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Old 10-08-2015, 12:04 PM  
NALEM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe Obenberger View Post
Originally Posted by ilnjscb View Post
The onus is on the producer to know and comply with the law. Whether or not it IS enforced is immaterial to the consideration of whether it COULD be enforced.

No one can be prosecuted for a felony under the United States constitution except upon presentment to and a favorable return from a Grand Jury in the district where the offense was alleged to be committed. It is the United States alone, the Department of Justice in particular, that has the right to present matters to a Grand Jury.
Quote:
Originally Posted by ilnjscb View Post
Winning may matter to some, not being charged at all matters to most. In other words, Joe, we don't want to need you.
And here again I agree with "ilnjscb"'s statement. Smart forward thinking business people, do not intentionally try to violate or circumvent the laws. I will never intentionally violate the local laws that control me as a person, or my business activities so as to put at risk my personal freedom, or the financial well being of the company and its employees and their families. I never want to be in a bad situation that I am at fault for creating, where I need legal counsel to "try" to get me out of it.


Quote:
Originally Posted by CyberSEO View Post
Ok and how could it be checked? I mean where the producer was located during the production? Does it say the GPS coordinates must be included?
EXIF metadata - depending upon the capabilities of your digital camera or smartphone, encoded in the image, your photos can have the exact coordinates of where the photo was exposed.

How to See Exactly Where a Photo Was Taken (and Keep Your Location Private)


Quote:
Originally Posted by pornlaw View Post
I can't add much that hasn't already been said about IDs. Be aware that the US govt is big on human trafficking now. I've been interviewed by the US Senate Subcommittee on Human Trafficking about trafficking in adult.

Bringing models in from foreign countries to work in the US is a violation of immigration law. Customs and ICE watch out for this and numerous models are already on their watch list and often get turned away at the entry point and sent home on the next plane. Often they are not only refused entry but are also not allowed to re-enter the US on any type of VISA for up to 10 years.
Michael was good to remind everyone of this fact. It really hurts the individual models the most, and they are banned from entering the US for many many years. I can think of a dozen models + that have gone through this. They were from: Canada, UK, HU, CZ, and RU.
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