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...
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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 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...
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

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

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...
Read More
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,...
Read More
Coffee With a Sex Worker

DSW Newsletter Archive

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 is voraciously circulated by law enforcement, the government, and the media. Yet, time and time again, research continues to find absolutely no correlation between the Super Bowl and human trafficking.

Fact or Fiction: Sex Trafficking, Sex Work, and Human Rights at the Super Bowl,” a report compiled by attorneys and researchers at Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW), Woodhull Freedom Foundation, and SOAR Institute, found that the perpetuation of the “Super Bowl sex trafficking myth” uses rhetoric that equates consensual adult sex work and human trafficking, which is known to be dangerous. By conflating these two very different phenomena, the discourse encourages the prohibition of prostitution at the expense of sex workers, survivors of human trafficking, and entire communities.

Evidence has conclusively found that the decriminalization of sex work, rather than prohibition, helps to reduce stigma and violence directed at sex workers, improves public health, and helps combat human trafficking.

The conflation of sex work and human trafficking often leads to victims of trafficking being prosecuted for crimes that they were forced to commit. Convictions for these crimes prevent survivors from accessing critical social resources when attempting to recover from being exploited. It also encourages law enforcement to target sex workers under the guise of preventing trafficking. Research shows that increased policing is a threat to the safety of sex workers.

Current prostitution and anti-trafficking laws make it difficult for victims and witnesses to report exploitation without risking prosecution. When innocent people are arrested and prosecuted, victims face barriers to services, and exploitation proliferates in the black market.

The myth that human trafficking spikes during the Super Bowl occupies an unwarranted amount of space in media discourse and policy responses around the event. This wastes the resources of law enforcement and encourages over-policing, which erodes trust between law enforcement and communities.

While the perpetuation of the Super Bowl sex trafficking myth is incredibly harmful, it continues to spread for four main reasons.

1. As a fundraising strategy for nonprofits wanting to abolish sex work under the guise of fighting trafficking.

2. As a method of virtue signaling by national and local governments taking a stand against human trafficking.

3.  As a way to grab media and public attention for the issue of anti-trafficking.

4. As justification for social control measures such as increased policing and migration controls based on anti-prostitution ideology.

Human trafficking is a critical human rights concern that warrants effective and concerted policy responses. Rather than increasing the policing of prostitution around the Super Bowl, DSW, SOAR Institute, and Woodhull Freedom Foundation suggest the following alternative policy solutions:

1. Create evidence-based public education campaigns around human trafficking that reduce stigma and provide resources for those who are suffering exploitation.

2. Encourage states and municipalities to pass immunity bills to provide sex workers and trafficking survivors the right to report crimes committed against them without facing prosecution.

3. Develop study commissions made up of impacted community members, service providers, public health experts, and law enforcement to study the impact of current policies around human trafficking and sex work and make further recommendations.

4. Conduct mandated and standardized training for law enforcement in all jurisdictions on the critical differences between sex work and trafficking, as developed by the aforementioned study commissions.

5. Fully decriminalize consensual adult sex work, in order to reduce rates of STI transmission and violent crime and to increase law enforcement’s ability to detect and address trafficking.

6. Devote government funds previously used to arrest and incarcerate consensual adult sex workers to provide stigma-free social services and resources for those engaged in sex work and to fight all kinds of human trafficking, including labor trafficking cases that often go undetected.

Research Finds No Correlation Between Super Bowl and Human Trafficking

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...
Read More
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,...
Read More
Coffee With a Sex Worker

DSW Newsletter Archive

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, community engagement consultant at Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) and co-founder/co-director of TIC, was a host at the event.

Coffee With a Sex Worker is an ongoing series of events during which TIC will meet with community members to talk about sex work and their mission to advocate for sex worker rights, support survivors of human trafficking, and provide mutual aid for members of their community.

The aim of the events is to demystify sex workers in Vermont by providing a safe point of outreach to sex workers, as well as to compassionately invite dialogue around community concerns and sex work.

TIC member Elle R., who was involved in organizing the event, said the following.

“Sex workers are so stigmatized and dehumanized by society that for us to come out and meet folks for open conversations and dialog around consensual sex work is so important. We become relatable people with rich and diverse lives who deserve rights, respect, and safety in our work. Coffee with a sex worker was such a great event that allowed us to come together, engage with the public and give them a real perspective on what we do and how they can help support us.”

The next Coffee With a Sex Worker event will be held on March 3 at Muddy Waters Cafe in Burlington from 1:00-3:00 PM. All are welcome to attend.

Emma R., Skylar Axel, Christine R., and Henri Bynx pose for a photo at Muddy Waters Cafe in Burlington, Vermont.

Emma R., Skylar Axel, Christine R., and Henri Bynx pose for a photo at Muddy Waters Cafe in Burlington, Vermont.

Coffee With a Sex Worker

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...
Read More
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,...
Read More
Coffee With a Sex Worker

DSW Newsletter Archive

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 offenses and amend provisions relating to the prosecution of such offenses and vacating judgments.

SVSTA’s co-sponsors include Senators Jabari Brisport, Kristen Gonzalez, Cordell Cleare, Robert Jackson, Zellnor Myrie, Jessica Ramos, Gustavo Rivera, and Luis R. Sepúlveda.

The criminalization of sex work has jeopardized the lives of sex workers in New York for far too long. The criminalization of sex work is associated with increased risk of sexual and physical violence at the hands of clients, third parties, and domestic partners. Criminalization also encourages increased policing among vulnerable communities, resulting in arrests and police brutality. Studies conducted in New York have shown that prostitution-related arrests disproportionately affect Black, Asian, and Hispanic individuals.

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.

Presently, New York state law has more than two dozen anti-prostitution penal codes. About half of these codes target sex work between consenting adults, and the other half focus on trafficking, the exploitation of minors, and coercion into commercial sex. SVSTA upholds all felony anti-trafficking statutes that are designed to hold traffickers accountable.

SVSTA was first introduced in 2019, and advocates of decriminalization are pushing for its passage once again. Activists, advocates, and allies will gather in New York’s capital city of Albany on March 1 to lobby in support of the bill.

Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) has been actively involved in DecrimNY, a coalition that has been working hard in preparation for the lobby day next week. In the weeks leading up to the event, DecrimNY has hosted a handful of virtual lobby trainings with the goal of preparing attendees. The trainings included background on sex work in New York and the positive impact that SVSTA would have, as well as a briefing on the legislative process, how lobbying works, and how to lobby effectively.

The passage of SVSTA would be monumental in the fight for the rights of sex workers and victims of human trafficking across New York, a battle that has been ongoing for many years.

The decriminalization of sex work is crucial to the health and safety of sex workers and their communities. The passage of SVSTA would be an enormous step forward for sex worker rights, racial justice, LGBTQIA+ rights, and human rights in general.

Follow @decrimNY and @decrimsexwork on Instagram and @decrimNY and @DecrimSex on Twitter to keep up with lobby day updates. Show your support for SVSTA by sharing posts using the hashtag #SVSTA!

Stop Violence in the Sex Trades Act

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...
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Research Finds No Correlation Between Super Bowl and Human Trafficking

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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...
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Coffee With a Sex Worker

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DSW Newsletter Archive

DSW and Allies Celebrate START Act Anniversary

January 20, 2023

On January 20, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) gathered with allies from the New York Anti-Trafficking Network (NYATN) to celebrate the one year anniversary of the Survivors of Trafficking Attaining Relief Together Act (START) in New York. DSW’s Crystal DeBoise is a founding member of NYATN and helped organize the event, which was attended by anti-trafficking advocates, criminal defense lawyers, and activists.

The START Act allows New York State courts to vacate a range of criminal convictions stemming from a person’s experience as a victim of human trafficking, permitting survivors to petition for record relief relating to any crimes committed as a result of being trafficked. It went into effect in January 2022.

New York’s old vacatur law left the vast majority of trafficking survivors unprotected from criminal penalties for involvement in crimes they were forced to commit. DSW’s Melissa Broudo and Crystal DeBoise were key members of the START coalition, which ultimately pushed New York to expand its vacatur law, along with fellow attorneys, advocates, and service providers.

The coalition spent years advocating for the expansion of New York’s vacatur law, eventually gaining support from district attorneys’ offices, service providers, and impacted community members from around the state. Sixty brave survivors shared their stories with New York lawmakers to shed light on the impact the START act could have on their lives and communities.

Expanding criminal record relief is an essential lifeline for many trafficking victims, especially as they try to reclaim their lives. The collateral consequences of an arrest can be devastating, preventing survivors from accessing resources like housing and healthcare.

The passage of the START Act was monumental in securing the human rights of trafficking survivors throughout the state of New York. This party was a well-deserved celebration for those who were so closely involved in this victory.

Members of the New York Anti-Trafficking Network (NYATN) celebrate the anniversary of the START Act. From L to R: Anita Teekah of Latino Justice, Melissa Broudo of Decriminalize Sex Work, Mary Caparas of Womankind, Kate Mogulescu of Brookly Law School, and Ryan Wall of Legal Aid Exploitation Intervention Project.

Members of the New York Anti-Trafficking Network (NYATN) celebrate the anniversary of the START Act. From L to R: Anita Teekah of Latino Justice, Melissa Broudo of Decriminalize Sex Work, Mary Caparas of Womankind, Kate Mogulescu of Brookly Law School, and Ryan Wall of Legal Aid Exploitation Intervention Project.

DSW Newsletter #44 (January 2023)

DSW Attends Adult Video News Awards in Las Vegas

January 7, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended the annual Adult Video News (AVN) Awards in Las Vegas earlier this month. The event recognizes achievements in various aspects of the creation...
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California Repeals Anti-Prostitution Loitering Law

January 1, 2023 SB 357, otherwise known as the Safer Streets for All Act, has officially gone into effect in California. The bill repealed California Penal Code § 653.22, which criminalized the...
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United States Appeals Court Hears Arguments Against SESTA/FOSTA

January 11, 2023 The Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA) and Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) have harmed victims of trafficking, the very individuals they were meant to protect, along...
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DSW and Allies Celebrate START Act Anniversary

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DSW Newsletter Archive

United States Appeals Court Hears Arguments Against SESTA/FOSTA

January 11, 2023

The Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA) and Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) have harmed victims of trafficking, the very individuals they were meant to protect, along with sex workers across the United States since they became law in 2018. For the past five years, human rights advocates, sex workers, and even law enforcement have worked hard to oppose SESTA/FOSTA.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit heard arguments challenging SESTA/FOSTA from the Woodhull Freedom Foundation, the Internet Archive, Human Rights Watch, massage therapist Eric Koszyk, and sex worker rights activist Jesse Maley, who filed suit as a group against the United States on the basis that the law is unconstitutional.

The group of plaintiffs filed its initial case in 2018 and has experienced a frustrating back-and-forth since then. After a series of dismissals and appeals, a panel of three appellate judges finally heard oral arguments at the D.C. Circuit Court on January 11, 2023.

SESTA/FOSTA amends Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996, which protects internet service providers from being held responsible for the actions of their users. SESTA/FOSTA makes it a federal crime to “own, manage, or operate an interactive computer service” with “the intent to promote or facilitate the prostitution of another person.” This creates an exception to Section 230 by holding platforms liable for content posted by their users that could be perceived as promoting the prostitution of others. State law enforcement can prosecute these cases at their discretion.

Unable to bear this new criminal and civil liability, many platforms have censored user content, and many users self-censored their content to avoid being de-platformed. One of the most prominent examples of this happened when Craigslist shut down its Therapeutic Services page, leaving people like massage therapist Eric Koszyk, a plaintiff in this case, without a means of advertising, screening clients, and scheduling appointments online.

It’s important to note that sex workers also use online platforms to create networks, advertise, screen and approve clients, and schedule appointments. SESTA/FOSTA shut these resources down, effectively making sex work more dangerous.

The supposed purpose of SESTA/FOSTA is to put a stop to online human trafficking. However, law enforcement actually relies on online platforms for evidence when investigating trafficking cases. By censoring certain language from the internet, SESTA/FOSTA scrubs away leads and evidence, making it easier for cases of human trafficking to go undetected.

Those challenging the bill argue it does not provide a specific enough description of what it means to “promote prostitution” or even who could be charged with owning, managing, or operating an interactive computer service, thus leaving it unclear what specific actions are being criminalized. The basis of their argument is that SESTA/FOSTA’s overly broad language violates the First Amendment requirement that restrictions of speech must be narrowly specific. The plaintiffs also argue that this vagueness violates the Fifth Amendment’s due process clause, which forbids the implementation of laws that do not reasonably define or explain the conduct that they make illegal.

Meanwhile, the main argument made by U.S. attorneys is that SESTA/FOSTA is simply an “aiding-and-abetting” statute intended to criminalize any individual who aids or abets another person engaging in prostitution. Yet the bill’s text never mentions either of these words.

This unclear use of language begs the question, what exactly does it mean to “promote” prostitution? Could the government hold the owner of a website liable for a post advocating for the decriminalization of sex work? Could this count as the promotion of prostitution?

The answer is unclear, which is why opponents of SESTA/FOSTA claim it is unconstitutional.

While the court’s final ruling can’t be predicted, decriminalization advocates agree that the events of the hearing appear encouraging.

When faced with the argument that SESTA/FOSTA is simply an aiding-and-abetting statute, Harry Edwards, a judge on the panel, said the following.

“In my mind, it's not an aiding-and-abetting law. We know how to write 'em when we want to. This doesn't look like anything that I understand to be an aiding-and-abetting law.”

SESTA/FOSTA has been actively harming sex workers for five years now. Should the court ultimately find SESTA/FOSTA unconstitutional, it will be a huge victory for human rights. Still, the judges won’t issue an official ruling for some time. Meanwhile, we must continue to defend the health and safety of sex workers by advocating for the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work.

Audio of the full hearing is available here.

Last September, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) staff attorney Becca Cleary took the lead in authoring an Amicus Brief against SESTA/FOSTA, along with the support of eleven other organizations.

Visit DSW’s Take Action page to join the challenge against SESTA/FOSTA.

Image courtesy of @WoodhullFreedom on Twitter.

DSW Newsletter #44 (January 2023)

DSW Attends Adult Video News Awards in Las Vegas

January 7, 2023 Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) attended the annual Adult Video News (AVN) Awards in Las Vegas earlier this month. The event recognizes achievements in various aspects of the creation...
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DSW Attends Adult Video News Awards in Las Vegas

California Repeals Anti-Prostitution Loitering Law

January 1, 2023 SB 357, otherwise known as the Safer Streets for All Act, has officially gone into effect in California. The bill repealed California Penal Code § 653.22, which criminalized the...
Read More
California Repeals Anti-Prostitution Loitering Law

United States Appeals Court Hears Arguments Against SESTA/FOSTA

January 11, 2023 The Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA) and Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA) have harmed victims of trafficking, the very individuals they were meant to protect, along...
Read More
United States Appeals Court Hears Arguments Against SESTA/FOSTA

DSW and Allies Celebrate START Act Anniversary

January 20, 2023 On January 20, Decriminalize Sex Work (DSW) gathered with allies from the New York Anti-Trafficking Network (NYATN) to celebrate the one year anniversary of the Survivors of Trafficking...
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DSW Newsletter Archive