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Judge provisionally dismisses charges against backpage.com website for its small ads for adult services
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| 21st November 2016
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| See article from abc13.com
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A California judge has tentatively rejected supposed pimping charges against the operators of Backpage.com, a major international website that advertises escort services. However the judge gave both sides more time to submit briefs before issuing a final
ruling next month. Sacramento County Superior Court Judge Michael Bowman cited a federal law involving freedom of speech while ruling that the state attorney general's office cannot continue prosecuting Backpage.com's CEO Carl Ferrer and former owners
Michael Lacey and James Larkin. The men were charged by California Attorney General Kamala Harris, who ludicrously referred to Backpage.com as an online brothel. The judge, however, said Harris lacked authority to bring the charges because
the federal Communications Decency Act, as a way of promoting free speech, grants immunity to website operators for content posted by users. Bowman wrote: Congress has spoken on this matter and it is for Congress, not
this court, to revisit.
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Head of backpage.com, a major small ads website, arrested over adverts for prostitutes
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9th October 2016
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| See article from bbc.com |
Carl Ferrer, head of small ads website Backpage.com has been arrested on allegations of pimping, the California Attorney General has announced . In a rather blatant conflating of trafficking with adult consensual sex work, the department said that a
three-year investigation concluded that many of its adult escort adverts involved prostitutes and victims of sex trafficking, including children. Warrants have also been issued for two controlling shareholders. The site, which operates
around the world, is still online. |
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US small ads website, Backpage.com, wins appeal with the court agreeing that the website is not responsible for the posts added by users
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| 29th March 2016
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| See article from nswp.org
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Advertising website Backpage.com, which includes small ads for sex workers, won an appeal on the 14 th of March, 2016. The ruling states that Backpage is not responsible for any trafficking that may happen because of the advertisements on their website.
Backpage provides free or cheap advertisements and has been used a lot by sex workers since the removal of Craigslist in 2010. Ads are moved to the front using Bitcoin transactions after credit card companies were pressured to stop working for the
website. In recent years, the website has been subject to multiple lawsuits in different states. The website has also been subject to hearings in the United States Congress, as NSWP reported here . Three young women who alleged they
had been trafficked through ads on Backpage brought the civil case forward. They were all minors at the time the events occurred. As Mike Masnick reports at Techdirt , the case alleged that Backpage was responsible for this activity under the Trafficking
Victims Protection Reauthorisation Act (TVPRA) of 2008. The TVPRA states that, anyone who "knowingly benefits, financially or by receiving anything of value from participation in a venture which that person knew or should have known has
engaged" in an act of sex trafficking.
However, Backpage argued that they were not responsible because they are protected through section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. Section 230 states that websites are not responsible
for the actions of their users. The three women argued that Backpage was aware of and encouraged sex trafficking on their website. The court did not accept this assessment, upholding their protection under section 230. |
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Congress get heavy with boss of Backpage.com after he claims constitutional rights to avoid state pressure against adverts for sex workers
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| 21st March 2016
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| 15th March 2016. See article from theregister.co.uk
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The CEO of Craigslist-style classified ad website Backpage.com may be the first person in 20 years to be found in contempt of US Congress. Carl Ferrer was subpoenaed by a Senate subcommittee back in October to answer questions over allegations that
his site was responsible for nearly three-quarters of all reported child sex trafficking ads. He refused to attend. The subcommittee responded by formally approving a contempt motion that will be reviewed by the full Senate, likely this week. If
approved, it will be the first time since 1995 that such a motion has been passed. Update: In contempt 21st March 2016. See
article from movie-censorship.com Led by Senators Rob Portman and Claire McCaskill, the Senate voted today to hold Backpage.com's CEO in contempt of
Congress. |
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Bill introduced in New Hampshire to decriminaliase prostitution
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| 2nd February 2016
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| See article from
business.avn.com |
The Erotic Service Providers Legal Education and Research Project (ESPLERP) has commended New Hampshire representatives Elizabeth Edwards, Amanda Bouldin, and Carol McGuire, who introduced House Bill 1614 that seeks to decriminalize prostitution in New
Hampshire. On January 28, there was a hearing on the Bill before the New Hampshire Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee. Interestingly, representative Dick Marston (Republican) was quoted as saying, This bill can't be supported by
women because my wife would hate this bill. This despite the fact that all three of House Bill 1614's sponsors are women, and that a series of women spoke in support of the Bill at a press conference. Maxine Doogan, President of the Erotic Service
Providers Legal Education and Research Project said: This is groundbreakingThe criminalization of prostitution is a failed policy. The 'War on Sex' hasn't stopped anyone from buying or selling sex, but it has caused a
lot of collateral damage, to poor women, women of color, and trans women. It's about time that the government stopped intervening in what consenting adults do in private.
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22nd January 2016
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Claims to be a 1912 price list from a London brothel (but it's priced in dollars) See article from imgur.com |
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US authorities close down escort review site covering sex workers in Seattle
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| 11th January 2016
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| See article from xbiz.com |
US police have shut down TheReviewBoard.net, one of the best known and highly used escort review forums in the Seattle area. TheReviewBoard.net operated for several years. The site describes itself as Here local
Seattle hobbyists and providers gather to share information, or chat in a relaxed environment.
The website's home page has now been hijacked by police and shows a message indicating it has been: Seized pursuant to a promoting prostitution investigation conducted by the King County Sheriff's Office, the Bellevue Police Department, the King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
According to KIRO-TV, eight men associated with TheReviewBoard.net site were arrested for promoting prostitution, money laundering, and various other charges. The Sex Workers Outreach Project, known as SWOP, condemned the
site's seizure and noted that there is resulting collateral damage. SWOP believes the closure of TheReviewBoard.net is the latest in a long history of abuses of people in the sex trade that puts these communities in
more vulnerable and often more dangerous situations. Along with raids, attacks on web-based communities like TRB harm both native and non-native sex workers. In addition to a discussion forum, TRB functioned as a free advertising
platform for adult workers. Many adult workers in the Northwest relied on the site as a low-barrier and free way to advertise and work without management, indoors, especially subsequent to MyRedbook's closure new barriers for using Backpage to advertise.
Capri Sunshine, a local sex worker and the SWOP-Seattle media coordinator, said: The site was valuable to a lot of sex workers. It was free, undocumented workers without ID or credit cards could use
it, and it was where most girls got the majority of their work
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