Dallas Law Against 'Manifesting' Prostitution Declared Unconstitutional
Plus: The right to call neighbor a "red-headed bitch," the case against a Digital Consumer Protection Commission, and more...
Plus: The right to call neighbor a "red-headed bitch," the case against a Digital Consumer Protection Commission, and more...
Horrible things are happening to vulnerable people, but we cannot help them by sending groups of vigilantes or law enforcement officers to hunt them.
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Prosecutors also want a judge to take basically all possible defenses off the table.
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As former Backpage execs await their August trial, the shutdown is still worsening the lives it was supposed to improve.
New bills in six states showcase some right and wrong ways to help sex workers, from full decriminalization to ramping up penalties for prostitution customers.
Plus: States move to stop cops from lying to kids, Biden wants to raise Medicare taxes, and more...
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The 2018 law criminalizes websites that "promote or facilitate" prostitution. Two of three judges on the panel pushed back against government claims that this doesn't criminalize speech.
Kaytlin Bailey wants to decriminalize—and normalize—the world's oldest profession.
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Once again, policies billed as helping people coerced into prostitution wind up harming those that cops say they're trying to help.
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Former Backpage executives could now face trial again in 2023, after the government's first attempt resulted in a mistrial.
It would be far easier to prosecute sex trafficking if voluntary sex work were legal.
Podcaster Molly Lambert's gambit to get listeners to critically examine the conflation of sex work is mostly successful.
Reason's Elizabeth Nolan Brown makes the case for legalizing sex work. Author Julie Bindel wants customers to be held criminally liable.
Reason's Elizabeth Nolan Brown makes the case for legalizing sex work. Author Julie Bindel wants customers to be held criminally liable.
One bill would repeal a range of laws against sex work, while the other would change them from criminal to civil offenses.
Belgium is the first country in Europe to decriminalize selling and paying for sex.
In addition, 201 "sex buyers" were arrested.
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The pimping charges Krell helped bring against Backpage's CEO and founders were twice thrown out of court.
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Judge said she has concerns that the government crossed the line several times.
The defendants are not on trial for child sex trafficking, yet prosecutor Reggie Jones wouldn't stop talking about it.
Five men face "trafficking a person for sexual servitude" charges after meeting an undercover cop at a hotel.
St. James fought for sex workers at a time when the mainstream U.S. feminist movement was hostile to them and leftist organizers portrayed them as victims.
The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids railed against cops for enforcing the same kind of anti-vaping rule they help pass.
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Portland police are calling it "human trafficking," but it was just an old-fashioned vice bust.
The Nordic Model comes to Manhattan.
Certain politicians and pundits are living in a 1930s fantasy world.
Plus: Effort to decriminalize psychedelics gains traction in California, crony capitalism at its worst, and more...
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Two women still face felony charges, though the cases against all male defendants were dropped.
Not sure that paying for sex makes you an "extraordinary gentleman," even if you do try to "give something back" by providing expert consumer reviews.