Page 64 - AVN April 2020
P. 64
6 4 PUBLIC RELATIONS
Hooking up outdoors is more sex-citing
From doing it on the top of the Empire State Building to having sex on a moving
roller coaster, people love hooking up in risky places. The riskier the better, and the
more people think they might get caught, the more they like doing it in weird places.
Apparently, lots of people want to get it on in a public place. Having sex in public
consistently comes in as the No. 3 sex fantasy in most sex surveys. It trails behind
“having a threesome” and is “less wrong” than the No. 2 fantasy, which is “having
sex with my wife’s best friend.”
≠ STORY: ANKA RADAKOVICH
A N K A R A D
A V N . C O M | 4 . 2 0 | S E X P L O R A T I O N S
Law and Disorder
There seem to be more
news reports of arrests for
public sex than ever before.
Psychologically, it’s the fear
of getting caught that makes it
so sex-citing. A Catholic priest
caught a couple doing it in the
back pews at a church. And
a photographer captured a
couple at the Cannes Film
Festival banging right on the
red carpet—after everyone
left, of course—then posted
a pic of the faceless lovers
on Twitter. What happens in
Cannes stays on Twitter.
If you get caught, what are
the charges? According to
Clay White of the website
CriminalDefenseLawyer.com,
“indecency” or “lewdness”
usually includes “an element
of lustful or sexual indulgence
on the part of the defendant.”
“For example,” says White,
“engaging in sexual intercourse
in a public place
definitely satisfies the requirement.
Other public sexual
acts may also fall within the
definition of lewd or indecent
behavior.” Like a blow job.
“The level of sexual contact
required, if any, varies by
state,” says White, who notes
that the exposure of private
body parts, known as flashing
or exhibitionism (big on NYC
subways), “also constitutes
lewd behavior in some states.”
The defense on this one
could be “lack of intent to act
publicly,” says White, which
means someone could flash
his weenie on the subway and