3.85 12 Adult Businesses (09/08/10-05/01/13) 14.82 37.5 Non-Adult Bars and Nightclubs (01/15/08-09/07/10) 4.42 10.5 Non-Adult Bars and Nightclubs (09/08/10-05/01/13) 12.89 30.25
2013 Linz Report at 4.
Point Source Weighted Average Unweighted Average Adult Businesses (01/28/08-09/07/10) 5.15 17.13 Adult Businesses (09/08/10-04/18/13) 5.03 14.25 Non-Adult Bars and Nightclubs (01/28/08-09/07/10) 10.04 28.25 Non-Adult Bars and Nightclubs (09/08/10-04/18/13) 12.02 30.12
2013 Linz Report at 6.