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  #1  
Unread October 14th, 2016
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Default Santa Clara Motel Sting

We’re looking for human trafficking and to find victims of human trafficking. That’s our goal,” said Sheriff’s Sgt. Kurtis Stenderup, who is running the operation. “Whether or not we arrest or cite sex workers, we don’t have a blanket policy on that. We know there are sex workers out there who aren’t being exploited, they’re in that business and that’s what they want to do.

http://www.mercurynews.com/2016/10/1...-exploitation/

Nice to know the cops can see difference, even if politicians, activists and the media can't.
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Unread October 14th, 2016
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Default 5 Reasons Decriminalization Protects Sex Workers' Rights

5 Reasons Decriminalization Protects Sex Workers' Rights

June 9, 2016

Amnesty International responds to controversy over recent policy change on decriminalizing sex work

As one of the largest human rights organizations in the world, Amnesty International's mission is to promote human rights for all and to protect people wherever justice is denied. Sex workers are among the most vulnerable populations in the world, at risk of abuse not only at the hands of clients or members of the public but by the police as well.

With that in mind, Amnesty International spent nearly three years conducting research and interviewing sex workers and their advocates in order to formulate a policy that calls for states to respect, protect, and fulfill the human rights of sex workers and to address any discrimination or inequalities that limit their choices in life. The policy includes decriminalizing sex work as one crucial step toward those goals.

In our research, we made it a point to not only speak with current and former sex workers who support decriminalization and are engaged in sex work by choice but also with those who oppose it. We weighed all of this input seriously with the understanding that everyone we spoke with felt strongly about the safety of those engaged in sex work and the need to address the social and economic conditions that make some feel as if they have no other choice but sex work.

Here are five reasons why decriminalization is a crucial component of protecting the human rights of sex workers.

1. Criminalizing buyers does not protect sex workers.
2. Full decriminalization reduces the risk that sex workers will be vulnerable to discrimination, eviction or arrest for related charges.
3. Decriminalizing sex work still means trafficking and other abuses are illegal.
4. Decriminalization is supported by leading human rights organizations, international bodies and medical experts.
5. Decriminalization is just one step in protecting the human rights of sex workers, but it is an important one.

read the rest of the article in Rolling Stone

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics...ights-20160609
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Unread October 15th, 2016
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Nice post lib, unfortunately logic doesn't trump, rhetoric and false righteousness of deep prudish belief systems. Loved the,sexual deviant speech from masters of sex the other night though.
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Default Sex Work Should Be Decriminalized

Sex Work Should Be Decriminalized

10-14-16

ACLU of Southern California

By Melissa Goodman and Maria Carmen Hinayon

The ACLU has long opposed the criminalization of sex work because we believe the Constitution protects the rights of consenting adults to engage in private, consensual sexual activity without fear of criminal penalty. In other words the Constitution protects an adult’s personal decision to engage in intimate, sexual activity with another adult whether the intimacy is built on love, desire or done in exchange for money or other things of value like shelter, food or necessities. At a minimum, restrictions on that right must receive a high level of constitutional scrutiny before they can be allowed to stand.

The ACLU and an array of civil rights, legal and social services organizations argue these points in a friend-of-the-court brief filed last week with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which is hearing a constitutional challenge to California’s statute that prohibits solicitation and engagement in sex work for both buyers and sellers of sex.

Precedent supports our argument. In 2003, the Supreme Court struck down sodomy laws as unconstitutional. That ruling was based on three important principles that consenting adults have:

* the right to private sexual intimacy,

* the right to form and make decisions about intimate relationships that are sexual in nature

* the right to privately engage in intimate conduct in one’s own bedroom.

The court recognized “an emerging awareness that liberty gives substantial protection to adult persons in deciding how to conduct their private lives in matters pertaining to sex.” It also said that the “state cannot demean people’s existence or control their destiny by making their private sexual conduct a crime.” We believe all these principles apply to an adult’s personal decision to engage in sexual activity with another adult in exchange for money, shelter, food or necessities. As the sodomy ruling–as well as the Supreme Court’s marriage equality ruling–make clear, moral disapproval of certain conduct–including sex work–alone cannot justify its criminalization.

We hope this brief sends a strong signal to the court that it should apply a high level of constitutional scrutiny to California’s criminal statute penalizing solicitation and sex work and bear in mind the dark history and the current reality of discriminatory enforcement as it considers the case. More generally, courts may start to more deeply examine how laws used to ensnare suspected sex workers are discriminatorily enforced on the ground.

As the Supreme Court said when it recently struck down laws banning same-sex couples from marrying, “the nature of injustice is that we may not always see it in our own times.”

https://www.aclusocal.org/decriminalize-sex-work/

read friend-of-the-court brief filed last week with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals

https://www.aclusocal.org/wp-content...ief-100716.pdf

Support the ACLU of Southern California

Los Angeles phone: 213.977.9500
Orange County phone: 714.450.3962
Legal intake: 213.977.5253

1313 West Eighth St., Los Angeles, CA 90017


The ACLU of Southern California defends the freedoms guaranteed by the Bill of Rights

Melissa Goodman is director of the LGBTQ, Gender & Reproductive Justice Project at the ACLU of Southern California

Maria Carmen Hinayon is UCLA POP law fellow at the ACLU of Southern California
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