Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Foes of Sex Trade Are Stung by the Fall of an Ally

New York Times
March 12, 2008

By NINA BERNSTEIN

As New York’s attorney general, Eliot Spitzer had broken up prostitution rings before, but this 2004 case took on a special urgency for him. Prosecuting an international sex tourism business based in Queens, he listened to the entreaties of women’s advocates long frustrated by state laws that fell short of dealing with a sex trade expanding rapidly across borders.

And with his typical zeal, he embraced their push for new legislation, including a novel idea at its heart: Go after the men who seek out prostitutes.

It was a question of supply and demand, they all agreed. And one effective way to suppress the demand was to raise the penalties for patronizing a prostitute. In his first months as governor last year, Mr. Spitzer signed the bill into law.

Now the human rights groups, which credit him with what they call the toughest and most comprehensive anti-sex-trade law in the nation, are in shock. Mr. Spitzer stands accused of being one of the very men his law was designed to catch and punish.

“It leaves those of us who worked with his office absolutely feeling betrayed,” said Dorchen Leidholdt, director of Sanctuary for Families Legal Services, one of the leaders of the coalition that drafted the legislation.

The law, which went into effect Nov. 1, mainly deals with redefining and prosecuting forms of human trafficking, which Governor Spitzer called “modern-day slavery.” It offers help to the women who are victims of the practice, rather than treating them as participants in crime.

But it also lays the groundwork for a more aggressive crackdown on demand, by increasing the penalty for patronizing a prostitute, a misdemeanor, to up to a year in jail, from a maximum of three months.

That was a key shift in approach for New York State, and one the governor and his top aides seemed to support wholeheartedly, said Ken Franzblau, now director of the law’s implementation at the State Division of Criminal Justice Services. Generally, the law and its enforcers focus on pimps and prostitutes, and treat customers as an afterthought.

“If you eliminate the demand, you eliminate the problem,” said Mr. Franzblau, who worked for years with Equality Now, a women’s advocacy and human rights group that had long urged prosecution of the Queens sex tourism business operating as Big Apple Oriental Tours.

“In fact, the demand is really the lower-hanging fruit,” he added. “The johns are really afraid of being caught. The idea is that if we get some real penalties, and get D.A.’s to insist on them, we really could create a deterrent to this.”

For Equality Now, and a core of high-profile supporters that included Gloria Steinem and Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, the Big Apple Oriental Tours case was a frustrated seven-year campaign for prosecution that became a turning point. Even after Mr. Franzblau posed as a would-be customer, gathering what was described as “smoking-gun evidence,” the Queens district attorney, Richard A. Brown, declined to prosecute.

Mr. Brown maintained that under state law he had no legal jurisdiction over acts of prostitution that took place in Thailand and in the Philippines, even if those acts were being promoted by a travel business operated in New York.

Mr. Spitzer disagreed. Newly re-elected as attorney general, he began an investigation, slapped the business with a civil action that shut down its Web site, and in February 2004, won a grand jury indictment of the two operators in Dutchess County, where they lived. He proclaimed it the first criminal charge against a sex tourism business based in the United States.

But the case stalled, and despite another indictment in 2005, it has yet to reach trial.

Efforts to clarify and overhaul New York’s penal code on prostitution and human trafficking seemed stuck in legislative gridlock.

“We had tremendous difficulty trying to get this law passed, year after year,” said Taina Bien-Aimé, executive director of Equality Now. “Our only hope was for Eliot Spitzer to be elected governor.”

“He understood,” she added. “He got it, unlike hundreds of other politicians and law enforcement officials that we talked to.”

She and Ms. Leidholdt said the governor put his muscle behind the legislation, detailing top aides to work with sponsors of piecemeal bills that had languished, to consult with a coalition of human rights and women’s groups, and to lobby labor unions whose support was won through provisions addressing the trafficking and exploitation of workers.

Peter Pope, one of Mr. Spitzer’s point people on the bill, declined to comment through the governor’s press secretary, Errol Cockfield.

The law explicitly made sex tourism and its promotion a crime, resolving the jurisdictional debate that had mired the Big Apple prosecution for so long. But more important, Ms. Bien-Aimé said, it demonstrated a comprehensive approach to the larger issues.

“One of the goals of the human trafficking law was the acknowledgment that demand is a critical factor in sex trafficking,” she said. “And as a result of that, it increased the penalties for patronizing a prostitute across the board, whether or not the person is trafficked.”

Too often, Ms. Bien-Aimé maintained, the public imagines a huge divide between the kind of glamorous call girl depicted in a movie like “Pretty Woman,” and the lurid, violent world of trafficked women in a film like “Eastern Promises.” But they are all part of a commercial sex industry that buys women’s bodies, she said, citing studies that put the average age of entry into prostitution in the United States at 14.

“There’s no sliding scale in the exploitation of women,” she said. “Either you exploit a woman in the commercial sex trade or you don’t.”

Because Mr. Spitzer seemed to agree, she said, “he was our hero.”

Monday, March 10, 2008

NY Governor Eliot Spitzer Tied to Prostitution Ring

Just when we thought NYC police officers forcing minor girls into prostitution was the height of hypocrisy, we learn that NY Governor Eliot Spitzer is linked to a prostitution ring.  He was apparently a client of a high-end escort service that did business in New York, Paris, London and Miami.  There are a few points that really need mention in this regard:
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(1)  As the former NY Attorney General, Spitzer oversaw the prosecution of at least two prostitution rings by the state's organized crime task force, which reports to the attorney general.  I try to imagine how useless our trafficking or organized crime task forces might be if they were being led by someone who benefits from trafficking and organized crime... 
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(2)  Spitzer transported the prostitute from NY to DC.  The feds haven't yet brought up formal charges, but he can potentially be charged under the Mann Act, which is essentially the statute US Attorneys use to more easily prosecute cases of human trafficking.  It carries stiff penalties, up to 15 or so years in prison.  That's big.
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(3)  Most importantly, is it no surprise why the blood, sweat and tears of several New York anti-trafficking agencies, including GEMS, was all for naught when the proposed NY Safe Harbor Act failed to pass last year?
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As reported in an editorial in the New York Times, "Gov. Eliot Spitzer of New York and his colleagues in the Sate Legislature got deserved kudos earlier this year for passing a law that provides aid and protection to victims who are smuggled into this country and forced to work as sex slaves.  Unfortunately, the sex trafficking law did nothing to protect the growing numbers of American-born children, as young as 12 or 13, who are forced into prostitution by street pimps.  
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During the last term, the Legislature failed to pass a bill that would have provided those protections.  Under the Safe Harbor Act, children who are too young to legally consent to sex would no longer be charged with prostitution and would no longer be treated as criminals.  The courts would instead be required to provide them with counseling, medical care and the long-term shelter they end to reclaim their lives." (NY Times 9/15/07)
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It was reported by Safe Harbor advocates that some members of the Legislature were only slightly interested in hearing the young survivor's testimony, perking up when she named off some clubs she used to work at in a manner that suggested that they were flipping through their mental rolodexes to remember if it was one of the many that they have patronized in the past.  There may be a few rational arguments one can make against a bill of this nature, but I'd bet money that some to many of the nay votes had to do more with Legislators' de facto acceptance of the sex industry and their view of American children in prostitution as bad kids making a bad choice (and thus not "innocent victims" like foreign victims of trafficking), than any well thought out reasoning.  It makes you wonder what Spitzer was thinking through all these deliberations.  "Dang, I can't wait to get home and call 'Kristin'.  This is getting real boring."
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What really burns me up is that you can educate people.   You can educate them with interesting information in an interesting way.  You can give them all the horrendous facts they need so that there is no denying that most of the girls involved in prostitution have a traumatic life.  Many are minors, even if they don't say so.  Many are getting beat and raped regularly, even if they cover their bruises with makeup and put a smile on their faces.  Many don't get to keep a dollar of the money they make, even though they brag about living the glamorous life in the public eye.  Granted, the high-class circuit may not be as oppressive as the street prostitution rings, but it is oppressive nonetheless. It's all a facade.  We never kept that a secret from you.  They really need our help, not our judgment, not our complacent acceptance of "the world's oldest profession".  What burns me up is that you can make the reality of the trauma blatantly clear...and they just don't give a damn.  
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Now who knows how the girls working for VIP Escorts were  treated or whether there were any minors involved.  It doesn't matter.  When the political will is non-existent, bills fail.  Period.  Is it any wonder now where the will went when the Safe Harbor Act failed?

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

The Wrong Target

New York Times
February 19, 2008
Op-Ed Columnist
By BOB HERBERT


A New York City police detective and his girlfriend have been accused of kidnapping and forcing a 13-year-old girl into prostitution.


According to the Queens district attorney’s office, the detective, Wayne Taylor, and the girlfriend, Zalika Brown, would parade the girl at parties and other places where adult men had gathered and force her to have sex with them for money — $40 for oral sex, $80 for intercourse.
The child was an investment. The couple allegedly told her that she had been purchased for $500 — purchased, like the slaves of old, only this time for use as a prostitute.


Other than the fact that one of the accused in this case is a police detective, there was nothing unusual about this tale of trafficking in young female flesh.


Our perspective is twisted. It was a big story when a television newsman was crude and thoughtless enough to use the term “pimped out” in a reference to Chelsea Clinton. The comment generated outrage — as it should have — and the newsman was suspended. But if someone actually pimps out a 13-year-old child, and even if that someone is alleged to be a police detective, it generates a collective yawn.


Across the country, young girls by the many thousands — children — are being drawn into the hellishly dangerous world of prostitution. They are raped, beaten and exploited in every way imaginable.


As part of the staggeringly lucrative commercial sex trade, the role of these children is to satisfy the sexual demands of johns who in most cases do not fit the stereotype of a pedophile.


“Many of the guys who buy sex with children would never consider themselves pedophiles,” said Rachel Lloyd, founder of an organization in New York called GEMS that offers help to under-age girls in the sex trade. “They’re not necessarily out there looking for 12-year-olds or teenagers. They just kind of don’t care.


“They feel like they have the right to buy sex from someone, and they prefer it to be someone who looks younger and cleaner and less drug-addicted.”


In the case of the accused New York City detective, the authorities acted promptly and effectively. The girl managed to escape and notified the police, who investigated immediately. Detective Taylor and Ms. Brown were arrested and the case has been turned over to the office of Queens District Attorney Richard Brown. Both are in custody.


But law enforcement does not always respond in a positive or constructive way. It is common across the country for under-age girls engaged in prostitution to be arrested, which is bizarre when you consider that it is a serious crime — statutory rape — for an adult to have sex with a minor.


If no money is involved, the youngster is considered a victim. But if the man pays for the sex — even if the money is going to the pimp, which is so often the case — the child is considered a prostitute and thus subject in many venues to arrest and incarceration.


“We often see the girls arrested and the pimps and the johns go free,” said Carol Smolenski, the head of Ecpat-USA, a group that fights the sexual exploitation of children. “One of the big problems is that there is this whole set of child sex exploiters who are not targeted as exceptionally bad guys.”


What’s needed is a paradigm shift. Society (and thus law enforcement) needs to view any adult who sexually exploits a child as a villain, and the exploited child as a victim of that villainy. If a 35-year-old pimp puts a 16-year-old girl on the street and a 30-year-old john pays to have sex with her, how is it reasonable that the girl is most often the point in that triangle that is targeted by law enforcement?


A measure of how far we still have to go is the fact that some enlightened officials in the state of New York tried to shift that paradigm last year and failed. The proposed Safe Harbor Act would have ended the practice of criminalizing kids too young to legally consent to sex. Under the law, authorities would have no longer been able to charge children with prostitution, but would have had to offer such youngsters emotional counseling, medical care and shelter, if necessary.


Legislative passage was thwarted in large part because prosecutors made the case that it was necessary to hold the threat of jail over the heads of these children as a way of coercing them to testify against pimps. In other words: If you don’t tell us who hurt you, little girl, we’re going to put you in jail.


It was an utterly specious case, filled to the bursting point with tragic implications and unworthy of a civilized society.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Cyber prostitution den found in suspect's home

Print This Article
Posted on Sun, Jan. 20, 2008

When detectives arrested reputed gangster Bird Road Rudy, they made an unsettling discovery inside the Southwest Miami-Dade home where he was found: an Internet prostitution den.

Police say they arrested Hugo Olmo Gonzalez, 30, last week on prostitution and sex trafficking charges.

According to an arrest report, Miami-Dade Detective Yannile Hernandez was searching the house at 10281 SW 58th St. when she spotted ``several computers containing pornographic material with minors involved.''

A 17-year-old girl told police Gonzalez was her pimp and was ``ordered to call him daddy.''

Detectives were there to detain Rudy Villanueva, Bird Road Rudy, who caused a furor among police after a video of himself, armed and taunting police, was posted on YouTube.com.

He and another man were arrested on federal guns charges.


MORE ARTICLES ON THIS:  http://www.wikio.com/news/Rudy+Villanueva 


Friday, December 14, 2007

Inspiration from Dallas

Dallas has been hailed as a city with a model response to the commercial sexual exploitation of children. Sgt. Byron Fassett leads the Child Exploitation Squad and has been instrumental in finding new and effective ways to identify victims, interview them and work together with social service providers to ensure that the victim is safe and on the path to healing. Read the following article for more information on the work being done in Dallas.

http://www.cyc-net.org/today2006/today060712.html

Thursday, December 6, 2007

An Underground Issue? Really?

Billboard off of I-95 in Broward County

When considering the risk factors that lead to a child being commercially sexually exploited, we may think prior history of abuse in the home, poverty and other likely suspects. The greatest risk factor, however - and one we typically gloss over – is DEMAND. Wherever there is an adult sex industry, there are children being exploited within it. The demand for buying sex and societal acceptance of it culminates in a double standard that allows and encourages men (1 out of 7 men to be precise) to purchase (often) a woman for sex without judgment, while the “prostitute” is dehumanized and treated as a morally and legally inferior citizen. This dehumanization of “prostitutes” in general leads us to be desensitized to the fact that children are being exploited in this industry and thus ignore the problem.

Most men soliciting children for sex are not pedophiles. They are situational abusers. They may not necessarily seek out children to buy, but if they are available and they happen to be under 18, they simply don’t care, as long as they meet their criteria for appearance. And in today’s world, we know two things: that sex is available for sale and that young is sexy.

This billboard shouts out from the side of I-95 in Broward County. Prostitution is illegal, but this advertisement clearly shows its acceptance. People often say that child prostitution is hidden underground, and that’s why it’s a difficult issue to tackle. This is clearly not the case. Children are walking the streets being sold alongside all the adults you see. They are listed on Craig’s List as 18 years old when they are not. Their photos are being shown in magazines and sent to entice men to travel abroad for sex. It is clearly not an underground problem. It’s an ignored problem.

We are seeing children being exploited in the sex industry every day, but since we are so desensitized to the adult sex industry, we don’t even stop to consider if that young looking girl is really an adult. Makes you wonder about this billboard.

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