8-6-2-1: OBSCENE MATERIAL:
   Any material or performance is obscene if:
      1.   The average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that, taken as a whole, it appeals to the prurient interest; and
      2.   The average person, applying contemporary adult community standards, would find that it depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, ultimate sexual acts or sadomasochistic sexual acts, whether normal or perverted, actual or simulated, or masturbation, excretory functions or level exhibition of genitals; and
      3.   Taken as a whole, it lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.
   Obscenity shall be judged with reference to ordinary adults, except that it shall be judged with reference to children or other specially susceptible audiences if it appears from the character of the material or the circumstances of its dissemination to be specially designed for or directed to such an audience.
   A person commits obscenity when, with knowledge of the nature or content thereof, or recklessly failing to exercise reasonable inspection which would have disclosed the nature or content thereof, he:
      1.   Sells, delivers or provides, or offers or agrees to sell, deliver or provide any obscene writing, picture, record or other representation or embodiment of the obscene; or
      2.   Presents or directs an obscene play, dance or other performance or participates directly in that portion thereof which makes it obscene; or
      3.   Publishes, exhibits or otherwise makes available anything obscene; or
      4.   Performs an obscene act or otherwise presents an obscene exhibition of his body for gain; or
      5.   Creates, buys, procures or possesses obscene matter or material with intent to disseminate it in violation of this Section, or of the penal laws or regulations of any other jurisdiction; or
      6.   Advertises or otherwise promotes the sale of material represented or held out by him to be obscene, whether or not it is obscene.
   In any prosecution for an offense under this Section evidence shall be admissible to show:
      1.   The character of the audience for which the material was designed or to which it was directed;
      2.   What the predominant appeal of the material would be for ordinary adults or a special audience, and what effect, if any, it would probably have on the behavior of such people;
      3.   The artistic, literary, scientific, educational or other merits of the material, or absence thereof;
      4.   The degree, if any, of public acceptance of the material in this State;
      5.   Appeal to prurient interest, or absence thereof, in advertising or other promotion of the material;
      6.   Purpose of the author, creator, publisher or disseminator.