Showing posts with label Backpage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Backpage. Show all posts

Sunday, August 18, 2013

States Seek Control Over Backpage Advertising

Advertising for prostitution and child-sex trafficking has flourished online thanks to websites such as Backpage.com.  Authorities, human rights groups and other officials argue that backpage.com knowingly profits from what amounts to sex slavery for children.  Many of the ads listed are for girls who are underage and/or under the control of a pimp.

 
Its estimated Backpage.com makes 5 million dollars a month from on-line sex ads. 

In March, Backpage.com published 67,455 online listings in 23 U.S. cities for escorts and body rubs, both euphemisms for prostitution 

Unfortunately, there is little states can do to end this advertising. 

In a recent letter to congressional leaders, 47 state attorneys general are calling on Congress to add the phrase “or state” to the Communications Decency Act of 1996.   This would give states jurisdiction for ending online prostitution.

The letter to congress:
July 23, 2013
           
Dear Senator Rockefeller, Senator Thune, Representative Upton, and Representative Waxman: 

Every day, children in the United States are sold for sex.  In instance after instance, State and local authorities discover that the vehicles for advertising the victims of the child sex trade to the world are online classified ad services, such as Backpage.com.  The involvement of these advertising companies is not incidental—these companies have constructed their business models around income gained from participants in the sex trade.  But, as it has most recently been interpreted, the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (“CDA”) prevents State and local law enforcement agencies from prosecuting these companies.  This must change. The undersigned Attorneys General respectfully request that the U.S. Congress amend the CDA so that it restores to State and local authorities their traditional jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute those who promote prostitution and endanger our children. 

It is ironic that the CDA, which was intended to protect children from indecent material on the internet,1 is now used as a shield by those who intentionally profit from prostitution and crimes against children.  Federal courts have broadly interpreted the immunity provided by the CDA,2 and recently the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington held that the CDA preempts state criminal law.3  As online advertising of child prostitution goes unchecked, sex traffickers are able to expand their businesses, magnifying the scope of the problem.  In the last few months alone, law enforcement agencies throughout the nation have linked sex-trafficking operations to internet advertisers. 

For example, on March 28, Miami police arrested a man for advertising the sex services of a 13-year-old girl on Backpage.com.  The perpetrator had tattooed his name across the girl’s eyelids, marking her as his property.  Two months earlier, two men were arrested in Fairfax County, Virginia for prostituting four minors on Backpage.com.  And on April 10, four males and one female were arrested in St. Paul, Minnesota for running a prostitution ring of eight girls and women ages 15 to 40.  The girls and women were advertised on Backpage.com.  These examples offer just a small sampling of the countless instances of child sex trafficking that occurs every day in the United States.

In order to better combat such crimes, we recommend that 47 U.S.C. § 230(e)(1) be amended to the following (added language in bold):
Nothing in this section shall be construed to impair the enforcement of section 223 or 231 of this title, chapter 71 (relating to obscenity) or 110 (relating to sexual exploitation of children) of Title 18, or any other Federal or State criminal statute.. 

Federal enforcement alone has proven insufficient to stem the growth of internet- facilitated child sex trafficking.  Those on the front lines of the battle against the sexual exploitation of children—State and local law enforcement—must be granted the authority to investigate and prosecute those who facilitate these horrible crimes.

Respectfully,
(Signed by the Attorney Generals)

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Take Action to Stop Backpage

If you aren't familiar with Backpage.com please read my post The Ugly Truth

FAIR Girls has created an online ad that tells the true story of what happened to a 13-year-old girl who was sold on Backpage.  The ad also dispels the myth that girls are always trafficked by someone they don't know.  The fact is that in 46% of the cases the victim knows her captor.



It is estimated that Backpage.com generates about $29 million in prostitution ads over a 12 month period.

FAIR Girls has also started on online petition to urge the owners to stop the site's adult section where young women and girls are advertised and purchased for sex.  It's already gotten more than 41,000 signatures.  You can take action and  Sign the Petition Here

You can also write your senators and inquire what is being done to stop Backpage ads in your state.  If you aren't sure who your senators are you can search by zip code at Congress.org  Once you search, click on each individual for their contact information. 


Thursday, October 25, 2012

13 year old girl peddled on Backpage

A brutal pimp was sentenced Tuesday to six to 18 years in prison after apologizing for forcing a
13-year-old runaway into prostitution.

Kendale (Ace) Judge, 21, took a plea deal last month for sex trafficking, admitting he met the girl just over a year ago.

He promised to love her, but instead peddled the teenager on the website backpage.com, prosecutors charged. When she tried to escape, he threw her down a flight of stairs, they added.

"I sincerely apologize," Judge said in Brooklyn Supreme Court.

"My own weakness, my own weak-mindedness and lack of education led to my incarceration," he went on. "I now know I was the cause and this is the effect."

Shanique Davis, 21, who helped the pimp by taking the girl's pictures and watching over her, is set to get five-year probation on Wednesday.

Defense attorney Phillip Katowitz managed to convince the judge to deny the media from taking photos of his client, who'll have to register as a sex offender after his release.

The lawyer declined comment


Read more: NY Daily News


You can read my original post about Backpage.com here

Friday, October 19, 2012

The Ugly Truth

If your're not familiar with Backpage.com let me introduce you to the sad, ugly truth.  Backpage is a classified advertising website. Similar to Craigslist it offers a wide variety of classified listings including automotive, jobs, and real estate. In fact, it is the second largest classified ad listing service on the Internet in the United States after Craigslist.  Unfortunately, it is also the the largest source for adult services listings on the Internet. This vile website is being used by pimps to peddle girls online.  There are many stories of young girls being seduced online by men who turn out to be pimps or sex-traffickers and this website is providing them an avenue to do that.

If you want to see for yourself how vile it is go to their website (Backpage), choose a random city or one close you.  Then click on the adult section.  Before you do please be warned that this is disturbing and disgusting.  You will see girls in scantily clad, sexy outfits.  Under headings such as Escorts, Body Rubs, Strippers, Dom & Fetish this website is clearly advertising sexual services.  The girls listed claim to be of legal age, but many of them look younger than the age posted.  Many of these ads may be consenting adults, but the ugly truth is that many of them are not.  Minnesota, Ramsey County Attorney John Choi is quoted as saying "When we get a case involving trafficking or prostitution, usually the story is going to start on Backpage.com."  Prosecutors across the country have seen an increase in cases (in 22 states recently) of underage girls being sold for sex on Backpage.com.

Backpage claims that ads submitted to Backpage are subject to an automated scan for terms and code words linked to prostitution. A team of around 100 people then checks each ad individually before it's posted. Each month the team finds around 400 ads offering potentially underage sex. These are sent to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children which in turn alerts law enforcement.  But here is the kicker...The team does not attempt to identify whether the subjects of the ads in question are participating of their own free will.  Nor are these questionable ads removed!

A few years ago Craigslist was doing this very same thing, but caved to the pressure it was getting and removed such ads from it's website.  Some recent strides have been made with Backpage.  Formerly, they were owned by Village Voice Media.  In recent months, Village Voice has separated their newspaper company from Backpage after several high profile companies cancelled ads for publications.  Backpage is now being run by shareholders Mike Lacey and Jim Larkin.

To read about a recent law suit by 3 teens who were trafficked from ads on Backpage click here
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