DSW Advocates Instrumental in VT’s Enactment of Country’s Most Comprehensive Police Sexual Violence Law

June 7, 2023

Governor Phil Scott signed S. 33, an act relating to miscellaneous judiciary procedures, amending 13 V.S.A. § 3259, which prohibits a law-enforcement officer from engaging in sexual contact with an individual who is in custody, being detained, or being arrested to also prohibit law enforcement from engaging in a sexual act with a person who is the subject of an open investigation or a confidential informant or victim in an open investigation. With this legislation, policymakers reiterated that non-consensual sex is a crime, while consenting adults should be afforded the autonomy and dignity to make choices about their own bodies.

Consistent with this view, S.33’s ban on police sexual assaults will help prevent the second-most prevalent form of police violence behind excessive force, police sexual misconduct, which most commonly occurs between police and consensual adult sex workers. Due to their engagement in a criminalized activity, victims engaged in prostitution are targeted by officers who use their fear of arrest to exploit them. “The fear of arrest makes it impossible for a sex worker to give consent even if it appears that they may have made a choice. There is no choice to be made between violation and incarceration. Additionally, because consent was obtained by deception, it amounts to sexual assault,” said Henri Bynx, co-founder and co-director of The Ishtar Collective.

“Laws addressing police sexual violence codify the notion that consent, or lack thereof, is key when determining if a crime has occurred,” said Rep. Taylor Small, sponsor of the initial bill included in S.33. “By delineating when consent cannot be given, we acknowledge that it is possible for sex workers to consent to paid sex in other instances and that when consent is involved, it should not be a crime,” Small continued, referencing the companion bills introduced last legislative session that would decriminalize consensual adult sex work.

Police sexual violence (PSV) is a term that encompasses interactions in which a law-enforcement officer (sometimes referred to as a peace officer) engages in sexual contact with someone they have encountered in the line of duty. Law-enforcement officers are inherently in a position of authority over civilians, and this authority can be wielded to coerce unwanted sexual contact. The International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) has recognized that policing “create[s] opportunities for sexual misconduct” because officers “have power and authority over others” and “engage with vulnerable populations who lack power and are often perceived as less credible.” PSV is the second-most prevalent form of police violence behind excessive force, but because victims are often hesitant to report their experiences, there are likely exponentially more cases than have been documented.

Read DSW’s comprehensive fact sheet and recommendations on PSV laws here.

Read Henri Bynx’s Commentary, published in the VT Digger, on PSV laws here.

DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary testifies in front of the Vermont House Judiciary Committee.

DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary testifies in front of the Vermont House Judiciary Committee.

DSW Newsletter #48

DSW Advocates Instrumental in VT’s Enactment of Country’s Most Comprehensive Police Sexual Violence Law

June 7, 2023 Governor Phil Scott signed S. 33, an act relating to miscellaneous judiciary procedures, amending 13 V.S.A. § 3259, which prohibits a law-enforcement officer from engaging in sexual contact...
Read More
DSW Advocates Instrumental in VT’s Enactment of Country’s Most Comprehensive Police Sexual Violence Law

Arrest in Long Island Serial Killer Case Shines Brighter Light on Need for Immunity Laws for Sex Workers

July 26, 2023 Opinion: Sex-worker immunity would have helped Gilgo Beach probe | Newsday By Melissa Sontag Broudo Guest essay Updated July 25, 2023 7:36 pm The recent arrest of Rex...
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Arrest in Long Island Serial Killer Case Shines Brighter Light on Need for Immunity Laws for Sex Workers

Maine Enacts Prostitution Law Decried by Leading Trafficking and Human Rights Experts

June 26, 2023 Governor Janet Mills signed into law a bill, sponsored by Representative Lois Reckitt, that makes it legal for adults to sell sexual services but illegal for adults to...
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Maine Enacts Prostitution Law Decried by Leading Trafficking and Human Rights Experts

The Ishtar Collective Provides Basic Needs After Catastrophic Flooding in VT

July 10, 2023 Much of Vermont was devastated by flooding after weeks of heavy rains. Many downtown areas around the state, including the state’s capital of Montpelier, were covered with water...
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The Ishtar Collective Provides Basic Needs After Catastrophic Flooding in VT

DSW Staff Attend Influential Conferences

July 19, 2023 This June, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended the MAPS Psychedelic Science conference in Denver, Colorado. 2023 marked the fourth gathering of the psychedelic community for the quinquennial conference,...
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DSW Staff Attend Influential Conferences

DSW Newsletter Archive

RI Study Commission Concludes

May 23, 2023

DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo and Community Engagement Consultant Henri Bynx were at the Rhode Island State House in April and May, as the study commission on which Bynx served held its final meetings. The commission will soon release a report with recommendations based on its findings.

The study commission was formed following the unanimous passage of House Resolution 5250, which proposed a special legislative commission to study ensuring racial equity and optimizing health and safety laws affecting marginalized individuals. The bill, as passed, delineated who should sit on the commission, which includes thirteen members, including individuals with lived experience. Other members of the commission include two legislators, a member of COYOTE RI, a representative from Amnesty International, two representatives of organizations serving populations disproportionately impacted by the criminalization of commercial sex, the director of the Department of Health, an attorney from the Rhode Island Public Defender’s Office, the Rhode Island attorney general, or designee, a representative from the Brown University Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, and the president of the Rhode Island Police Chiefs Association, or their designee.

The study commission has met eight times since fall of 2021 with experts from both within the commission and outside of it testifying at each meeting. In her capacity as legal director at DSW and with over twenty years of experience representing and advocating for the legal rights of consensual adult sex workers and survivors of human trafficking, Broudo testified in April 2022 about the devastating consequences of the conflation of consensual adult sex work and human trafficking. She helped to draft the legislation proposing the study commission as she believes that public policy should be informed by research and evidence. In April 2023, Broudo and Bynx testified together,  providing recommendations to the commission.  Bynx has testified on the impacts of criminalization on their life as a consensual adult sex worker. A leading advocate for sex worker rights, Bynx spoke powerfully about the critical need for decriminalization — the vital step that would allow individuals marginalized by criminalization to live with less fear and more dignity. In June 2022, Bynx provided testimony on the intersection of sex work and LGBTQIA+ rights.

DSW advocates for the creation of study commissions focused on evaluating prostitution laws, addressing trafficking concerns, and identifying better ways to create support systems for both sex workers and trafficked people.

Read our fact sheet on study commissions to review existing laws and address trafficking and exploitation.

DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo and Community Engagement Consultant Henri Bynx testify before the RI legislative study commission.

Melissa Broudo and Henri Bynx provide recommendations to the commission.

DSW Newsletter #47

DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

April 15, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended XBIZ Miami in South Beach, Miami, earlier this May. XBIZ, the adult industry’s leading publisher of business news and information, hosts five annual...
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DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

RI Study Commission Concludes

May 23, 2023 DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo and Community Engagement Consultant Henri Bynx were at the Rhode Island State House in April and May, as the study commission on which...
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RI Study Commission Concludes

DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

April 25, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) gathered elected officials, advocates, and survivors of trafficking to urge the New York State Legislature to pass S1966 (Sepulveda), an act to amend the...
Read More
DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

May 1, 2023 As sex work related reforms gain momentum around the country, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) staff members are busier than ever. Within the span of just a few weeks,...
Read More
DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

DSW Newsletter Archive

DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

May 1, 2023

As sex work related reforms gain momentum around the country, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) staff members are busier than ever. Within the span of just a few weeks, staff members testified in Maine, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island to advocate for laws that would decrease trafficking and increase public health and safety. Ensuring that legislators have the most compelling, accurate evidence in support of decriminalization and understand the realities of the Entrapment Model has never been more important.

Massachusetts

DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary testified in front of the Joint Judiciary Committee during a hearing that lasted nearly five hours. She advocated for passage of H1757, “An Act to promote the health and safety of people in the sex trade” and H1758/S1046, “An Act to prevent human trafficking and improve the health and safety of sex workers” and shared DSW’s strong opposition to H1597/S983, “An Act to strengthen justice and support for sex trade survivors.”

Two of these bills, H1757 and H1597/S983, seem similar on their face; in fact, they reflect two opposing approaches to the criminalization of sex work and two different philosophical understandings of sexual labor. H1757, “An Act to promote the health and safety of people in the sex trade” would fully decriminalize consensual adult sex work, repealing laws criminalizing both the consensual sellers and buyers of sexual services. H1597/S983, “An Act to strengthen justice and support for sex trade survivors” removes laws prohibiting the sale of sexual services but continues to criminalize buyers — in fact, significantly increasing penalties for the purchase of sexual services. This policy, known as the Entrapment Model, Nordic Model, or the Equality Model, among other names, has unambiguously failed to protect the health and safety of sex workers. The third bill, H1758/S1046, “An Act to prevent human trafficking and improve the health and safety of sex workers” creates a series of incremental policy measures to protect the human rights of sex workers and trafficking survivors. The measures include repealing the law that bans loitering for the purposes of prostitution, enacting a study commission that would research the criminalization of sex work and provide recommendations, and creating an immunity law for sex workers.

Immunity protections create an important tool for law enforcement in their efforts to identify and prosecute perpetrators of violence and trafficking. Sex workers and trafficking survivors are especially vulnerable to violence and exploitation — but frequently don’t report crimes perpetrated against them due to fear of arrest. When those abusers aren’t discovered by law enforcement, they are able to continue violence and exploitation with impunity. Additionally, sex workers and buyers of sex are in unique positions to witness trafficking and exploitation of minors, but due to criminalization they cannot safely report these crimes. Thus, immunity policies serve a dual purpose: they allow victims and witnesses of crime to safely seek the services they need without fear of arrest, and they also provide invaluable tools for law enforcement investigating crimes including human trafficking, assault, and even murder. Alaska, California, Colorado, Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, Utah, Vermont, and Washington have existing immunity laws, and similar bills were introduced in Hawaii, New York, Rhode Island, and Tennessee this year. Individuals and organizations with a breadth of priorities and experiences have openly supported these policies across the country, including trafficking survivors, advocates, sex workers, prosecutors, and police departments.

Maine

Staff testified in opposition to LD1435, “An Act to Reduce Commercial Sexual Exploitation” which would remove penalties for the sale of sex while leaving statutes criminalizing the purchase of sex intact, an Entrapment model policy. Staff also educated legislators on the dangers of the conflation of sex work and trafficking that underpins Entrapment model policies. Insisting that all sex work is exploitative strips people of bodily autonomy and does nothing to increase safety for either sex workers or individuals being trafficked.

Rhode Island

DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo testified in support of H5428, “An Act relating to health and safety – licensing of healthcare facilities.” It would mandate that patients be afforded respectful, considerate care and would not be discriminated against on any basis including age, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, or income source or profession.

Healthcare access is critical for the rights and safety of all. This is especially true when it comes to sex workers, who face increased risk of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), sexual assault, and physical assault as a result of the criminalization of their work. Many sex workers do not seek critical healthcare because they have faced discrimination or reporting to law enforcement by medical professionals. Protection against discrimination in seeking care is not only life-saving, it’s an important step in protecting against the spread of STIs and increasing resource access for some of our most underserved community members.

Further, healthcare providers serve a critical role in identifying and helping to report (with the patient’s permission) instances of human trafficking. Unfortunately, because of the criminalization of commercial sex, individuals trafficked for the purpose of selling sex are afraid to seek services. This is not only a violation of human rights, it is a public health and safety concern. We must make safe, confidential, and appropriate healthcare resources available to all individuals.

Staff Attorney Becca Cleary testifies in front of the Joint Judiciary Committee in Massachusetts.

Staff Attorney Becca Cleary testifies in front of the Joint Judiciary Committee in Massachusetts.

DSW Newsletter #47

DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

April 15, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended XBIZ Miami in South Beach, Miami, earlier this May. XBIZ, the adult industry’s leading publisher of business news and information, hosts five annual...
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RI Study Commission Concludes

May 23, 2023 DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo and Community Engagement Consultant Henri Bynx were at the Rhode Island State House in April and May, as the study commission on which...
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RI Study Commission Concludes

DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

April 25, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) gathered elected officials, advocates, and survivors of trafficking to urge the New York State Legislature to pass S1966 (Sepulveda), an act to amend the...
Read More
DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

May 1, 2023 As sex work related reforms gain momentum around the country, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) staff members are busier than ever. Within the span of just a few weeks,...
Read More
DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

DSW Newsletter Archive

DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

April 25, 2023

Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) gathered elected officials, advocates, and survivors of trafficking to urge the New York State Legislature to pass S1966 (Sepulveda), an act to amend the penal law in relation to individuals engaged in prostitution who are victims of or witnesses to a crime, and S4266A (Webb)/A5288A (Reyes), an act to establish a task force on missing women and girls who are Black, indigenous and people of color. Both bills seek to address how the policing of marginalized women and girls often reinforces structural inequities and stereotypes that contribute to their particular vulnerability to violence.

S1966 is common-sense legislation that would encourage sex workers and trafficking survivors who are crime victims and witnesses to report their experience to law enforcement, receive medical care, and seek help. People involved in commercial sexual activity, whether by choice or because they are being trafficked, are often targeted by predators who know they are unlikely to report victimization or seek medical attention for fear of their own arrest. When abusers are not reported to law enforcement, they are able to continue their acts of violence and exploitation with impunity. Similar legislation has recently passed in a number of states around the country.

S4266A/A5288A highlights how women and girls of color who are victims of crime have been failed by institutions that reinforce structural violence. Their stories and names are obscured by race, socioeconomic class, lack of urgency, gendered racism, and invisibility. The task force will develop policy changes to address the lack of care and concern for missing and murdered BIPOC women and girls; educate and train communities on the prevention, protection and protocols relating to missing women and girls; develop research strategies; recommend preventive programming; identify major traffic places that have high abduction rates; and create an awareness campaign.

Advocates and impacted individuals held meetings with over twenty state legislators to discuss the importance of both bills and were pleased with how receptive the lawmakers were. It is not clear whether either bill will become law this legislative session but the day was a success nonetheless as advocates were able to educate lawmakers and lay the groundwork for future action.

In addition to meeting with legislators, advocates, impacted individuals, and the bills’ sponsors, DSW held a press conference. Below are a handful of the most impactful statements made:

As a proud co-sponsor of both bills, I believe that we must act in unison to enact both into law this year. In doing so, we will empower and elevate survivors, raise awareness, and finally focus our time and resources on those who need and deserve it the most.”

— Senator Cordell Cleare (D-Harlem)

Sex workers and trafficking survivors who are crime victims and witnesses often remain silent for fear of retribution. With S1966, we are seeking to provide them with the necessary protection to report their experiences, receive medical care, and seek help. S4266A/A5288A, on the other hand, highlights the institutional failures that lead to the invisibility and vulnerability of missing and murdered women and girls of color. Passing both bills is essential in our efforts to address structural inequities and ensure justice for marginalized communities.”

— Senator Luis Sepúlveda (D-Bronx)

We have an epidemic of missing BIPOC Women and Girls in the U.S. and in New York State, the numbers keep rising. Missing Women and Girls of Color do not receive the same care and concern when they go missing as their white counterparts. Their cases are covered by fewer news stories, and they are too often mischaracterized as runaways, leaving families to resort to hiring bounty hunters to find their daughters. My legislation will establish a task force to address this gap in care and concern for BIPOC victims of abduction and human trafficking, educate communities to prevent disappearances, and identify the major hubs in New York where abductions occur.”

— Senator Lea Webb (D-Binghamton)

Women and girls of color are discarded by systemic racism in the reporting and search for missing persons. I am the proud sponsor of A5088-A with Senator Webb to tackle that inequity by establishing a task force of government agencies to analyze, reform, and prevent the conditions that allow both the media and law enforcement to treat these cases differently. This vital legislation will chart the path forward to making New York State a safer and affirming state for women and girls of color and their families, especially in missing persons cases.”

— Assembly Member Karines Reyes, R.N. (D-Bronx)

Immunity legislation is gaining popularity across the country with bipartisan support and collaborative efforts between activists, survivors, legislators, and law enforcement, who are all in agreement that these policies are crucial in advancing public health and safety. Ensuring that perpetrators of violence cannot repeatedly exploit their victims’ vulnerability and allowing survivors of violence to seek help is common sense public policy, which is why immunity laws are increasingly common in other states.”

— DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary

For too long, missing women and girls of color have largely been ignored. By creating a task force to focus attention on this issue, New York can follow the lead of other states who have made women and girls of color a priority.”

— Dawn Rowe, Executive Director of Girl Vow

Immunity laws directly protect victims and witnesses of violence, and they ultimately benefit all communities by allowing law enforcement to better detect criminal activity. I have had to accompany many clients who were raped or assaulted to the police to ensure they themselves would not be seen as the criminals, which just should not be the case.”

— DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo, longtime advocate and attorney for sex workers and trafficking survivors

Staff Attorney Becca Cleary speaks during the press conference.

Staff Attorney Becca Cleary speaks during the press conference.

DSW and Girl Vow Inc. staff and volunteers pose in between meetings with legislators.

DSW and Girl Vow Inc. staff and volunteers pose in between meetings with legislators.

DSW Newsletter #47

DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

April 15, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended XBIZ Miami in South Beach, Miami, earlier this May. XBIZ, the adult industry’s leading publisher of business news and information, hosts five annual...
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DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

RI Study Commission Concludes

May 23, 2023 DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo and Community Engagement Consultant Henri Bynx were at the Rhode Island State House in April and May, as the study commission on which...
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RI Study Commission Concludes

DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

April 25, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) gathered elected officials, advocates, and survivors of trafficking to urge the New York State Legislature to pass S1966 (Sepulveda), an act to amend the...
Read More
DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

May 1, 2023 As sex work related reforms gain momentum around the country, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) staff members are busier than ever. Within the span of just a few weeks,...
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DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

DSW Newsletter Archive

DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

April 15, 2023

Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended XBIZ Miami in South Beach, Miami, earlier this May. XBIZ, the adult industry’s leading publisher of business news and information, hosts five annual trade events throughout the United States and Europe. Each event brings together all segments of the industry: creators, performers, content producers, webmasters, brand executives, marketers, developers and service providers, among other market players.

DSW Executive Assistant Maddy Kammeraad-Campbell, Director of Communications Ariela Moscowitz, and Development Manager Esmé Bengtson attend XBIZ Miami to connect with other industry professionals.

DSW Executive Assistant Maddy Kammeraad-Campbell, Director of Communications Ariela Moscowitz, and Development Manager Esmé Bengtson attend XBIZ Miami to connect with other industry professionals.

DSW Director of Communications Ariela Moscowitz, Executive Assistant Maddy Kammeraad-Campbell, and Development Manager Esmé Bengtson attended. They networked with content creators and industry partners and discussed how the decriminalization of sex work would benefit performers and brand leaders in the adult entertainment industry.

The event offered a number of panels on legal issues for content creators, the difference between consensual adult sex work and trafficking, and payment processing in 2023. The event also offered the opportunity to meet with representatives from leading adult entertainment companies like PornHub, Chaturbate, and Fansly. Keynote speeches were presented by Dani Daniels and Siri Dahl.

This legislative session, the adult entertainment industry is facing extreme discrimination from policymakers across the country. In 2022, Louisiana passed a law requiring the use of age verification software on websites that contain a substantial amount of adult content. The purpose of the law was to protect minors from illicit content, but in practice the law endangers users’ private information, fails to protect minors, and places an unconstitutional burden on Americans seeking to exercise their First Amendment rights. Since Louisiana’s law passed, 14 additional states have introduced copycat age verification legislation.

Many laws that proclaim to have safety as their primary goal are thinly veiled attempts to eradicate the adult industry entirely. Pornography is a legalized form of sex work but performers, creators, platforms, and producers still face stigmatization from society, demonization from policymakers, and discrimination from financial institutions. The decriminalization of consensual adult sex work not only benefits criminalized sex workers but also sex workers whose work is legal but who still face undue burdens implemented by legislation and private companies who discriminate against them.

Members of The Cupcake Girls display their “Decrim Sex Work” temporary tattoos.

DSW Newsletter #47

DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

April 15, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended XBIZ Miami in South Beach, Miami, earlier this May. XBIZ, the adult industry’s leading publisher of business news and information, hosts five annual...
Read More
DSW Attends Top Adult Content Industry Conference

RI Study Commission Concludes

May 23, 2023 DSW Legal Director Melissa Broudo and Community Engagement Consultant Henri Bynx were at the Rhode Island State House in April and May, as the study commission on which...
Read More
RI Study Commission Concludes

DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

April 25, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) gathered elected officials, advocates, and survivors of trafficking to urge the New York State Legislature to pass S1966 (Sepulveda), an act to amend the...
Read More
DSW Hosts NY Lobby Day of Action Against Gender-Based Violence

DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

May 1, 2023 As sex work related reforms gain momentum around the country, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) staff members are busier than ever. Within the span of just a few weeks,...
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DSW Testifies on Important Legislation in MA, ME, & RI

DSW Newsletter Archive

DSW Testified on Important Sex Work Related Bills in RI

March 22, 2023

DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary traveled to Rhode Island to testify in support of three important bills making their way through the Rhode Island legislature. DSW is working towards the ultimate goal of the decriminalization of consensual adult sex work and advocating for incremental measures that states can take to reduce exploitation and violence perpetrated against sex workers and survivors of trafficking. If passed, these bills introduced in RI would bring immediate health and safety benefits to individuals engaged in sex work. Rebecca was joined by Tricia Newalu, founder of the Erotic Laborers’ Association of New England (ELA-ONE), who testified that since an immunity law was enacted in her home state of New Hampshire, sex workers have been able to share critical information about violent individuals with law enforcement.

H6140, currently being reviewed by the House Judiciary Committee, grants immunity from prosecution for commercial sexual activity to any victim or witness of a crime if they report the offense to law enforcement, seek or receive health care services as a result of their involvement or witnessing the offense, or assist or attempt to assist in the investigation and prosecution of the offense. Importantly, this protection is honored even if they later withdraw their cooperation. S402 is currently being reviewed by the Senate Judiciary Committee and would offer similar vital protections around immunity as the House bill.

People involved in the sex trade, whether by choice or by force, fraud, or coercion, often are victims of violent crime and exploitation, but frequently don’t report crimes perpetrated against them due to fear of arrest. When abusers are not reported to law enforcement, they are able to continue acts of violence and exploitation with impunity. Immunity allows sex workers and trafficked people to safely report crimes and seek medical care without the fear that they themselves will be criminalized. They equip law-enforcement entities with an increased ability to identify, investigate, and convict perpetrators of violence and trafficking. Immunity laws directly protect victims and witnesses of violence and they ultimately benefit all communities by allowing law enforcement to better detect criminal activity.

Read more about the importance of immunity laws, also referred to as Good Samaritan Laws, and states that have enacted them here.

S0372, in front of the Senate Judiciary committee, establishes criteria for the criminal offense of sexual assault when the victim is in the custody of a peace officer. It provides that a person convicted of custodial sexual assault would face imprisonment for not more than 3 years. Forty states have laws making sexual interaction between a law-enforcement agent and a person in their custody illegal.

As Clearly wrote:

While I am writing as an advocate for sex workers, this is an issue that affects a much wider swath of community members. Police sexual violence is the second-most prevalent form of police violence behind excessive force, but because victims are often hesitant to report their experience, there are likely exponentially more cases than have been documented. Sexual assault is, of course, already illegal; however, victims are understandably reluctant to report an assault to the same law enforcement entity that caused their victimization. They may fear that they will face retaliation, that they won’t be believed, or that the offender will claim the encounter was consensual. A law explicitly prohibiting sexual assault of someone in law enforcement custody is necessary to ensure these crimes don’t go unreported.

Custodial sexual assault can affect anyone who comes into contact with law enforcement, but sex workers and trafficking survivors are especially vulnerable to police sexual violence. The International Association of Chiefs of Police’s Addressing Sexual Offenses and Misconduct by Law Enforcement Executive Guide even acknowledges that “predators select victims based on vulnerabilities and a perceived lack of credibility, and therefore, victimization is often higher among certain populations including … individuals in prostitution and/or the commercial sex industry.” Offenders take advantage of the stigma surrounding sex work and can exploit their authority to coerce victims into unwanted sexual contact by threatening arrest.

Read DSW’s publication on Police Sexual Violence Laws here.

Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary testifying before the Rhode Island Senate Judiciary Committee.

Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary testifying before the Rhode Island Senate Judiciary Committee.

Tricia Newalu and Becca clearly pose with RI House Representatives following the House Judiciary Committee Hearing.

Tricia Newalu and Rebecca Cleary pose with RI House representatives following the House Judiciary Committee hearing.

DSW Newsletter #46 (March 2023)

Decriminalization Advocates Fill the NY State Capitol

March 1, 2023 Sex workers, allies, and advocates, including Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) Legal Director Melissa Broudo,  DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary, and DSW Consulting Attorney Allison Kollins gathered in the...
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Decriminalization Advocates Fill the NY State Capitol

DSW Testified on Important Sex Work Related Bills in RI

March 22, 2023 DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary traveled to Rhode Island to testify in support of three important bills making their way through the Rhode Island legislature. DSW is working...
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DSW Testified on Important Sex Work Related Bills in RI

VT Senate and House Introduce Decriminalization Bills

March 16, 2023 Elected officials, law-enforcement officials, sex workers, and anti-trafficking and sex workers’ rights advocates gathered to announce the introduction of S.125, an act related to voluntary engagement in sex...
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VT Senate and House Introduce Decriminalization Bills

Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer | New York Law Journal

COMMENTARY Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer Those of us with the power to defend individuals — or to change laws — should vehemently support the full decriminalization...
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Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer | New York Law Journal

DSW Newsletter Archive

VT Senate and House Introduce Decriminalization Bills

March 16, 2023

Elected officials, law-enforcement officials, sex workers, and anti-trafficking and sex workers’ rights advocates gathered to announce the introduction of S.125, an act related to voluntary engagement in sex work, and its companion bill in the House of Representatives, H.372. Lead senate sponsor Senator Becca White (D-Windsor) was joined by nine co-sponsors and 13 other representatives signed on with lead house Sponsor Representative Taylor Small (P/D-Winooski). Each bill, which would repeal the state’s archaic prostitution laws, has been referred to its chamber’s judiciary committee.

State’s attorneys Michelle Donnelly (Washington), Ward Goodenough (Windsor), Vince Iluzzi (Essex County), and Ian Sullivan (Rutland) joined the bills’ supporters at the Vermont State House. Chittenden County State’s Attorney Sarah George, not in attendance, has stated her support for the decriminalization of consensual adult sex work.

“Regardless of how one feels about prostitution personally, I hope we can all agree that criminalizing it is wrong for so many reasons. Our laws should be rooted in reality and data, instead of morality and ideology. This bill reflects Vermont’s commitment to personal and bodily autonomy and individual liberty,” said Senator Becca White (D-Windsor).

“Criminalization compromises access to resources, endangers public health, and allows violence against sex workers to go unchecked. Criminalization also fails to protect trafficking survivors. Decriminalization is a well-researched, practical, and simple step we can take in the fight against trafficking, while we work to address the nuanced causes of trafficking and invest in meaningful resources that support victims,” said Representative Taylor Small (P/D-Winooski).

“We all share a common goal of protecting our most vulnerable residents from trafficking, violence, and exploitation and it’s clear that criminalizing and stigmatizing the sex trade does not do this. Those of us trusted with the power to make, change and enforce laws have a duty to pay attention to evidence that shows us when we can do better. Modernizing our prostitution laws only reinforces our commitment to fighting trafficking and exploitation,” said Windsor County State’s Attorney Ward Goodenough.

“Through the decriminalization of consensual adult sex work, Vermont has a powerful opportunity to put its values into action. Those values are autonomy, community safety, and the recognition of the inherent dignity and humanity of all individuals. The best way to keep somebody trapped in a system of oppression is to keep them in a cycle of criminality and stigma. I want to get old, and I want to see my friends get old. I want us to live and thrive not under scrutiny, but in mutual respect and real community care,” said Henri Bynx, co-founder of The Ishtar Collective, Vermont’s only organization run by and for consensual adult sex workers and survivors of human trafficking.

Vermont legislators have introduced decriminalization bills in past sessions, but this is the first time that the Senate has also introduced a decriminalization bill. The bills would repeal the state’s laws prohibiting both prostitution and “indiscriminate sex.” Support for decriminalization and sex workers’ rights is gaining traction in Vermont.

On March 21, the House Committee on Judiciary heard testimony from DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary, Emma Honingford of The Ishtar Collective, and a researcher from Yale University on the importance of passing H.22, “An act relating to sexual exploitation of a person who is being investigated by law enforcement.” H.22 states that “No law enforcement officer shall engage in a sexual act with a person whom the officer is investigating, detaining, arresting, or otherwise holding in custody or who the officer knows is being investigated, detained, arrested, or otherwise held in custody by another law enforcement officer.” Vermont already has a law banning sexual contact between a law-enforcement officer and an individual in their custody, stating that this interaction would inherently be non-consensual because the power differential between law enforcement and civilians is too great. Passing this ban on investigative sex would make Vermont’s law on custodial sex complete and offer robust protections from police sexual violence.

Read coverage of Vermont’s pending decriminalization legislation here and here.

Watch the press conference at Vermont’s State House announcing the bills here.

Members of The Ishtar Collective, allies, and elected officials following the announcement of the introduction of the bills.

Members of The Ishtar Collective, allies, and elected officials following the announcement of the introduction of the bills.

DSW Newsletter #46 (March 2023)

Decriminalization Advocates Fill the NY State Capitol

March 1, 2023 Sex workers, allies, and advocates, including Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) Legal Director Melissa Broudo,  DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary, and DSW Consulting Attorney Allison Kollins gathered in the...
Read More
Decriminalization Advocates Fill the NY State Capitol

DSW Testified on Important Sex Work Related Bills in RI

March 22, 2023 DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary traveled to Rhode Island to testify in support of three important bills making their way through the Rhode Island legislature. DSW is working...
Read More
DSW Testified on Important Sex Work Related Bills in RI

VT Senate and House Introduce Decriminalization Bills

March 16, 2023 Elected officials, law-enforcement officials, sex workers, and anti-trafficking and sex workers’ rights advocates gathered to announce the introduction of S.125, an act related to voluntary engagement in sex...
Read More
VT Senate and House Introduce Decriminalization Bills

Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer | New York Law Journal

COMMENTARY Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer Those of us with the power to defend individuals — or to change laws — should vehemently support the full decriminalization...
Read More
Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer | New York Law Journal

DSW Newsletter Archive

Decriminalization Advocates Fill the NY State Capitol

March 1, 2023

Sex workers, allies, and advocates, including Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) Legal Director Melissa Broudo,  DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary, and DSW Consulting Attorney Allison Kollins gathered in the New York State House in Albany, NY, to urge legislators to decriminalize consensual adult sex work. DSW plays an active role in DecrimNY, a statewide coalition that organized the group’s visit to the Capitol. Approximately 100 individuals took part in DecrimNY’s Lobby Day which began with a press conference and also included numerous meetings with assembly members and senators.

“Sex Work is Work” could be heard throughout the State House during the press conference. The media heard from advocates including Elisa Crespo, executive director of The New Pride Agenda, and Jared Trujillo of The New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU). Sex workers and survivors of exploitation also spoke about the urgent need to decriminalize as did Senator Julia Salazar, lead Sponsor of S.4396, the Stop Violence in the Sex Trades Act (SVSTA) in New York. The bill would decriminalize consensual adult prostitution offenses and amend provisions relating to the prosecution of such offenses and vacating judgments. Senator Salazar introduced the bill in early February and it was referred to the Senate Codes Committee.

SVSTA’s co-sponsors include Senators Jabari Brisport, Kristen Gonzalez, Cordell Cleare, Robert Jackson, Zellnor Myrie, Jessica Ramos, Gustavo Rivera, and Luis R. Sepúlveda. SVSTA amends and repeals several existing statutes and penal codes so that consenting adults who trade sex, collaborate with, support, or patronize adult sex workers aren’t criminalized. In addition, the bill allows individuals to trade sex in spaces where legal business is permitted while upholding that maintaining exploitative workplaces where coercion and trafficking take place is a felony.

DecrimNY hosted several trainings and meetings prior to Lobby Day with the goal of preparing attendees. The trainings included information on current laws around sex work, as well as a briefing on the legislative process, how lobbying works, and how to lobby effectively.

Advocates were encouraged by the attention and momentum garnered by their presence in the Capitol on March 1. DSW will continue to work with elected officials, advocates, and DecrimNY to pass SVSTA, which was first introduced in 2019.

Advocates with Senator Kevin Parker after a successful meeting.

Advocates with Senator Kevin Parker after a successful meeting.

Members of DecrimNY stand behind Senator Julia Salazar during the press conference in the Capitol.

DSW Newsletter #46 (March 2023)

Decriminalization Advocates Fill the NY State Capitol

March 1, 2023 Sex workers, allies, and advocates, including Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) Legal Director Melissa Broudo,  DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary, and DSW Consulting Attorney Allison Kollins gathered in the...
Read More
Decriminalization Advocates Fill the NY State Capitol

DSW Testified on Important Sex Work Related Bills in RI

March 22, 2023 DSW Staff Attorney Rebecca Cleary traveled to Rhode Island to testify in support of three important bills making their way through the Rhode Island legislature. DSW is working...
Read More
DSW Testified on Important Sex Work Related Bills in RI

VT Senate and House Introduce Decriminalization Bills

March 16, 2023 Elected officials, law-enforcement officials, sex workers, and anti-trafficking and sex workers’ rights advocates gathered to announce the introduction of S.125, an act related to voluntary engagement in sex...
Read More
VT Senate and House Introduce Decriminalization Bills

Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer | New York Law Journal

COMMENTARY Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer Those of us with the power to defend individuals — or to change laws — should vehemently support the full decriminalization...
Read More
Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer | New York Law Journal

DSW Newsletter Archive

Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer | New York Law Journal

New York Law Journal

COMMENTARY

Making Sex Work an Honest Business Makes Communities Safer

Those of us with the power to defend individuals — or to change laws — should vehemently support the full decriminalization of consensual adult prostitution, a Manhattan civil rights attorney writes.

February 27, 2023 at 11:15 PM
6 minute read
Commentary
By Cary London | February 27, 2023 at 11:15 PM

The decriminalization of sex work is an unexpected, hot-button legal issue for 2023.

As a civil rights attorney with a background in public defense, I have seen the impact of systemic abuse on those who are the most vulnerable — sex workers. Sex work, a broad umbrella term that encompasses all forms of erotic labor, has and will always continue to exist.

Those of us with the power to defend individuals — or to change laws — should vehemently support the full decriminalization of consensual adult prostitution. Prohibition does not work. It makes people’s lives more dangerous.

From the personal costs (arrest, violence, stigma) to the public (taxes, police resources, court resources), it is time for New York to take its place as a progressive leader and decriminalize prostitution.

Decrim NY, a coalition of advocates and organizations, is lobbying this week Albany in support of Senate Bill S.4396, which is sponsored by State Sen. Julia Salazar, D-Brooklyn.

What I have witnessed on a day-to-day basis in court — that criminalization is immensely harmful — is supported by research. Data from around the world shows that the decriminalization of prostitution increases public health and safety and reduces trafficking and exploitation. The World Health Organization, Amnesty International and the ACLU are just some of the organizations calling for decriminalization.

Go after the John or the Jane? Opponents of decriminalization argue that removing criminal penalties for buying and selling sex will allow traffickers to act with impunity — the data shows this is simply not the case.

Even more absurd is the theory that the commercial sex industry can be abolished through a policy framework commonly referred to as the “End Demand Model,” the “Entrapment Model,” the “Nordic Model” and, in New York, the “Equality Model.”

This policy, currently making its way through the New York State Legislature (Senate Bill S.1352, sponsored by State Sen. Liz Krueger, D-Manhattan) removes criminal penalties for selling sex, but not for buying. Data from countries where this model has been introduced prove its failure to increase public health and safety and to decrease trafficking.

In Norway, after the Entrapment Model was implemented, sex workers reported higher levels of anxiety and unease, as well as increased stigmatization and have been subject to heightened rates of anti-social and nuisance behavior.

Compelling data compiled by national advocacy organization Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) shows the urgent need to decriminalize both the buying and selling of sex in New York.

In “By the Numbers: New York’s Treatment of Sex Workers and Trafficking Survivors,” DSW sought to determine the efficacy and social costs of policing prostitution by examining trends in arrest and conviction rates for both prostitution and human trafficking offenses in New York State.

One of the publication’s primary conclusions is the imminent need to decriminalize sex work in New York State and around the country. While New York has made critical reforms in its treatment of sex workers and human trafficking survivors in recent decades, chief among them the repeal of Penal Law Section 240.37 criminalizing loitering for the purpose of engaging in a prostitution offense and the expansion of vacatur eligibility for survivors of human trafficking, the stigmatization and marginalization of sex workers persists with detrimental effects for the health and safety of entire communities.

Sex workers and service providers agree that the decriminalization of consensual, adult sex work is the only way to dismantle the institutional oppression of these communities and combat stigma and exploitation in commercial sex. The data reveals that, though arrest rates for prostitution and related crimes are declining, those arrests have seemingly shifted to people working at unlicensed massage parlors, locations the New York City Police Department’s Vice Squad regularly raid as a result of anti-Asian bias and discrimination.

Only in recent years have the number of arrests for purchasing or aiding prostitution come close to arrests for solicitation offenses. The most damaging impacts of criminalization are felt by the communities with the greatest vulnerability. DSW’s analysis demonstrates that, even if arrest and conviction rates are slowing, racial and gender biases are as strong as ever. 98% and 97% of New York City arrests in 2019 for prostitution and loitering for the purpose of engaging in prostitution, respectively, were of female-identified individuals.

Similarly, 91% and 93% were people of color. Even more severe, in the past 10 years, 90% of arrests for patronizing a prostitute in the third degree were Black, indigenous and people of color — despite the fact that national studies report between 80-85% of sex buyers are white men.

Convictions showed similar bias. Over the last decade, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has taken critical steps to recognize sex worker rights. In April 2021, former District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. announced that his office would no longer prosecute prostitution or unlicensed massage, a statute used largely to arrest East Asian immigrants working in the massage business.

Last year, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced that prostitution is among the charges his office will no longer prosecute. Though fewer arrests and these DA policies may present a rosy picture, alarming trends, including heightened arrests of Asian immigrant women in massage parlors and widespread corruption and violence by NYPD Vice squad continue.

ProPublica reported that “…cops often earned overtime for making these [prostitution related arrests], giving them a financial incentive to arrest as many people as possible. And there was no real check on the conduct of the officers. In those rare cases when defense attorneys challenged the arrest, cases were often dropped, keeping the undercover cop’s identity and tactics secret.” Further, the city and state lack a cohesive, consistent approach, leaving a patchwork of justice that is woefully uneven.

Senate Bill S.4396 is supported by sex workers, public health researchers and human rights advocates and would repeal laws criminalizing consensual adult sex work, grounding our policies in data and promoting equal treatment under the law for all New Yorkers.

Make an honest business out of sex work — and our communities will be safer.

Cary London is the managing partner of civil rights at Shulman & Hill.

San Francisco Supervisor Issues Statement Calling for Legalization of Sex Work

February 14, 2023

San Francisco officials have installed barricades along Capp Street in the city’s Mission District in an effort to suppress street-based sex work. Supervisor Hillary Ronen, who represents the district, introduced the barriers with the intent of stopping potential clients from driving up and down the street in search of services from sex workers.

The area is also being heavily patrolled by officers on motorcycles who are set to issue citations to any potential clients. It is well-documented at this point that laws criminalizing the clients of sex workers are dangerous and harmful.

Attempts like these at stamping out sex work consistently prove to be futile. Many locals have expressed support for the implementation of these barricades (which are a huge fire hazard) under the impression that sex workers are victims who must be saved from their clients. In reality, sex workers are, for the most part, people making a living, and prohibition won’t change the fact that they must work to survive. Putting up physical barriers will only drive them to work somewhere else.

Forcing sex workers to work in different areas won’t make them any safer if they still run the risk of arrest and abuse at the hands of law enforcement.

Ronen’s initial intent in implementing the barriers on Capp Street was to put its residents, who frequently complain about sex work in the area, at ease. However, she has made it clear that this was a temporary fix to the situation and that a permanent solution must prioritize the safety of sex workers.

Just a few weeks after the barricades went up, Ronen issued an official statement calling for the legalization of sex work. While previous local reporting anticipated the creation of a red-light district in San Francisco, Ronen states this was never her intent. Instead, her resolution asks California’s State Delegation to move forward with the legalization of sex work.

You can read the resolution here.

It states:

“… Sex work happens in San Francisco, and everywhere in the world, in every city in the world. It is time to recognize this, and move towards decriminalization, and ultimately legalization and regulation of sex work. This is a long-term strategy, utilized in the U.S. and at least a few countries around the world. In most instances, legalization helps combat trafficking, improves working conditions for sex workers, reduces violence against sex workers, and makes it easier to stop underage and unhealthy practices in this line of work.”

While Ronen is correct in acknowledging the dangers of criminalizing sex work, her emphasis on legalization and regulation instead of decriminalization is misguided. Legalization and decriminalization are very different.

Legalizing sex work would create a set of laws, codes, and regulations specific to the sex industry. People who buy or sell sex outside of these rules would be breaking the law and subject to arrest, conviction, and punishment.

Meanwhile, decriminalizing sex work would simply make it so that consenting adults who buy or sell sex are not committing a crime. (There would, of course, still be laws against trafficking, rape, violence, and sex work involving minors.)

Here are some key differences between decriminalization and legalization.

Decriminalization

Legalization

Enables all sex workers and their clients to report crimes committed against them without fear of prosecution. Allows only licensed sex workers and clients who participate in the regulated market to report crimes committed against them.
Does not create barriers to participation, such as licensing, and does not bestow power on third parties such as brothel owners. Creates a two-tiered system that favors brothel owners and other wealthy, well-connected people.
Significantly reduces STI transmission and violence against sex workers. Leaves unlicensed sex workers unprotected against violence, and often unable to treat or prevent STIs without fearing prosecution.
Reduces the risks of human trafficking, as sex workers are able to freely advocate for their own health and safety, eliminating the need for exploitative third parties. Has no impact on human trafficking because the black market persists; sex workers remain dependent on potentially exploitative third parties such as brothel owners.
Saves or diverts law enforcement resources related to arresting and prosecuting consensual adult activities. Allows police departments to still conduct stings, raids, and surveillance of unlicensed sex workers and their clients.
Protects the human rights of everyone, including sex workers. Is an impractical and exclusionary system that does not minimize the harms of criminalization.

A rural county in Nevada is an example of an area where sex work is legal only under heavy regulations. Strictly enforced policies prevent people from engaging in consensual adult prostitution outside of licensed brothels, which may only exist in sparsely populated rural areas. The overwhelming majority of sex workers are unable or unwilling to work under the conditions created by legalization, which include barriers like applying for licenses, registering with local sheriffs, and working in one of the few brothels allowed to operate in the state. Despite prostitution being legal in Nevada, it saw an incredibly high prostitution arrest rate per capita between 2000 and 2018, at 95.3 arrests per 100,000 residents.

Consenting adults should not be arrested for their sexual choices, whether money is exchanged or not. The complete removal of criminal laws related to consensual adult sex work is the only option for ensuring the health, safety, autonomy, and rights of sex workers.

This is why Decriminalize Sex Work advocates for full decriminalization, not legalization.

San Francisco Supervisor Issues Statement Calling for Legalization of Sex Work

DSW Newsletter #45 (February 2023)

Stop Violence in the Sex Trades Act Reintroduced in New York

February 1, 2023 Senator Julia Salazar has introduced Senate Bill S4396, or the Stop Violence in the Sex Trades Act (SVSTA) in New York. The bill would decriminalize consensual adult prostitution...

Read More

Stop Violence in the Sex Trades Act Reintroduced in New York

Research Finds No Correlation Between Super Bowl and Human Trafficking

February 23, 2023 Fears that large sporting events fuel spikes in rates of human trafficking are unfounded. Every February, the rumor that the Super Bowl is a giant human trafficking hub...

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Research Finds No Correlation Between Super Bowl and Human Trafficking

San Francisco Supervisor Issues Statement Calling for Legalization of Sex Work

February 14, 2023 San Francisco officials have installed barricades along Capp Street in the city’s Mission District in an effort to suppress street-based sex work. Supervisor Hillary Ronen, who represents the...

Read More

San Francisco Supervisor Issues Statement Calling for Legalization of Sex Work

Coffee With a Sex Worker

February 5, 2023 On February 5, members of The Ishtar Collective (TIC) launched Coffee With a Sex Worker with their first event at Muddy Waters Cafe in Burlington, Vermont. Henri Bynx,...

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Coffee With a Sex Worker

DSW Newsletter Archive