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Marc of Frankfurt
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Fakten und Argumente in der Prostitutionsdebatte

#21

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Argumentationen zur auch in den U.S.A. scharf polarisierten Prostitutionsdebatte


Unser Forummitglied Michael hat einen Zeitungsartikel gegen Legalisierung analysiert und die falsche Argumentation in seinem Leserbrief aufgedeckt:

Fragwürdiger Artikel und
Leserbrief von Michael Goodyear (December 9, 2007 @ 5:14pm):
http://badgerherald.com/oped/2007/12/04 ... tion_l.php





Bild





Ein in diesem Forum schonmal zitierter Professor aus Washington untersucht den amerikanischen Prostitutionsdiskurs und stellt viele Mißinterpretationen richtig:
Dateianhänge
Prostitution Facts and fictions Weitzer Contexts.pdf
"Prostitution: Facts and Fictions"
Although sometimes romanticized in popular culture, prostitution is more often portrayed as intrinsically oppressive and harmful. How accurate is this image?
Feature article by Prof. Ronald Weitzer in: Context
(503.76 KiB) 2389-mal heruntergeladen

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#22

Beitrag von JayR »

Googling Johns

An ex-escort tells sex workers how to be savvy and safe online. The abridged version: Don't use Craig's List.
by Bonnie Ruberg

Amanda Brooks has been a stripper, a bikini-bar waitress, and a professional escort. But her most recent title she earned with all her clothes on. Brooks (her "professional name") is the self-published author of The Internet Escort’s Handbook Book 1: The Foundation, the debut chapter of a four-part series that the author is hoping will become a canon for online escorts.

Aimed at already-established escorts and women considering the job, The Internet Escort’s Handbook tackles questions that are existential (“Is This Something You Really Want To Do?”), medical ("What If Your Client Has an STI?"), and practical (“What’s the Best Way to Clean Up Condoms?”). The book also includes entire sections addressing an escort’s personal appearance ("Misconception #9: I have to be blonde and have big boobs, or be model-thin, to make money. Honestly: No.") and conveys Brooks's attitude about the differences among escorting, prostitution, and, well, dating. “If you are selling your time… and the unspoken offer of sexual entertainment, you’re an escort,” she writes. “If you won’t have sex with the man you’re dating unless he buys you an expensive dinner, you’re a relatively cheap prostitute.”

Unlike traditional escorting, online escorts use the web to advertise their real-life services, independently advertising on sites like Eros-Guide.com, as well as using public-information databases to screen customers. Here’s how the screening process works: after seeing an escort’s ad on a site, the would-be client emails or calls her with his name, address, even license number. Then the escort can read up on him via sites like Google and PublicData.com to make sure nothing looks suspicious. “If someone’s information doesn’t match up, that’s a definite red flag,” says Brooks over the phone from the West Coast, where she now lives. Once she got a call from a customer who, as a little research revealed, shared a house with a police officer. “I definitely didn’t meet that guy.”

Brooks's escorting days weren't some sex-tourist gonzo experiment. ("Amanda Brooks is not a journalist who became an escort in the hopes of a 'big story,'" reads her press bio.) Originally based in the South, the self-billed "provocateur" worked in the sex industry for nearly a decade, two and a half years of which she spent in the Dallas area as an independent escort. On her blog, she describes how she tried to break into the industry again and again while attending a "well-known Texas university," struggling against the odds of seedy bars and unsupportive boyfriends. “I knew next to nothing about the possible dangers I was facing back then,” she recalls.

Brooks persisted because, as someone who was "determined-to-be-deviant," she thought of sex work as “a glamorous and free way of making a good living… It was something I thought only the strongest and most amazing women could do.” Even after doing it for years, she still feels sex work can “make you into a strong woman. Done the right way, and with the right person… it can be a very, very good thing in your life.”

Then why did Brooks stop? “It’s the oldest story in the book,” she explains in a slow, sweet Texan drawl. “I met a man. I was increasingly distracted by my feelings for him while I was with clients, so I needed to make a decision.” Nowadays, it’s her boyfriend who helps support her while she works on her books, and the one-woman company (Golden Girl Press, LLC) she founded to publish them. Brooks also keeps busy as a safe-sex activist with the organization SWOP East, running a condom donation program for sex workers in Chile.

Back in 2002, Brooks had the idea for The Internet Escort’s Handbook. “When I was a stripper, I always wanted to write a stripper book. But frankly I wasn’t a very good stripper. Then, as an escort, I kept trying to read about other people’s experiences.” So she decided to write the books she always wanted to read.

“My best estimate is [that] there are 100,000 escorts working in America today,” says Brooks. Obviously, clients outnumber them, so she guesses that the population of people involved in the escorting industry could be over a million. That’s a lot of potential readers—and Brooks says volume one of The Internet Escort’s Handbook, already available online, has been selling steadily since its release earlier this year. “Girls appreciate my level-headedness,” she says. “And men are really curious to see what escorting is like from the other side.”

But first and foremost, her books are about safety. “No matter how much they pay for your time,” Brooks warns in her introduction, “A certain type of guy will always want to take off the condom. Just because he’s safe from you, doesn’t mean you’re safe from him.”

Safety isn’t the only advantage of internet escorting, says Brooks. "Men really like the ease of checking out women online, reading their blog, their reviews.” The internet also lets sex workers communicate better among themselves. “I can talk with girls who make thousands of dollars a day, or with girls who essentially work the streets.” Then there are the new ways sex workers can make the money. “You can set up ads on your site, or you can sell your lingerie on an online auction,” Brooks explains, listing the merits of being an internet-savvy escort. Of course, for escorts trying to be discreet, search engines and internet caching can make life hard—but Brooks says escorts shouldn't be worried if they keep personal details to themselves and stay away from police-patrolled sites like Craiglist.

After years spent as her own boss, bodyguard, and now publisher, Brooks isn't worried. She knows she's her own best watchdog “I’m always going to be far more concerned for my well-being than anyone else,” she says, “except maybe my mother. Now that would've really calmed my customers down. ‘Hey, did you know that’s my mom out in the parking lot?’”



Village Voice
http://www.villagevoice.com/screens/075 ... 61,28.html

The Internet Escort’s Handbook
http://www.theinternetescortshandbook.c ... eviews.php

Amanda Brooks' Blog
http://www.texasgoldengirl.com/afterhours/

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Namensgedächtnis an die ermordeten Kolleginnen

#23

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Hello fellow sex workers of the world,

As you know, the International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers is
December 17th.


At many events, it has become tradition to honour the
memory of sex workers lost to violence in the past year by reading out
their (in some cities, first) names. A member of SWANK (Sex Workers Action
New yorK), a new SWOP allied group, is putting together this list from
English-language news sources. Because we want the list to be truly
international, we could use your help. If you would like to have the
names of friends, colleagues, and comrades lost to your community, country
or continent in 2007 added to the list, please email them to
swank@riseup.net by 11 pm EST of Sunday, December 16th. Any names that
come in after the deadline will be included in future lists.

Please follow this format, and omit information if unknown:
Name (just first names are fine if that's what your group prefers), Age,
City, State, Country

Even just basic statistics (ie "police report 6 sex workers were killed in
2007") can be very useful.

Thank you very much for your help, and keep up your brilliant, important,
life-saving work!

With love, solidarity, and red umbrellas,
Layla Trouble
SWANK
(Sex Workers Action New yorK)

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Steuerliche Diskriminierung in Texas?

#24

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Neue Sondersteuer in Texas Stip Bars: 5 $ pro Person
Strip-Stangen-Steuer zugunsten von Vergewaltigungsopfern

Texas Slaps 'Pole Tax' on Strip Clubs


By DAVID KOENIG,
AP Posted: 2007-12-21 20:01:24

DALLAS (Dec. 21) -
Texas, where strip clubs have given rise to Anna
Nicole Smith and many other less-generously endowed performers, is
about to make it more expensive to watch a little bump and grind.

In what some have dubbed the "pole tax," the Lone Star State will
require its 150 or so strip clubs to collect a $5-per-customer levy,
with most of the proceeds going to help rape victims
. The tax goes
into effect on New Year's Day.

Club owners and some of their customers say the money is going to a
noble cause, but they argue that the tax infringes on their First
Amendment right to freedom of expression, that it will drive some
bars out of business and that it unfairly links their industry to sex crimes
.

"We'll be fine. I've already stopped advertising, and we're raising
our cover charges. But this is going to kill some of the smaller
clubs," said Dawn Rizos, who runs The Lodge, a Hemingway-inspired
place that has exotic animal heads on the walls and is packed after
Dallas Cowboys games at nearby Texas Stadium.

The strip clubs are suing to block the tax, which state officials
estimate will raise more than $40 million a year, based on liquor
sales figures. If accurate, the estimate suggests at least 8 million
people a year go to Texas strip clubs
to get a lap dance or watch
women pole-dance in a G-string.

Supporters of the stripper tax say they are not out to close the
clubs - that would just mean less money for victims of sexual assault.

"This is an industry that largely employs women, and this gives them
an opportunity to raise funds for a crime that affects women," said
state Rep. Ellen Cohen, a Houston Democrat who sponsored the bill,
approved by the Legislature in May.

"I've been told the fees to get into these places can be $10, $15. I
don't think another $5 is going to prevent someone from going," said
Cohen, who is also president of a women's center that could get
funding from the new law.

Most places will probably raise drink prices and cover charges, or
start charging a cover if they don't do so already.

Strip clubs occupy a mythic place in Texas lore as a spot where young
women can work their way through college and small-town girls with
dreams of Hollywood stardom get their start on the lowest rung of show biz
.

Texas' topless spots range from dimly lit dives with pickup trucks
lined up outside to gentlemen's clubs that resemble plush hunting
lodges and attract men in business suits. The pole tax is unlikely to
have much effect on your finer establishments.

On a recent weekday at The Lodge, the cars in the valet parking lot
included BMWs, a Ferrari and several Mercedes. At a table in a back
corner sat Jerry Trigg, an architect who said he goes alone or takes
customers to clubs in Dallas and Houston about three times a week.

Trigg said he typically spends about $50 during each solo visit and
$200 or more when entertaining clients. He said a $5 tax won't affect

the number of Diet Cokes he consumes, tips he doles out or lap dances enjoyed.

But Elle, a 28-year-old former Dallas dancer, said she worries the
tax will hurt women like herself who work their way through college
by stripping
. She earned a degree from the University of Texas at
Arlington and said she now runs a computer-servicing business with her husband.

Elle said she averaged $200 a day at the Lodge - "on good days, a
hell of a lot more
."

The owners of Players, a small topless bar in Amarillo, are among
those suing the state. They said that adding a $5 tax to the $4 cover [Eintrittsgebühr]
could drive away customers and force the club out of business.

"They won't pay it," said Chandra Brown, president of the company
that owns Players. "They won't come in. They can't afford it."

Some customers and clubs say it is not the extra five bucks; they
resent the implication that strip clubs lead men to commit sex crimes
.

Rizos said The Lodge already pays the state $1.3 million a year in
taxes, and the topless tax will be an additional $60,000 per month
.

"Run the right way, these businesses can really be a benefit for the
community," Rizos said. "We're a huge convention draw for the city.
We raise money for charity with our car washes."

Utah enacted a 10 percent tax on topless clubs in 2004. That same
year, the Texas Legislature considered a $5-per-head fee, with the
money going toward schools. But lawmakers didn't like the link
between strip clubs and kids
- the idea was mocked as "Tassels for
Tots" - and the proposal died.

The idea was resurrected last summer by the Texas Association Against
Sexual Assault as a way to open more rape-crisis centers.

In their lawsuit, the clubs said nude dancing is protected by the
First Amendment and the state can't selectively tax it, even if it is
conduct some may find offensive. Besides, they argued, the tax is so
broad it could apply to concerts by performers like Madonna or
Britney Spears who wear low-cut tops.

Jonathan Turley, a constitutional law expert at George Washington
University, said the Texas tax goes too far.

"It seems clear legislators are targeting strip clubs because they're
unpopular," Turley said. "Laws like this would expose any unpopular
industry to punitive taxes
. It could be abortion clinics."

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.

2007-12-21 17:32:50





Crack-Steuer in New York:
viewtopic.php?p=32178#32178

Steuer auf Vergnügungen der besonderen Art in Marburg:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=42010#42010





.
Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 03.09.2008, 12:35, insgesamt 2-mal geändert.

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Kalifornien

#25

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Geheimdienstliche Überwachungsmaßnahmen gegen SexarbeiterInnen

Los Angeles: Internet replacing streetwalking for Inland prostitution



10:00 PM PST on Tuesday, January 1, 2008

By JESSICA LOGAN
The Press-Enterprise



The woman wore clear high-heeled shoes with a Louis Vuitton bag slung over her shoulder as she walked toward the house in Sun City, hoping to make some fast Christmas money.

Inside the home, one of several similar to it on the cul-de-sac, she expected to find an off-duty Marine who would pay her for sex. Instead, a Riverside County sheriff's deputy waited inside.

She agreed to perform a sex act on the deputy for $150 in the living room. Deputies hiding in a bedroom rushed out to arrest her on suspicion of solicitation of prostitution. The woman was one of six women arrested in the sting operation at the house on Dec. 13.



Bild
William Wilson Lewis III / The Press-Enterprise
Riverside County sheriff's Cpl. Geoffrey W. Green monitors surveillance equipment during a prostitution sting.
A camera hidden in a Christmas tree in an adjacent room monitors transactions.



They are among a growing number of women and men who solicit prostitution using vague language and explicit pictures on Craigslist, an easy and free venue for ordinary people to advertise on.

The increasing use of the Internet among prostitutes is changing the world's oldest profession, say people who study sexual relationships. It's moved prostitution from the street, attracted a more sophisticated clientele and raised new questions about the danger this method of prostitution brings to society.

"In this age, Internet prostitution is the biggest thing going," said Riverside police Detective D. Woolley.

He noticed a spike in the number of ads on www.Craigslist.org three years ago and at the same time the number of prostitutes walking University Avenue, a once-popular strip for streetwalkers, has been whittled down to a handful of prostitutes.

"There are maybe four prostitutes on University Avenue who work just long enough to get a fix (of drugs) and rent a motel room for the night," Woolley said.

Last weekend, 700 people advertised under Craigslist's erotic services in the Inland Empire.

Julie Albright, a professor at USC and an expert in online relationships, said Internet venues attract an entirely new type of customer and prostitute.

"The Internet gives people the opportunity to explore things they never would have before because the Internet provides a cloak of secrecy," Albright said.

But it's unclear whether that cloak of secrecy tempts more into the business.

George Washington University professor Ron Weitzer, a prostitution expert, said no studies have been done on Internet prostitution to determine if anonymity leads people into selling their bodies.

Weitzer said studies have shown that strippers are more likely to ease into prostitution. And, Albright said, American culture is obsessed with strippers.

"Housewives are taking stripping classes," Albright said. "There are stripper poles in some hotel rooms. This fosters a sex-work type culture."

Both agree Internet prostitution attracts a higher economic-class client because people who have access to the Internet tend to be wealthier.

"I definitely think the Internet attracts a more educated customer, a more middle-class man who thinks no one will know what he is doing or ever find out," Albright said.





Sting Operation

Finding prostitutes online was easy.

The Riverside County Sheriff's Department obtained permission to use a private home. Deputies trolled the Internet, looking up ads for erotic services. They phoned dozens of women, some from as far away as San Diego County.

When the women showed up at the home a deputy posing as a customer greeted them at the door.

Once the discussion turned to money for sex, deputies made the arrest.

A deputy pulled a razor with a large yellow handle out of one woman's bag after she was arrested.

"What do you need this for?" the deputy asked.

"Because," she said, her eyes red and the smell of marijuana wafting off of her.

Weitzer and Albright believe the Internet insulates prostitutes from some of the violence inherent in street prostitution and protects communities where streetwalkers work.

But police say prostitutes are still vulnerable to violence and that type of crime can still spill into the surrounding communities.

Since Internet prostitutes go into any neighborhood, that makes any area vulnerable to violence from pimps.

"I have never arrested a prostitute who has never been assaulted in some capacity," Woolley said. "They are victims of crime constantly. Let alone the mental abuse from pimps."

Riverside police Detectives Woolley and C. Lanzillo say pimps are typically gang members who trade in women instead of drugs.





Enforcement Differences

Enforcement of prostitution law varies, even between Riverside and San Bernardino counties. The crime is punishable with up to six months in jail and a $1,000 fine, according to state law, but first-timers rarely receive jail.

Riverside police have been arresting Internet prostitutes and their clients regularly for the past three years. The Riverside County Sheriff's Department conducted a couple of stings recently.

But the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department says it only makes prostitution arrests if it receives complaints, choosing instead to focus its efforts on violent crime.

"Prostitution is not something we are having ongoing issues with. Gangs, gang violence, violent crimes and narcotics are serious issues that the department is aggressively targeting," San Bernardino County sheriff's spokeswoman Jodi Miller said.

However, Riverside County sheriff's deputies and police say they believe periodic stings curb online prostitution.

"If we started at 20 and now we have trouble finding three (prostitutes), that means we're having an impact," said sheriff's Cpl. Geoffrey W. Green, who participated in the Sun City sting, the second sting deputies have conducted.

But Albright and Weitzer said prostitution will grow despite these efforts.

"I'm not so sure (law enforcement) is going to be able to catch up," Albright said. "It's just so big ... There is an unending supply of vulnerable women."

Reach Jessica Logan at 951-368-9466 or at jlogan@PE.com.





Download story podcast:

http://www.pe.com/localnews/sbcounty/st ... .9893.html

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Tagebuch

#26

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Neues Buch von Callgirl Tracy Quan:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Diary-Jetsettin ... 0007249381

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#27

Beitrag von JayR »

The Market for Street Prostitutes in Chicago

One of the most intriguing papers in New Orleans this weekend was preliminary work by celebrity economist Steve Levitt of the University of Chicago and sociologist Sudhir Venkatesh of Columbia University.

Venkatesh, who is no stranger to investigations of underground economies, hired former street prostitutes in the south side of Chicago to act as pollsters. The women stood on corners in three neighborhoods (Roseland, Pullman and Washington Park) and collected data from over 100 prostitutes on 2,000 transactions.

The numbers confirm the view that the life of a street prostitute is far from easy. The women are beaten up by their clients once a month on average and the types of sex acts requested by these clients is often "mind boggling," Levitt said.

"The availability of premarital sex has largely crowded out standard garden variety prostitution," Levitt told the packed room. "What's left is a lot of stuff that the market of wives and girlfriends won't easily provide."

In the 1930-40's, some 50 percent of men lost their virginity to prostitutes, but to have a first sexual experience with a prostitute these days is a rarity.

We learn that prostitution arrests -- mostly the men seeking out sex -- happen in just 0.3 percent of all city blocks, meaning that the market for street prostitution is highly concentrated compared to other types of crime in the city (The police department in Chicago posts mug shots of those arrested here).

But we also learn that the police aren't much interested in arresting prostitutes.

"If you're a prostitute in our data, you're more likely to have sex with an off-duty police officer than to be arrested by an off-duty police officer," Levitt said.

In the neighborhood of Pullman, there was only one arrest made during the time Levitt and Venka collected data while many more were made in Roseland. What was the difference between the two neighborhoods that otherwise don't look all that different? Pullman prostitutes tended to have pimps while Roseland prostitutes flew solo.

Pimps, it turns out, do a good job of directing customers to prostitutes and pay the women better wages.

Prostitutes work 11 to 12 hours a week and make between $25- to $35-an-hour compared with an average of $7-an-hour for other types income opportunities. (In contrast, Levitt said a female friend stopped working as a computer scientist and is now a high-priced call girl making well over $100,000 per year.) Safe sex isn't on the minds of prostitutes in this "bottom of the barrel" market, Levitt said, as condoms were used in only five percent of all transactions. About 5 percent of all tricks are freebies given to police officers or gang members. The supply of prostitutes is also quite fluid.

During warm weather holidays, Washington Park attracts a number of family reunions which also happen to drive up demand for prostitutes. But Levitt and Venkatesh found that the price of tricks didn't rise in response.

As might be expected prostitutes from other neighborhoods flow into the area to soak up demand. More surprisingly, women who don't typically turn tricks also find these holidays to be good income opportunities and get in on the act. It seems that the stigma attached to prostitution is less pronounced in these areas.

The prostitutes in the study also practiced ethnic price discrimination. If the customer was black (as were all the prostitutes in the study), the women would make the first price quote. But white customers where asked to name the first price in the hopes that the amount would be much more than the typical transaction. Repeat customers who were black also paid a lot less than average, but that wasn't the case for whites.

Levitt and Venkatesh's full results will be featured in the upcoming sequel to Freakonomics.

CONDÉ NAST PORTFOLIO
http://www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/od ... in-chicago


The Market for Street Prostitution

I’m presently at the American Economics Association’s annual meetings in New Orleans, enjoying listening to research on peer effects, teacher labour markets, the economics of the media, and field experiments. But the most entertaining is Steven Levitt’s latest paper, which is about street prostitutes...

Andrew Leigh
http://andrewleigh.com/?p=1750



Sin in the Second City

By Steven D. Levitt

Rarely do I get to the end of a book and wish that it had still more chapters. On the rare occasion when this does happen, the feeling usually passes quickly. When my longing for a book persists, I know I really liked the book.

By this measure (as well as any other), I loved the book Sin in the Second City. For weeks after I’d finished it, I found myself wishing I had a stack of books just like it waiting to be read. Congratulations to Karen Abbott on writing a fantastic first book.

I first discovered the book, believe it or not, on the Freakonomics blog! Unbeknownst to me, either Melissa or Dubner convinced Karen Abbott to do a Q&A with us. I read that Q&A and promptly bought the book on my next trip to the bookstore. My primary reason for reading it was “business,” since Sudhir Venkatesh and I are working on a project concerning modern-day street prostitutes in Chicago. As such, I thought it would be important to learn something about the city’s prostitution in an earlier age.

I had no idea that the story would be so scintillating, with an amazing cast of (real-life) characters. The heroes are Minna and Ada Everleigh, enterprising sisters who move to Chicago and start a brothel like none the planet has ever seen. Visitors are entertained by a pianist playing a piano made of gold that would cost hundreds of thousands in today’s dollars, while the prostitutes quote poetry and Greek. Their brothel, called the Everleigh Club, becomes a destination for not only the city’s finest men, but also visitors from around the globe. (If I understand it correctly, the phrase “to get laid” is a shortened version of the original saying “to get Everleighed.”)

One of the most famous prostitutes at the Club was the world-renowned Suzy Poon Tang (who gave life to the slang term, I believe) sporting her legendary tattoo. Corrupt local politicians included Bathhouse John Coughlin and “Hinky Dink” Kenna. On the other side, you had Minister Ernest Bell, who devoted his life to fighting prostitution and became a celebrity in the process. The fight between “good” and “evil” is one of the most interesting aspects of the story, especially because it is often unclear exactly who is on which side.

I don’t often endorse books, but this one is fantastic.

Freakonomics blog
http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2 ... cond-city/


Bestseller: Prostitution in Chicago
viewtopic.php?p=20940#20940

Karen Abbott: Sin in the Second City: Madams, Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America's Soul
http://www.amazon.de/Sin-Second-City-Mi ... 756&sr=1-1

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Urteil

#28

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Stadt hatte sich mit einem speziellen Gesetz Finanzeinkünfte von Freiern erhofft.

Doch ein Gericht verwarf die Beschlagnahme-Verfügung über Autos, mit denen Kunden Prostituierte aufsuchten.


Court Strikes Forfeiture Ordinance for Cars Used to Solicit Prostitutes



Metropolitan News-Enterprise
Wednesday, January 9, 2008
By STEVEN M. ELLIS, Staff Writer



A City of Los Angeles ordinance authorizing the seizure and forfeiture [Beschlagnahme und Verlust] of vehicles used to solicit prostitution is expressly preempted [ausgeschlossen] by state law, this district’s Court of Appeal held yesterday.

Citing the recent California Supreme Court decision in O’Connell v. City of Stockton (2007) 41 Cal.4th 1061 that the California Vehicle Code preempted a similar ordinance, Div. One held that it was compelled to affirm the judgment of Los Angeles Superior Court Commissioner Victor Greenberg that the City of Los Angeles could not maintain forfeiture proceedings against Richard Reinsdorf’s 2000 Jeep Cherokee.

“Because the City of Los Angeles’s ordinance is substantively indistinguishable…,” Justice Miriam A. Vogel wrote, “it follows ineluctably [unvermeintlich] that our ordinance is also expressly preempted by state law and that the judgment in favor of Reinsdorf must be affirmed.”

No Fees

However, in a separate portion of the opinion, Vogel wrote that Reinsdorf was not entitled to an award of attorney’s fees for his successful appeal because “it wasn’t Richard Reinsdorf who conferred a benefit on the defendants whose cars were wrongfully seized by the City of Los Angeles — it was Kendra O’Connell, the plaintiff in O’Connell.”

Reinsdorf was arrested for soliciting prostitution and his Jeep seized in April of 2005. The city instituted forfeiture proceedings against his vehicle under the ordinance the following month.

The ordinance provides that any vehicle used to solicit or otherwise engage in an act of prostitution is a nuisance [Ärgernis] and may be seized by the city if it has probable cause to believe the vehicle was used for such a purpose. Once a seizure occurs, the ordinance requires that the seizing agency conduct an immediate investigation, and that notice of the seizure and the right to a post-seizure hearing to challenge the seizure’s validity be provided to the vehicle’s owner.

Reinsdorf challenged the ordinance, claiming that it was preempted under a Third District Court of Appeal ruling in O’Connell v. City of Stockton (2005) 128 Cal.App.4th 831, and the trial court agreed, granting judgment against the city and awarding Reinsdorf attorney fees in the amount of $49,735.90.

Oakland Ordinance

The city appealed, relying on Horton v. City of Oakland (2000) 82 Cal.App.4th 580, in which the First District Court rejected a similar preemption challenge to a City of Oakland ordinance authorizing the civil forfeiture of vehicles involved in soliciting prostitution or acquiring drugs.

The Court of Appeal for this district initially rejected Reinsdorf’s argument. However, the Supreme Court had already granted review in O’Connell to resolve the split between the First and Third districts, so it granted review to Reinsdorf, held the case pending its decision, and then transferred the case back to the Second district with instructions to vacate its decision and reconsider in light of O’Connell.

Writing for the Court of Appeal, Vogel quoted the Supreme Court’s decision in O’Connell to point out that the California Vehicle Code generally prohibits local regulation of “matters covered” by the code, but that it allowed a city or county to adopt an ordinance establishing a five-year pilot program to implement procedures for declaring a motor vehicle to be a public nuisance when used in the commission of certain crimes.

However, she noted that while the pilot program allowed for the development of procedure to enjoin and abate such nuisances, it allowed only for removal of the vehicle — not forfeiture.

“There being no express legislative authorization for any other form of local regulation of the matter…,” she quoted, “Vehicle Code section 21 precludes an ordinance…which seeks to regulate vehicle use in soliciting prostitution by requiring forfeiture of the vehicle. Under Vehicle Code section 21, therefore, the City’s ordinance is expressly preempted by state law.”

In a separate portion of the opinion, the court affirmed Reinsdorf’s original attorney fee award, but rebuffed his contention that he had succeeded in enforcing an important right affecting the public benefit which entitled him to additional fees for the cost of his appeal.

“Reinsdorf’s case just happened to be in the pipeline when the Supreme Court granted review in O’Connell,” Vogel wrote, “and today’s declaration that the Los Angeles ordinance is invalid adds nothing to the equation.”

Vogel was joined in her opinion by Justices Robert M. Mallano and Frances Rothschild.

A spokesperson for the city declined comment pending a review of the decision, and counsel for Reinsdorf could not be reached for comment.

The case is City of Los Angeles v. 2000 Jeep Cherokee, B185673.

Copyright 2008, Metropolitan News Company
http://www.metnews.com/articles/2008/city010908.htm





Die Stadt muß möglicherseise 12.000.000 $ an Strafgeldern zurückerstatten

Miami may have to refund $12M in impound fees



Posted on Tue, Jan. 29, 2008
BY LAURA MORALES
llmorales@MiamiHerald.com

An appeals court has ruled unconstitutional an ordinance crafted by Miami commissioners to fight prostitution and raise cash -- clearing another legal hurdle for a possible refund of $12 million to thousands of car owners.

The law, passed in 1997 during the city's financial crunch, allowed police to confiscate any vehicle alleged to be involved in drug or prostitution crimes. The original price to recover the car: $500, which was bumped up to $1,000 a year later.


That's on top of the towing and storage fees.

In last week's decision, the Third District Court of Appeals said that the ordinance does not clearly require police to notify an absent owner when the car is seized, its standard of proof is too lenient and there is no exception for innocent owners.

''We do not believe that an ordinance that does not allow for an innocent owner to be immune from loss of property and additional monetary penalties can satisfy due process,'' the court wrote in its opinion.

But the case is not over.

The city may ask the appellate court to rehear the case or go straight to the Florida Supreme Court, Deputy City Attorney Julie Bru noted in a written statement.

Bru also said that the outcome of a similar case in Hollywood -- on which another appellate court has yet to rule -- could affect Miami's chances of getting a Supreme Court review.

Miami lawmakers enacted the measure during a fiscal meltdown -- which later would lead to an unconstitutional fire-rescue fee -- in the mid-1990s.

''The discussion was two-pronged. We wanted to attack a big prostitution problem, but there was an economic element,'' said Commissioner Tomás Regalado, who first was elected in 1996. ``The city was in financial crisis. There was a frenzy of fund-seeking.''

The ordinance was first challenged in 1999 when Sidney Wellman, who was arrested for soliciting prostitution while in his wife's car, and Nadine Theodore, whose husband was arrested for the same reason while using her car, filed a class-action lawsuit arguing that state forfeiture laws should trump the city's measure.

At trial in Miami-Dade, a judge found that the ordinance was unconstitutional because it didn't make an exception for an innocent owner and because joint owners weren't necessarily given automatic notice of the seizure.

On appeal, the Third District Court reaffirmed the lower judge's decision. It found the ordinance unconstitutional because a state forfeiture law, requiring notice to owners of seized property, was in place already.

The Florida Supreme Court sided with the cities of Miami and Hollywood, which had a similar ordinance on its books, but sent both cases back to appellate courts for constitutional review.

Ronald Guralnick, who has shepherded both cases for more than seven years and worked on similar cases in Tampa and West Palm Beach, said he looks forward to wrapping them up.

''The file for this case goes around my whole office,'' he said of the Miami case.

Bru pointed out that ''the court simply held that the ordinance was unconstitutional in three ways that can easily be fixed,'' declining to specify how the city would fix the problems or come up with the money if it is to be refunded.

Guralnick criticized the idea of people having fewer rights if arrested for a misdemeanor than they would in a felony and said he believes the city has taken advantage of many.

''These people have to get their money back,'' he said.

Miami Herald staff writer Charles Rabin contributed to this report.

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/breakin ... 97989.html





siehe auch

Freier als Opfer:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=1187

ZwangsFreierKriminalisierung:
viewtopic.php?t=985





Ökonomische Prostitutionsstudien insb. U.S.A.
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=2288





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 31.01.2008, 17:32, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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Krieg von Privat-Schutz-Dienst gegen TS-Sexarbeiter

#29

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Atlanta: Privater Kampf eines Sicherheits-Sheriffs gegen Sexarbeiterinnen und ihre Kunden


One man's battle against Midtown prostitutes and their johns


By Andisheh Nouraee
Published 01.16.2008


It's shortly before 5 a.m., and Steve Gower is about to hit the rain-dampened streets of Midtown. "It's a good night for a car break-in," he says, since the overcast weather seems to dampen the sound of breaking car windows.

Gower is neither a thief nor a police officer. He's just an exceptionally active neighbor. Gower is vice president and operations director of Midtown Ponce Security Alliance, the security patrol arm of the Midtown Neighborhood Association.

Armed with a flashlight, a video camera and pepper spray, the longtime Midtown resident takes the MPSA's white pickup truck on regular predawn patrols of his neighborhood's tree-lined residential streets.

Auto break-ins are the neighborhood's most persistent crime, he says, but definitely not his focus. Gower is at war with the neighborhood's prostitutes. "It's the most visible sign of disorder in the neighborhood," he says.

He starts patrols at 5 a.m. to catch what he calls "the breakfast club" – men who tell their wives they have to go into work early, but instead go to Midtown and look for prostitutes.

According to Gower, the local street prostitutes are concentrated at the neighborhood's southern end, between Fourth Street and Ponce de Leon Avenue. When he sees someone he considers a prostitute, he often stops his truck next to the person. Sometimes he waits and watches. Often, he videotapes them, and frequently posts their images on YouTube.

When he sees someone he suspects is a prostitute talking to a possible john, he pulls up behind them, hoping his truck – with its official-looking MPSA logo and flashing yellow roof light – will scare the john away. If that doesn't work, he'll turn on his portable klieg light.

"What's really fun is catching [the prostitute] getting in the car with a john," he says. "You flip on the light and most of the time the john dumps the prostitute. I'm hitting prostitutes in the pocketbook."

Gower moved to Midtown in the mid-1980s. It was very different then, he says – much more lawless. He recalls sitting in a parklike area on Sixth Street late one night with a friend. While the two of them talked and smoked pot, he recalls with a chuckle, they saw six young men jump out of a car. Within a couple of minutes, each of the six men had stolen a car.

Crime dropped as Midtown became a fashionable address for affluent home buyers in the 1990s and early 2000s, but prostitution and vagrancy remained big problems, he says.

Gower has patrolled Midtown for the MPSA since 2003. Residents fund the MPSA with a $275 annual fee. Businesses pay $400. The organization raised nearly $100,000 each year, and it pays for 50-60 hours of patrols a week, mostly by off-duty Atlanta police officers.

"We're taxing ourselves to do this," says Peggy Denby, MPSA president.

Gower describes his patrols not as policing or vigilantism, but as a form of protest. He strongly objects to prostitutes plying their illegal trade in his neighborhood, so he says he's exercising his First Amendment right to drive up to them and tell them to leave. He wishes Atlanta police would handle the situation on their own, but chronic department staffing shortages mean prostitution is a low priority for the APD.

This morning, the first suspected prostitute Gower spots in his patrol zone is a twitchy woman in a very short skirt in front of a closed wig shop. He stops the patrol truck and just watches her for a few seconds before driving on.

"She's a real female," he says. "There are very few real females anymore." Gower says real females and male hustlers have largely been driven away by the MPSA's patrols.

Before the patrols started, Gower says, it was not uncommon to see 70 prostitutes plying their trade. The majority of prostitutes in the MPSA's patrol zone now, he says, are transgendered– "transvestitutes," as Gower and Denby call them. "We have about a dozen transvestitutes [in Midtown]," Denby says. "They're more violent and usually armed."

Gower says he has been the target of scorn and even violence. Videos of his patrols posted on his personal YouTube page show people (ID'd in the video as prostitutes) spitting, cursing and throwing things at his truck. Gower's videos can be found by searching for the word "transvestitute" on YouTube.



Bild[youtube]http://youtube.com/watch?v=RE_uE8dvnMM[/youtube]



Arianna Sykes, a transgender activist, says transgendered people are frequently presumed to be prostitutes. Tracee McDaniel, executive director of Juxtapose for Transformation, a transgendered advocacy group, says the MPSA harasses transgendered people who walk through Midtown.

"I'm not saying transgendered people aren't prostituting in Midtown, but what makes him so sure the people he's stopping are prostitutes?" McDaniel asks. "They could be going to a club or a party."

That's what Cheryl Courtney-Evans says happened to her when she was arrested for aggravated assault for allegedly pepper-spraying Gower through an open window in the truck in 2005.

Courtney-Evans, a 55-year-old preoperative transsexual, says she had pepper spray in her hands because she was frightened of Gower, who had followed her in his truck repeatedly during the preceding weeks. Gower even followed her home one night. "Wouldn't you call that stalking?" Courtney-Evans asks.

The morning of her arrest, she says she saw Gower following her again and was frightened. "I'm alone, he's been stalking me for some months," she says. "I reached into my purse and got pepper spray." She says she didn't spray him. The charge against her is still pending.

Courtney-Evans admits she has worked as a prostitute in the past, but says she was not a prostitute when the confrontation happened in 2005. "I'm a grown woman and I don't have a curfew," she says.

Activists point out that driving prostitutes out of Midtown won't actually solve the underlying causes of prostitution. It just moves the prostitutes a few blocks away.

That's fine with Gower and Denby, who are fed up with the presence of prostitutes in Midtown. "We did our time," Denby says. "Now it's someone else's turn."

Adds Gower, "We're not social workers."
©1996-2008 Creative Loafing Media - All Rights Reserved

http://atlanta.creativeloafing.com/gyro ... oid=394425





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#30

Beitrag von Zwerg »

Hi Marc!

Danke für diesen Beitrag (nicht nur für diesen)

Christian

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Int. Aufklärungs-Migration von Sexworker-Abgeordneten

#31

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

oben nachgetragen:

Staat muß evt. Millionen-Geld an Freier zurückzahlen, weil die vermeintliche Geldquelle Autos von Freiern zu konfiszieren unrechtmäßig sei
.
________________





Begrüßt das Neuseeländische Mitglied der Gesetzeskommission zur Entkriminalisierungsreform des Prostitutionsgesetz: Catherine Healy

Welcome NZ Prostitution Law Review Committee Member Catherine Healy to SF


Bild


Dear Friends,

We are excited to announce that the US PROStitutes Collective (US PROS) and Sex Worker Outreach Project USA (SWOP) are hosting Catherine Healy, member of the New Zealand Prostitution Law Review Committee [1], on a visit to San Francisco . Catherine was appointed to the Committee by the Minister of Justice and was a key member of the broad based coalition which achieved the decriminalization of prostitution in New Zealand in 2003.

Catherine comes to San Francisco from London , where she spoke at the House of Commons and various meetings around the country, at the invitation of the Safety First Coalition (chaired by the English Collective of Prostitutes – ECP). Her tour transformed the debate on prostitution in the UK so that decriminalization, as practiced in New Zealand , is now discussed as a viable option. A packed meeting in Parliament was attended by over 10 Lords and Ladies and inspired them and many others to vigorously oppose a government Bill which proposes compulsory “rehabilitation” for sex workers and measures to criminalize men who buy sex.

We are also glad to announce that Niki Adams, spokeswoman for the ECP, will be accompanying Catherine on her visit to the San Francisco Bay Area and can tell us more about these groundbreaking events.

Catherine and Niki will be arriving in San Francisco on February 5 and leaving on February 12. US PROS and SWOP USA along with SWOP NORCAL will host a reception – time and date to be announced. We will post a schedule of events and hope to see you all there. For more info please email.

Robyn Few
Sex Worker Outreach Project
info@swopusa.org
www.swopusa.org

Rachel West
US Prostitutes Collective
rachelwest [at] crossroadswomen.net





[1] The Prostitution Law Review Committee is an eleven member Committee appointed by the Minister of Justice. Nominations to the Committee were provided by the Ministers of Justice, Health, Police, Commerce, Local Government and the Minister of Women’s Affairs in consultation with the Minister of Youth Affairs and the New Zealand Prostitutes Collective.





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Aktion erforderlich!

#32

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Moralisch geprägte US-Politik bedroht SW Sozialprojekte auf der ganzen Welt.

Eine Anti-Prostitutions-Bürgschaft wird abverlangt, bevor US-Hilfsmittel gezahlt werden.

Jetzt soll der US-Kongress eingeschaltet werden



A strong group of advocates is working to strike the anti-prostitution pledge [Bürgschaft Prostitution nicht zu fördern] from PEPFAR (US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief). We need your help from OUTSIDE the US.

The pledge requires organizations receiving U.S. funding to sign a pledge "opposing prostitution." This has created problems for effective programs to combat AIDS. Please sign on to this letter to US Congress recommending that the pledge be removed.

To sign on, write to pepfarletter@taumail.com. If you would like to
add a sentence about the ways the pledge has affected your work,
please send that too!

The deadline to sign on is Tuesday, 5 February, at 5 pm GMT.

In solidarity,

Melissa





To Congress Re: PEPFAR

A Letter from the Field by
January 31, 2008

Dear Member of Congress:

We are members of non-governmental and community-based organizations
from throughout the developing world. We are writing out of concern
about the so-called anti-prostitution pledge within the President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the ways it affects our
work. The pledge requires organizations receiving U.S. funding to
sign a pledge "opposing prostitution." This policy has undermined
the work of many of our organizations and we must protest it.

PEPFAR demonstrates the US's commitment to address one of the world's
most urgent health problems, the need to prevent, treat, and care for
people infected with or affected by HIV and AIDS. The United States
Congress has generously appropriated nearly $23 billion for this
program, yet the conditions attached to PEPFAR limit the success of
this program and in fact even prevent the people most in need from
accessing both the prevention services and anti-retroviral drugs the
program was established to provide. In addition, this and other
restrictions have seriously diminished the effectiveness of the plan
by denying funding purely on ideological grounds to organizations and
programs seeking to prevent the greatest number of new infections
possible among some of the most vulnerable populations, specifically
sex workers.

Many of us have turned down US funding because of these restrictions,
which if adopted would prevent us from reaching some of the people
most vulnerable to HIV/AIDS. Those of us who in fact still receive
USAID funding are forced to restrict our activities and sometimes end
our support for programs that have proven successful in meeting the
needs of the most vulnerable. The vagueness of both the law and
policy implementing the pledge fosters self-censorship and stygmies
programs aimed at building skills within vulnerable populations and
saving the lives of those daily at risk of infection, violence,
discrimination and even death.

We cannot effectively do our work of HIV prevention with the pledge.
This restriction leads to violence against sex workers and other
human rights violations by further isolating sex workers from
mainstream society. Furthermore, this makes them prey to corrupt
police and officials
.

Our work gives us critical perspective on the gaps between U.S.
funding through PEPFAR and the reality on the ground. For example:

· Sex workers in Bangladesh include women who have no other
income-generating opportunities but whose programs have been cut due
to the anti-prostitution pledge. HIV/AIDS has reached epidemic
proportions among sex workers in some places. This pledge has been
used as justification to deprive sex workers and suspected sex
workers of clinical and humanitarian services. Sixteen drop-in
centers for sex workers in Bangladesh were closed after their parent
organization signed the pledge. For most of these women, the drop-in
centers were the only places they had to bathe, to use the toilet,
and to sleep.

· In Thailand, male sex workers were prevented from accessing
care at a clinic because offering services to sex workers was seen as
violating the anti-prostitution pledge.

· In Cambodia and Thailand, sex worker organizations have lost
long-term partnerships with other service providers who feared losing
their funding if they accepted sex workers at their facilities.

We strongly advocate striking the prostitution pledge from the
President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief. This well-intentioned
clause has had extremely detrimental effects upon thousands of women,
their families, and men throughout the developing world
. It has
undermined the effectiveness of US aid efforts. And it has
undermined our trust in US support for the basic human rights of all
persons, no matter their place in society.

Yours sincerely,

Manohar Elavarthi
Bangalore, India





Das umstrittene Sexworker feindliche Gesetz PEPFAR (US President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief) steht vor der Einführung.

PEPFAR reauthorization bill poised for introduction

"The United States Global Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Reauthorization Act of 2008," a groundbreaking bill that reauthorizes the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) at $50 billion over five years, is poised for introduction in the House.


However, it is with great sadness that we report that Congressman Lantos (D-12th/CA), Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and author of the bill, passed away Monday morning. As many of you know, Chairman Lantos was a champion of health and human rights issues globally, and his PEPFAR reauthorization bill reflects his leadership on these issues. Because of Chairman's passing, it is not yet clear when the bill will be introduced, but all sources indicate that the House will still move forward quickly.



The good news

The Chairman's bill makes several critical improvements to U.S.-funded global HIV prevention policy in order to better address the real-life needs of women and girls. It strikes the ideologically-driven requirement that 33% of prevention funds be spent on abstinence-until-marriage programs, removes the anti-prostitution pledge, and emphasizes the integration of HIV and AIDS programs with family planning programs--thanks in large part to your continued advocacy.



The bad news

These hard-fought, life-saving improvements to PEPFAR are in jeopardy. Members of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs are scheduled to gather during the week of February 25, 2008 to make amendments to the PEPFAR reauthorization bill, many of which would roll back the advancements in the Chairman's bill. We cannot let a vocal opposition compromise the health and rights of women and girls worldwide!



Call Congress for improved global HIV/AIDS programs

Last week, many of you in targeted districts made important phone calls to Representatives on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs who we believe will support Chairman's bill. With mark-up pushed back until the week of February 25th, we need to keep the pressure on and ensure our Congressional supporters attend the entire mark-up! At the same time, it is crucial that we contact committee members who are less supportive of the Chairman's bill and urge them to support its critical provisions.

Please consider making phone calls TODAY to any and all of the committee members who live in your state. Click here for the list of Representatives to call, their office telephone numbers, and a sample phone script. And if you're not in one of these states, we encourage you to circulate this action to any contacts you have in these states.

However, please do not make phone calls to Chairman Lantos' office. This has been a difficult week for House Committee staff and as such, we ask to hold off any calls to them until next week.

Thank you for taking these critical steps. Stay tuned for further updates about PEPFAR reauthorization and developments in the Senate. Please don't hesitate to contact us for more information.

Best regards,

Healy and Kim

Healy Thompson and Kim Whipkey
Advocacy and Outreach Team
Center for Health and Gender Equity (CHANGE)

hthompson at genderhealth.org, 301-637-7773
kwhipkey at genderhealth.org, 301-270-1182
PEPFAR WATCH is a project of the Center for Health and Gender Equity intended to inform and spur action on U.S. global HIV/AIDS policies and related issues in which U.S. policy and funding is of concern.
Support our work!
Update your contact information or unsubscribe.

6930 Carroll Avenue, Suite 910, Takoma Park, MD 20912 USA
Tel: 1-301-270-1182 Fax: 1-301-270-2052 change@genderhealth.org
http://www.genderhealth.org
http://www.pepfarwatch.org
http://www.preventionnow.net





URGENT CALL TO ACTION:

SUPPORT THE REMOVAL OF THE ANTI-PROSTITUTION PLEDGE FROM PEPFAR!


As you may know, "The United States Global Leadership Against
HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Reauthorization Act of 2008," a
bill that reauthorizes the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief (PEPFAR), is poised for introduction in the House. This
bill makes several critical improvements to U.S. funded global HIV
prevention policy:
  • It strikes the ideologically-driven requirement that 33% of
    prevention funds be spent on abstinence-until-marriage programs,
  • It removes the anti-prostitution pledge, a provision that has
    forced groups that work with sex workers to choose between their
    clients and their funding,
  • It emphasizes the integration of HIV and AIDS programs with
    family planning programs
The House Committee on Foreign Affairs (HCFA) will gather to
"markup" this bill tomorrow, February 27. As Senator Lantos, the
author of the bill and our champion in the House, has recently
passed away, it is even more important that calls be made to HCFA
members urging them to support the removal of the anti-
prostitution pledge during markup. Click
http://www.pepfarwatch.org/images/PEPFA ... script.pdf
for the list of Representatives to call, their office
telephone numbers, and a sample phone script.

Click
http://www.sexworkersproject.org/workin ... Pledge.pdf
[PDF - 29 pages]
to read the Sex Workers Project position
paper on the anti-prostitution pledge and
http://www.sexworkersproject.org/workin ... Video.html
to watch a short video on the
pledge.





Video über die Anti-Prostitutions-Bürgschaft:
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=12925#12925





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 26.02.2008, 23:40, insgesamt 2-mal geändert.

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Werben für Verbotene Früchte?

#33

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Marketing-Fachwissen:
Der Kampf gegen Werbeanzeigen von Sexarbeitern



Market Penetration: The War on Prostitution Advertising


By Caroline Andrews

Back in 1973, the year Roe v. Wade decriminalized abortion and made women’s lib front page news, the National Organization for Women passed a resolution supporting the decriminalization of prostitution. It emphasized the sentiment of the day – that women’s bodies were their own domain and only they should decide how to use them.

Fast-forward to the present. In March, 2007, the National Organization for Women’s New York City (NOW-NYC) chapter sent out a press release titled, “New York Press: The Marketing Arm of the Human Trafficking Industry.” The press release highlighted the organization’s “Ending the Business of Human Trafficking” campaign, in which print publications, particularly free weeklies, have been targeted in an effort to convince them to pledge not to accept “adult” ads for non-licensed massage parlors, escorts, and the like. In their press release, NOW-NYC took particular aim at the New York Press for initially refusing to accept their demands, charging that the Press, an alternative free weekly paper, “deliberately or not… has become the intermediary between trafficked people and the ‘johns’ who seek their services.”

In bullet points, NOW-NYC laid out their evidence for the link between adult advertising and trafficking. First, the press release cited eight “spas” in East Midtown Manhattan that are actually brothels uncovered by NOW in its “Block by Block” campaign. Next, they described a john review website (www.spahunters.com) in which they claim men have reviewed their experiences with trafficked women in New York City brothels. (For the record, I couldn’t find one example of a client posting on that website who described “trafficking...”) Then, NOW referenced a human trafficking bust by the FBI in Queens from January, 2007. Finally, they pointed to an August, 2006 bust on West 26th Street in Manhattan involving Korean women whose passports had been held by traffickers.

What do any of these examples have to do with the New York Press? No clue. Astoundingly, NOW-NYC didn’t demonstrate any link between a single one of the hundreds of ads in the Press and any verifiable or even alleged instance of trafficking, including the examples cited in that press release. While it is almost certain that some truly exploited and trafficked women have been advertised in the Press at some point, what is disturbing is that it wasn’t deemed necessary by NOW-NYC to actually prove that even one of the paper’s adult ads were really a trafficking front. All they had to do was talk about the fact that trafficking is a problem in New York City (which I don’t dispute) and then point out that those ads in the back of the Press are not actually for back rubs and companionship (duh!). The fact that prostitution is different from trafficking is irrelevant because to the general public, prostitution might as well be a synonym for trafficking.

In late 2007, the New York Press capitulated to the pressure and now no longer accepts adult advertising. To date Time Out New York, The Brooklyn Paper, Hoy, Our Town, Westside Spirit, The Westsider, Our Town Downtown, City Hall, Chelsea-Clinton News, AVENUE, New York Family, The Queens Courier, L Magazine, and New York Magazine have taken NOW-NYC’s pledge. The Village Voice and Verizon’s New York City Yellow Pages are future targets.

Earlier in NOW-NYC’s campaign, a member of Prostitutes of New York (PONY) who wishes to be identified as “Eve,” attended a NOW-NYC meeting to explain her concerns about the effort. Eve says, “I’ve been a NOW member for over a decade. I went to a meeting and told NOW that based on my personal experience the majority of these ads were for prostitution, not trafficking. They were very nice, but unfortunately the basic attitude was that anything ethnically advertised was de facto a trafficking operation. I’m not sure they wanted to believe that it was possible for escort agencies, parlors, or independent girls themselves to use ethnic advertising as a marketing strategy because of client fetishes for a particular nationality. “Hot Russian Girls 4 U” might not be politically correct or tasteful, but that doesn’t mean the girls working there are trafficked, badly treated, or even necessarily Russian. But it fit NOW’s campaign better to assume the worst. I also really believe that many of NOW’s leaders are abolitionist about prostitution; they’ve spent time visiting the worst examples of trafficking in New York City brothels and know very little about the everyday life of more ordinary sex workers. My main goal in going to that meeting was to explain that limiting advertising options for prostitutes was bad policy. If it becomes impossible for prostitutes to advertise online or in cheap print publications then we’re back to street soliciting, which is much more dangerous.”

Cheap print ads in free papers have long been the mainstay of escort agencies, parlors, fetish houses, and independent sex workers because no special skills are necessary to get an ad printed and the costs are minimal. The wide availability of print advertising means that sex workers, particularly prostitutes, who lack access to the Internet or the skills to effectively advertise online, have an opportunity to avoid resorting to street work. Specific newspapers in every city are often well known for having sex industry ads in the back of their publications, so they represent a never-ending source of new clients for sex workers and sex industry businesses – as well as a major source of operating funds for independent and alternative news publishing. It’s unclear how much traffickers rely on print ads to attract clients, and until some entity studies the subject, it’s likely to remain that way.

One reason traffickers might actually choose to avoid print publications is all the unwanted attention. Last October, a U.K. newspaper, South Wales Echo, published an exposé about trafficked women in the Welsh capital of Cardiff. The paper was caught with its pants down when it was discovered that all the brothels that held the trafficking victims advertised in their paper (and in the exact same issue as the exposé). Local police were quoted as saying that one important factor in tracking down the traffickers was their print advertising.

While the Cardiff case is just one example, it’s a general truism that what happens in plain sight is easier to monitor than what happens underground or behind closed doors. An effective ban on open advertising for the sex industry would mean the creation of an underground network of whispers to replace it – and anything that drives the sex industry further underground is not better for sex workers.

Last year, The Economist printed a story highlighting the debate around prostitution advertising in British newspaper classifieds and noted, “Allowing sex to be bought and sold in reasonably open circumstances can in fact make things safer for the workers involved [and] newspapers can do more by regulating their adverts than by dropping them altogether. In Suffolk, where five prostitutes were murdered last year, Archant Regional, a big local newspaper group, decided with the police that the small ads should continue in order to stop the trade going underground. The newspaper passes information to officers and has made simple changes—such as accepting payment only by che[ck] or credit card for adult listings—which mean that advertisers can be traced if illegalities are reported.”

While print advertising keeps everything out in the open, the in-your-face aspect of the ads themselves means that there will always be plenty of people who are offended every time they pick up a paper and see the sex industry displayed. And if they can’t stop the newspapers from printing the ads through public humiliation, some take the war on sex industry advertising to another level.

Orlando’s Metropolitan Bureau of Investigation (MBI) got really creative last year. On October 19, vice agents arrested three employees of the Orlando Weekly whose job it was to sell classified advertising for the newspaper. The three workers were charged with 17 counts of “aiding in the commission of prostitution” and the newspaper itself was accused of racketeering. At the Orange County grand jury indictment, vice agents said that the paper earned $2.3 million in five years from prostitution-related ads. The Weekly charges $80 for a three line ad, so there is clearly a huge market share of Orlando represented in this paper. Vice agents went undercover to the newspaper’s office and explicitly asked to place an ad for a prostitution business. The sting was part of MBI’s pun-laden “Operation Weekly Shame.”

Orlando Weekly publisher, Rick Schreiber, quickly denounced the arrests as “an outrageous abuse of process and an attempt to censor the First Amendment rights of a newspaper that has reported critically on the Metropolitan Bureau of Investigation.”

The case is still pending and could have far-reaching and chilling effects on whether or not print publications continue to accept adult advertising. In a similar case two years ago, a grand jury in Tennessee indicted the Nashville Scene for promoting prostitution, but the state of Tennessee eventually dropped the case.

With print advertising under attack, the obvious refuge is Internet advertising, but this is a war zone too. Anyone who was selling or buying sex online in 2002 remembers Operation Flea Collar, when Florida police put together a major sting against Big Doggie website owner, Charles Kelly. As one of the net’s largest escort review and advertising sites, when Big Doggie suddenly went dark, escorts and clients alike scurried for cover.

In retrospect, it’s surprising that something like this didn’t happen sooner. With sex being openly advertised all over the Internet, shutting down major advertising and review sites would seem like an obvious goal of law enforcement.

In the case of Big Doggie, however, the police weren’t able to make any of the over 50 felony racketeering, obstruction, or procurement charges stick. All the chatter on the Big Doggie message boards are protected as free speech, so in order to prove their case the police needed witnesses (clients) to testify in open court, and no one was willing to talk. Moreover the operation was also extremely resource-heavy - vice officers were needed to create a fake escorting site, advertise it, entrap clients, and monitor the message boards; lawyers were needed to review the evidence and put together a case - and it’s not good to tell the District Attorney or local Sheriff that you can’t successfully prosecute the case that he or she has just sunk all the office’s staff time and money into. At the end of the day, MSNBC reported that the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office (who ran Operation Flea Collar) would not be renewing an investigation into Big Doggie.

Having realized how difficult it is to prosecute the owners of online advertising sites, police have turned their attention to the providers themselves. While it has always been the case that sex workers and clients occasionally find themselves on the receiving end of online police sting operations, recently the volume of arrests has begun to live up to the sex industry’s paranoia on the subject. Nowhere is this truer than with Craigslist.

The Erotic Services section of Craigslist represents the online version of a stroll that accidentally found itself in a good neighborhood: Everyone’s complaining. Ever since Craigslist broke into mainstream consciousness, there has been a spike in cultural chatter on the subject of prostitution being advertised online. When the sex marketplace was relegated to its own particular websites that no-one who wasn’t looking for them would accidentally stumble across, the sex industry remained relatively under the radar, even though its market share of commerce on the Internet was significant and growing. With Craigslist, however, broader audiences of web users are suddenly being exposed to brazen prostitution on one of their favorite websites. If you ask most Americans about online prostitution advertising, they will probably answer, “Do you mean, Craigslist?”

Craigslist’s huge audience as well as it’s basic structure has been great for sex workers: it’s free, there are tons of people looking, and it’s very simple to use. It’s also a site that many former street workers have turned to as a way of leaving street solicitation. I spoke to “Frannie,” a 47 year old former street worker from the Bronx, about her postings on Craigslist after she responded to my Craigslist ad. Frannie told me about how Craigslist helped her to leave the street. “I never used no computer until last year when my kid – he’s 21 -- showed me Craigslist and said to me, ‘Yo, ma, here’s where they look for some so you don’t have to stand on no street corner. At my age, I don’t get mad customers, not like when I was young. I have another job too, but I put up my ad every few days, check my hotmail, and every now and then I get some extra cash without freezing my butt off or messing with crackheads. I’m too old for that shit.” When I asked Frannie if she knew of others who were able to move their work off the streets because of Craigslist, she added, “Anyone who’s not a crackhead or just likes it out there for God-knows-what reason is coming inside if they have sense.”

Last summer I attended a public meeting of Manhattan’s 10th Precinct Community Council where a Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood resident asked an officer making his report what the precinct was doing to arrest street prostitutes and clean up the area. The officer replied that NYPD sent out vice patrol every night to what were considered problem spots by the community but that there were very few arrests because they couldn’t find any street prostitutes. A few residents commented on how the strolls tended to migrate to keep up with the police, but the officer interrupted and said, “You know, a lot of these people just do this online now.”

The numbers tell the same story. The city of Chicago was reported by the New York Times to have had 43 street-based arrests in July of 2007 – and 60 Craigslist arrests. The Times story that included that fact was published as a front-pager on September 5, 2007, “As Prostitutes Turn to Craigslist, Law Takes Notice.” The article, which re-discovered Internet prostitution, describes how police departments from “Hawaii to New Hampshire” are spending more and more of their time trolling the Erotic Services section of Craigslist. In it, Nassau County Assistant Chief of Detectives, Richard McGuire, called Craigslist “the high-tech 42nd Street, where much of the solicitation takes place now.”

As with print advertising, online advertising creates an openness and (digital) paper-trail that can make it easier for police to track down the bad guys. I don’t just mean traffickers but also other men (clients or management) who may be abusing prostitutes.

Right now, the war on prostitution advertising is striking some serious blows against industry workers. The right to free speech guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution protects our ads where they appear in print (online or in print publishing), but if newspapers refuse to accept our business because they are afraid of being labeled as “facilitators of trafficking” and the major market share websites become unsafe because of police entrapment operations, there will soon be few choices left for prostitutes, many of them choices that make women less safe and less money.

Caroline Andrews is a former escort who lives and works in New York City. She chose her pseudonym because Caroline and Andrew are former Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s children. In Giuliani’s eyes, we are all children.

Original:
http://www.spreadmagazine.org/waronad3.4.html

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Haus mit Geschichte

#34

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Bordell von Erdbeben zerstört


Strong 6.0 quake shakes Nevada's gold country



...

In Wells [290 km west of Salt Lake City], Randy Bowers said he was working the overnight shift bartending at the town's 140-year-old brothel, Donna's Ranch, when he felt two powerful jolts and a third lighter one.

"The building is here, but everything else is demolished, everything inside is trashed," Bowers said by telephone.

"Stuff didn't fall off, it flew off," he added, noting that there were no customers in the brothel at the time and the "working girls were in their rooms."

Wells is town of about 1,300 people, 614 km north of the gambling center of Las Vegas. Wells' Chamber of Commerce touts the town as a "perfect setting" for western and road movies.
...

Quelle


Homepage 'Wüstenbordell':
www.donnasRanch.net

Lage:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&ll=41.1 ... 1&t=h&z=18





.
Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 02.05.2008, 18:59, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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Heterogene Sex-Markt-Berichte

#35

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Sex for Hire: Real Stories of Prostitution in America

ABC News' Two-Year Examination of Women Working in the
Commercial Sex Industry


By ELIZABETH JOSEPH
March 21, 2008—

http://abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=4495721&page=1


For more than a week, Americans have been fascinated
by the revelation that former New York Gov. Eliot
Spitzer was a client of a high-end escort service
called "The Emperors Club
."

"The last time I saw him, he had asked me to write
about prostitution and his work on the field," said
The New York Times' Nicholas Kristof. "It's just such
an astonishing act of bravado and chutzpah considering
what we know of him now."

What we know now is not just a tale of one man's
political fall from grace, but one that represents the
lives of thousands of women collecting money in return
for sex in the U.S. every day.

CLICK HERE TO LEARN ABOUT ORGANIZATIONS WORKING TO
HELP WOMEN ESCAPE THE SEX TRADE.
http://abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=4495862&page=1

Long before the Spitzer scandal broke, ABC News had
been investigating the multifaceted world of sex for
hire, from women selling themselves to support a drug
habit to closed-door negotiations in Nevada's
world-famous Bunny Ranch, one of the nation's few
legal brothels.

For more than two years, ABC News' Diane Sawyer and
her producers met with prostitutes as they walked the
streets, spoke with the johns that pay and learned
firsthand what keeps this underground culture hidden
from view and yet completely available to those who
seek it
.



'You Can't Be Nice'

Jessi, a platinum-blond 22-year-old, walks the streets
in Reno City, Nev., most days and nights. She grew up
on an organic farm in California and dreamed of
becoming a firefighter but said her home life was
unstable and caused her to leave. She said her
happiest times were when she joined the Navy at 17,
and the saddest times began when she was later
diagnosed with epilepsy and discharged. Soon Jessi was
homeless and began using drugs. "I was shooting up 50
times a day," she said. "Toward the end, I was using
methamphetamines."

It was her drug dealer who suggested she prostitute
herself to make money.


"With the females, most of them don't have residence
here," said Sgt. Dave Evans of the Reno Street
Enforcement Team. "They're homeless, and they're
balancing from place to place. Very few of them have
valid IDs. They don't have jobs, so they don't qualify
for citations, so they go to jail."

"Most girls here make an average of $20 -- $20 for
half and half, which is both: oral and physical sex,"
Jessi said. "You can't be soft, you can't be nice, you
can't be sweet. You have to treat everyone like
they're going to f**k you over. Because they are."

Growing tired of working the streets, Jessi explored
expanding her business to cyberspace.

Today, women advertise themselves in the online
red-light district under various aliases.

"You could go to Craigslist, you could open your
yellow pages, you could see pages and pages of ads,
escort agencies and massage parlors," explained Rachel
Lloyd, executive director of Girls' Educational
Mentoring Services of New York City, a group that
specializes in rescuing underage girls who enter the
sex world
.

Hiding in plain sight are hundreds of thousands of
individuals both seeking and selling sex. "The nice
thing about this site is the women in the pictures are
all wearing suits," Jessi said. "And so when you first
get to it, you can't really tell what kind of site it
is. Most of my clientele that I've met are married,
and they don't want a little girl in that little red
mini dress and sky-high heels to walk up to them in a
bar if that's where they're meeting."

Prostitution is a two-person event, but men and women
are perceived and prosecuted very differently.


"The johns do have a stake in the society. There is
some risk if you're a policeman or if you're a
prosecutor that if you start arresting johns, that one
of them will be your neighbor, your boss, whatever
else," explained Kristof. "It's much simpler just to
arrest the young women."

Referring to the Spitzer situation, Kristof said, "I'm
just afraid that people are going to mistake that for
typical prostitution in the U.S., and you know, that
is a sliver of it, but for an awful lot of young women
and girls -- and girls meaning, you know, teenage
girls, young girls -- it is not a choice, it's a
nightmare
."



Happily Ever After at the Bunny Ranch?

But what happens when prostitution is legal? What
about the women who work in the 30 legal brothels of
Nevada
?

All sorts of people, from businessmen to cowboys, even
some women, visit the Moonlight Bunny Ranch in Carson
City, Nev., for an opportunity to hire one of the
women sex workers.

Christina, who ended up at the ranch after 37 foster
homes and was trying to put herself through nursing
school, said working at the legal brothel seemed like
a dream come true.

"[Owner Dennis Hoff] told me that I could make a good
living out here and that I'd be happy. I'd never go
without a roof over my head. I'd never go hungry, I'd
never go without money."

Another one of the prostitutes, a former nurse, said,
"In here I can work four, five, six hours if I wanted
to and make as much money in one day that I can in two
weeks nursing."

Men spend large amounts of money at the ranch for not
only sex but for what is commonly referred to as the
GFE: The Girlfriend Experience. "He wants you to be
his girlfriend for however long he booked you for,"
one prostitute explained. "Whether that's 10 minutes
or 10 hours, kissing, holding hands, cuddling."

Hoff tells his employees to "fulfill those fantasies.
Be the fantasy experience you know and create them.
You'll be rewarded handsomely, have six figures and
live happily ever after."

"My rate is $2,000 an hour for everything, $1,000 for
half an hour, $500 for 15 minutes," another employee
claimed.

Though licensed sex workers are legally allowed to
charge for their services in Nevada, the drug culture
still integrates itself into the lives of some women
there.

According to a Bunny Ranch prostitute named Danielle,
"A lot of the girls here do drugs. Whether it's
illegal drugs on the street, coke and ecstasy kind of
stuff, or whether its prescription drugs, three or
four Xanax to get through the day, most of them are on
something."



Dependence on Pimps

There are about 800 women working in legal brothels in
Nevada
. However, the majority of prostitutes in
America are the tens of thousands working in fear of
and dependency on the men who make the money -- the
pimps.

"Ninety-nine-point-nine percent of the girls we work
with have been under, or are under, the control of a
pimp at some point," said GEM's Lloyd. "If we're
talking about girls or young women who have been, you
know, systematically abused, who have previous trauma,
who maybe have run away from home and are currently in
a really vulnerable situation, and this adult man who
comes onto them, and promises them the world, that can
be very intoxicating."

"It's like a cult where they brainwash you," said one
woman who escaped the world of prostitution. "In the
beginning, it's as if they're training you like a dog,
but when I wanted something, I got it. If I wanted a
car, I got it. If I wanted a fur coat, I got it. If I
wanted to go shopping, I got it."


Kristof explains that for law enforcement, the
difficulty in prosecuting pimps begins with the
victim's reluctance to help. "You would have to show
force, fraud and coercion, and the argument is that if
the pimp is essentially a financial manager to a young
woman, then that is not so serious a crime
, while if
he's forcing the girl to sell herself, that is. The
problem is that to prove force, fraud and coercion,
you pretty much have to get this young woman to
testify against her pimp. That means her life will be
in jeopardy
, [the lives] of her family will be in
jeopardy, and also there really is often an emotional
bond in a very weird way between her and that pimp."

An emotional bond that another young former prostitute
formerly known as Caramel knows all too well. "I
thought I was so in love," she said. "You've got
somebody there to take care of you, take care of your
money."

[Daß diese informellen Subkulturmechanismen eine Folge
des Prostitutionsverbotes sind wird nicht diskutiert.]



'Anything Can Happen'

Street prostitutes are obviously the most vulnerable.

Jessica, another prostitute who works the streets
outside Philadelphia said, "The Friday after
Thanksgiving I got robbed at gunpoint, beat in the
head with a gun [and] I've been stabbed --
127 stitches."

"Every time you get into a car you know anything can
happen. You can get raped, you can get killed, you
have all different types of people out here,"
explained a prostitute named Audrey.

Be it glamorized prostitution with high-end escorts,
poverty stricken street hookers or legal working women
in the sex trade, these women all [? unbewiesen] share some things in
common. Sexual abuse at a young age, broken homes and
addictions to drugs and alcohol all lead women to
pursue lives that aid them in getting money any way
they can.

During her investigation into the lives of
prostitutes, Diane Sawyer asked Skylar, a college
graduate turned street prostitute what it would take
for her to change her life.

"I don't know," Skylar said. "Maybe watching this when
it airs." [gute Selbstvermarktung]

Copyright © 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures

Fotostrecke:
http://abcnews.go.com/2020/popup?id=448 ... x=1&page=1

http://www.bunnyRanch.com

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostitution_in_Nevada





.
Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 30.04.2008, 12:47, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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ex-oberelfe
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Beiträge: 2001
Registriert: 05.04.2005, 16:12
Wohnort: Wien
Ich bin: Keine Angabe

#36

Beitrag von ex-oberelfe »

XBN SWOP East Broadcast Network on Blog Talk Radio

Sex Worker Voices, Sex Worker Viewpoints, Sex Worker Rights

Please join XBN at www.blogtalkradio.com/swopeast
<http>

or get more info and links from http://www.sexworkeurope.org/site/
<i>::: Jasmin war SexarbeiterIn, später BetreiberIn und bis Ende 2010 für das Sexworker Forum mit besonderen Engagement in der Öffentlichkeitsarbeit tätig :::</i>

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Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
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Polizei-Mißbrauch gegen SW in Washington D.C.

#37

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

DIFFERENT AVENUES REPORT RELEASE EVENT:
"MOVE ALONG: POLICING SEX WORK IN WASHINGTON, D.C."
May 1, 2008, 3-5 pm
Flemming Center, Washington, D.C.

Different Avenues invites friends and allies to join them on May
Day to learn more about the abuses of the DC police department
towards sex workers and people profiled as sex workers
. This
project is the result of work by representatives of communities
affected by policing in the District including sex workers,
transgender people, and immigrants. It is their hope that the
report, their findings and recommendations will be useful tools to
work for change in the District's approach to commercial sex.

The event will be held on May 1, 2008, from 3-5 pm at the
Flemming Center, 1426 9th St NW at P St NW. Refreshments will be
provided. For more information, call Different Avenues at 202-829-2103.
Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 03.05.2008, 00:13, insgesamt 1-mal geändert.

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Marc of Frankfurt
SW Analyst
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U.S.A. - Irak

#38

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Prostitutierte von US-Söldnertruppen in Panzern transportiert


DynCorp Manager Used Armored Car
To Transport Hookers in Iraq

  • "DynCorp's site manager was involved in bringing prostitutes into hotels operated by DynCorp. A co-worker unrelated to the ring was killed when he was travelling in an unsecure car and shot performing a high-risk mission. I believe that my co-worker could have survived if he had been riding in an armored car. At the time, the armored car that he would otherwise have been riding in was being used by the contractor's manager to transport prostitutes from Kuwait to Baghdad."
Zitiert nach:
http://www.muckraked.com/wordpress/2008 ... s-in-iraq/

Hearing zu den Vorwürfen:
SENATE DEMOCRATIC POLICY COMMITTEE TO HEAR FROM
THREE WHISTLEBLOWERS ABOUT ABUSES IN IRAQ
CONTRACTING AT APRIL 28 HEARING:
http://democrats.senate.gov/dpc/pr042808.pdf





.

Hanna
PlatinStern
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Beiträge: 908
Registriert: 08.10.2007, 19:06
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tod einer Betreiberin

#39

Beitrag von Hanna »

in dieser krassen Form wohl nur noch in einem christlich-fundamentalistischen Land denkbar

http://nachrichten.alice.aol.de/nachric ... 0677721765

Prostitutierten-Chefin erhängt aufgefunden


Prostitutierten-Chefin erhängt aufgefundenSie war wegen Zuhälterei verurteilt worden und Chefin eines Edel-Prostitutions-Rings in Washington. Deborah Jean Palfrey wurde jetzt in einem Schuppen im US-Bundesstaat Florida erhängt gefunden. Sie soll ihre Selbstmordabsichten in handgeschriebenen Mitteilungen hinterlassen haben. Fremdeinwirken ist nicht festzustellen.
Die wegen Zuhälterei verurteilte Chefin eines schillernden Washingtoner Edel-Prostitutionsrings hat Selbstmord begangen. Die als „D.C. Madam“ bekannt gewordene Deborah Jean Palfrey wurde nach Polizeiangaben in einem Schuppen im Bundesstaat Florida erhängt aufgefunden. Am Fundort der Leiche seien „handgeschriebene Mitteilungen über die Selbstmordabsicht des Opfers“ gefunden worden, sagte Polizeisprecher Jeffrey Young in der Ortschaft Tarpon Springs. „Hinweise auf ein Fremdeinwirken gibt es nicht.“
Die 52 Jahre alte Palfrey war im April in einem spektakulären Prozess wegen Zuhälterei schuldig befunden worden. Die Verhängung eines Strafmaßes stand noch aus. Das Verfahren hatte Aufsehen erregt, weil Kunden aus höchsten Kreisen der Washingtoner Politik und Gesellschaft die Dienste von Palfreys Escort-Agentur in Anspruch genommen hatten und zum Teil durch die Ermittlungen bloßgestellt wurden.
Im vergangenen Jahr entschuldigte sich der republikanische Senator David Vitter öffentlich dafür, dass er Kunde von Palfreys Mitarbeiterinnen war. Der Chef der US-Entwicklungsbehörde, Randall Tobias, erklärte seinen Rücktritt, nachdem auch er als Kunde identifiziert worden war. Auch Angehörige und Mitarbeiter der Streitkräfte, der NASA, der Weltbank und des Währungsfonds IWF waren in der Kundendatei verzeichnet.
Palfrey selbst hatte immer wieder beteuert, lediglich einen Begleitservice, nicht aber eine Sexvermittlung betrieben zu haben. Nach Polizeiangaben erhängte sie sich am Donnerstagvormittag in einem Schuppen, der sich neben dem Haus ihrer Mutter in Tarpon Springs befindet. Die 76-Jährige habe die Leiche entdeckt und die Polizei alarmiert.
Zuletzt aktualisiert
Augen gab uns Gott ein Paar / um zu schauen rein und klar / um zu GLAUBEN was wir lesen / wär ein Aug' genug gewesen (aus HH. zur Teleologie)

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Wir SW trauern - Selbstmord? der Agentur-Chefin D.J. Palfrey

#40

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Ich sehe die Parallele zum Zuhälter, der sich im Boxkeller der Hamburger "Ritze" erhängt hat. (Siehe unser Filmarchiv und Hamburg Infos)





Bild

Deborah Jeane Palfrey, The Washington D.C. Madam (March 18, 1956 – May 1, 2008)


Hier die erste Meldung vom Skandal:
viewtopic.php?p=14527#14527 ...

Hier Interviews mit Deborah Jean:
viewtopic.php?p=21033#21033

Auch ihr Escort-Girl, die Professorin Brandy Britton (Uni Maryland), hatte sich erhängt, nachdem sie von der Polizei hochgenommen und ihr Fall in den Medien bahandelt wurde.





Gedenktafel Sexarbeiter Selbstmorde

viewtopic.php?p=14824#14824





Medien-Links

Ihr letztes? TV-Interview:
link myfoxdc.com

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article ... 87,00.html

http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/myfox/page ... geId=1.1.1





RIP - Nachrufe von Sexwork KollegInnen

Tiisetso Motloung:
We need to mobilize against emotional abuse of sex workers as they are treated as criminals for doing what .... nothing against anybody. They don't actually deserve this kind of treatment from authorities who also use their services. Condolences to the family of Deborah


Callboy Starchild:
Suicide? I wonder. Body found in a storage shed? Seems an odd place for a middle-aged woman to kill herself. Handwritten notes can be coerced. There was a forged suicide note in the case of Vincent Foster. I can easily imagine powerful people wanting to pressure Deborah Jeane Palfrey not to release details, and being willing to use all kinds of unsavory methods.


Priscilla J. Alexander:
How awful. The fucking patriarchal system and the pseudo feminists and their anti-sex agenda. Making sex work a legal normalized business would do so much to improve conditions for the people doing the work.

As far as I am concerned, the FBI and the police departments involved in this heinous prosecution are evil.

How awful she must have felt to take this step.

Just think of all the hundreds of thousands of people in prison and jails in this country for engaging in consensual, non-violent behavior that puritans don't approve of. Most of them African American and Hispanic (including most of the Johns who get busted). Reverend Wright is correct that there is a lot wrong with this country, it is just too bad he says it in such an inflammatory way.


Dave in Phoenix:
D.C. Madam Tragic Ending. Deborah Jeane Palfrey, the "D.C. Madam"
The good legal briefs, the terrible defense at trial and the Tragic Suicide
A history lesson as to waste of resources and lives over in private consenting adult sexwork
Outcall as in her service - legal in almost all the world except the U.S.

May 1, 2008 The Tragic Ending
Jeane Palfrey hangs herself on mother's property in Tampa, Suicide notes were found near the body, police say. Palfrey's 76-year-old mother, Blanche Palfrey, found her daughter hanged using a nylon rope from a metal beam on the ceiling of a storage shed outside her home,

One of Palfery's escort service employees was former University of Maryland, Baltimore County, professor Brandy Britton, who was arrested on prostitution charges in 2006. She committed suicide in January before she was scheduled to go to trial.

Summary from earlier reports
As I have extensively reported on, I had been in e-mail discussion with her civil attorney Palfrey lawyer Montgomery Blair Sibley.I read some of his motions which were excellent including using Lawrence vs Texas (see my articles at
www.sexwork.com/legal/Lawrence_Index.html ) But her criminal attorney, Preston Burton at trial had in my view, a terribly lacking defense.

At trial her only defense was that she didn't know sex was going on with her escorts. I had suggested an aggressive defense using both Lawrence vs Texas and the fact that clients only paid for time not for sex and whatever happened during time in private with consenting adults with no money exchanged for sex, was not a crime.

I had discussed with prior lawyer what resulted in my article:
Is Paying for Time legal as long as not for sex?
Is it similar to how Restaurants avoid Liquor License laws?
At www.sexwork.com/legal/TimeNotSex.html

The trial was a total disaster with only the "she didn't know" defense used which prior escorts easily proved wrong and the defense rested from what I have read with no other defense. It was a slam dunk guilty verdict by the jury.

She was found guilty April 15 of money laundering, racketeering and mail fraud and faced a maximum 55-year prison term at her sentencing, which was scheduled for July 24.

Consolidation of my many reports is at
www.sexwork.com/escorts/dcmadam.html
A lot of reading but a serious issue. Hopefully some of the ideas might be useful in a future case.


Catherine, an activist with the IUSW:
As many of you doubtless already know, a body believed to be that of Deborah Jeane Palfrey has been found. Although it seems possible she committed suicide, it has been reported she feared for her life from those whose public standing could be damaged by her testimony.

Whether she died by her own hand or her suicide is a cover for murder, she has been killed by the state.


We will remember her as we remember all those named and unnamed women and men who are victimised for their sexwork, till one day we all are free.


Dan Moldea:
You have to remember that all those who worked for her service and those who used it — none of them were held to account, or punished. And now, she is dead.


Tracy Quan:
Many are questioning the official version of her death, and I was taken to task yesterday by a friend for referring to DJP's death as a suicide. At a moment like this, people who basically share some sense of loss can turn on each other. Maybe that's a way of processing death.

But you know what? Conspiracy theory is not a term in my lexicon. I wouldn't rule anything out. And neither, it seems, do a lot of New York Times readers.

I think everyone responds to a thing like this differently. A lot of us, whether we knew Deborah or not, are taking this personally. Will she come to be seen as a martyr for our cause?

I wish she had lived on to do a book about her experience, including her prison time.
http://www.tracyquan.net/gossip/blog.php
http://governmentdirt.com/it_is_a_sad_d ... world_over


Betroffenheits-Radio der Sexworker:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/swopeast/2 ... -film-bill


Weitere:
http://www.swopusa.org/contribute
http://www.boundnotgagged.com


Presseerklärung der SW-Projekte:
The Pink Scare: Ms. Palfrey and Sex Panic
viewtopic.php?p=36277#36277





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 03.05.2008, 00:05, insgesamt 7-mal geändert.

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