Hero of the Month: Norma Jean Almodovar

May 15, 2021

A relentless activist for justice, truth, marginalized groups, and simple human decency, Norma Jean Almodovar is a force of nature. With incredible courage, grace, and a great sense of humor (she made Joan Rivers laugh hysterically), Almodovar has changed laws and the public perception of sex workers — both critical in reducing exploitation in the sex industry and improving the health and safety of sex workers. Almodovar’s website, where she compiles extensive research and analysis of arrests and police corruption, is called simply, PoliceProstitutionandPolitics. Until you know her story, it might be hard to imagine that any single person could be a traffic officer, a prostitute, and a politician, but Almodovar was all three. The title of her book, “Cop to Call Girl,” also sounds more likely to be fiction than fact, but Almodovar was a cop and a call girl and has based her advocacy on one simple premise — give people the facts.

“Don’t take my word for it,” says Almodovar. “Look at the numbers.” Almodovar launched “Operation Do The Math” in 2012 and has continued to release a new report on the government’s arrest data each year since. Her meticulous analysis continues to show that abolitionist and prohibitionists feminists greatly overestimate the numbers of minors and others coerced into the sex trade to the detriment of sex workers and victims of crimes. Almodovar, along with others working to improve the rights of sex workers and to decrease the rate of exploitation and trafficking in the sex industry, knows that the way to do this is to decriminalize sex work — and the proof is in the numbers. Almodovar is outraged by the “patronizing” views of abolitionists, who assume that sex work is inherently exploitative and that sex workers can’t “think for themselves.” Aside from this assumption being incorrect, it does nothing to reduce exploitation and increase safety for sex workers.

Operation Do The Math is only the most recent iteration of Almodovar’s fierce pursuit for justice and truth. In 1982, after ten years with the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), Almodovar decided to become a call girl. She “wanted to make a social statement about the moral hypocrisy of our society — a society which seemed completely untroubled by the police corruption that permeated the LAPD, and yet demanded that law enforcement spend a significant portion of its resources to set-up and arrest women whose sole ‘crime’ was to accept money from men for acts of sex in which they could otherwise legally engage, even with thousands of men - provided the sex was free. The arrest and subsequent incarceration would brand them forever as a prostitute and destroy their lives — all in the name of protecting them from exploitation.” During this time, Almodovar continued to work on her book, “Cop to Call Girl,” an act of free speech that jeopardized her freedom and nearly her life.

For exposing the corruption she witnessed while on the LAPD, Almodovar was arrested for “pandering” after a former LAPD colleague expressed a fantasy of being a call girl as well to her. She testified that she said she set up Almodovar in an attempt to stop her book from being published. Almodovar had never been arrested before. To this day, in California, pandering still carries a minimum three to six-year prison sentence. Ira Reiner, the Los Angeles District Attorney at the time of Almodovar’s arrest said what she did, which did not result in harm to any individual was "worse than rape or robbery" and even more shocking that she had compounded her "crime" by writing a book which would cause "disrespect for law and order." Almodovar feared for her safety while incarcerated and again once she was released. She felt that the only way to protect herself was to be as public and vocal as possible and so that is exactly what she did.

Almodovar appeared on numerous national television shows, including Oprah and 60 Minutes, filmed during her eighteen months in jail, no doubt influencing public perception of sex workers and prostitutes. As she says, activism runs in her blood. In addition to the work she has done to expose corruption, Almodovar has had tremendous success in her formal advocacy for sex workers’ rights. After becoming close with Margo St. James, Almodovar revived the LA Chapter of Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics (C.O.Y.O.T.E.), which she continues to lead. In 1995, she traveled to the UN Fourth World Women's Conference in Beijing as a representative of C.O.Y.O.T.E and an official delegate of the US.

At the conference, Almodovar, along with colleagues from Thailand, Australia, Malaysia and England fought to add a single word to the Platform for Action. Almodovar points out that, “Every ten or so years, this document-which sets the course for legislation adopted in UN member countries- must be thoroughly discussed, every word in the document debated and finally accepted for the member nations' delegates to ratify.” Despite going up against well-funded opponents who had been afforded much more time to organize, Almodovar and her peers successfully made the change. Almodovar says, “the original text read, ‘… all prostitution and pornography are incompatible with the dignity and worth of the human person and must be eliminated.’ The final text in the same paragraph which was ratified by the UN delegates now reads, ‘… all FORCED prostitution and pornography. … ’ The new meaning … makes a world of difference for prostitutes around the world who have chosen their work and refuse to be bullied into believing they are ‘victims’ because they engage in sex work.”

That incredible achievement was almost thirty years ago and Almodovar hasn’t stopped advocating since. She remains a constant in the movement for sex workers’ rights and dignity. She celebrated her seventieth birthday this month and has no plans to slow down. She remains encouraged by younger activists and how far the movement for sex workers’ rights has come. Almodovar has never once regretted or felt ashamed by any of her decisions. She proudly wears the label “whore” and wishes that more people knew that before modern times, whores were revered and beloved for their unique ability to comfort and care for others.

Almodovar continues to research, advocate, appear publicly, and to lead the International Sex Worker Foundation for Art, Culture and Education (ISWFACE), which she launched in 1997. Through ISWFACE, Almodovar continues to make her research available to anyone interested in joining the movement. ISWFACE is completely volunteer led. Since COVID began, it has been just Almodovar along with her computers, printers, and servers working to ensure the public has access to the critical information she collects. Please visit ISWFACE to learn more and support Norma Jean’s incredible work.

Hero of the Month: Norma Jean Almodovar

Norma Jean Almodovar on the cover of her book. Courtesy of Norma Jean Almodovar.

DSW Newsletter #26 (May 2021)

Hero of the Month: Norma Jean Almodovar

May 15, 2021 A relentless activist for justice, truth, marginalized groups, and simple human decency, Norma Jean Almodovar is a force of nature. With incredible courage, grace, and a great...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Norma Jean Almodovar

NY Senate Passes the START Act

May 24, 2021 The New York State Senate passed the Survivors of Trafficking Attaining Relief Together (START) Act (S.674/‍A.459), which would provide greater protections for survivors of human trafficking by allowing them...
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April 28, 2021 New York Transgender Advocacy Group (NYTAG) hosted their annual advocacy day on April 28. The full day of programming included appearances from elected officials, a conversation with former...
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Remembering Margo St. James

May 1, 2021 DSW was thrilled to sponsor the online international memorial for legendary sex worker rights activist, Margo St. James. In addition to sponsoring the event, DSW’s Melissa Broudo...
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Remembering Margo St. James

May 1, 2021

DSW was thrilled to sponsor the online international memorial for legendary sex worker rights activist, Margo St. James. In addition to sponsoring the event, DSW’s Melissa Broudo served on the planning committee and she, along with DSW’s J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly, were two of the many sex workers’ rights activists who appeared in the “Celebration of Life” that premiered during the event. Old Pro Productions produced a fitting and moving tribute to St. James, who passed away on January 11, 2021. St. James was the founder of Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics (COYOTE) and St. James Infirmary Clinic serving sex workers in San Francisco. St. James was instrumental in building the activist scene in California, serving and protecting sex workers and LGBTQAI+ folx, and opening crucial litigation in Rhode Island (COYOTE v. Roberts), arguing that the state had too much authority over people’s personal sexual lives and choices. She was also famous for her successful and creative fundraising, such as the annual Hooker’s Ball.

Watch the online tribute, featuring sex workers’ rights activists from around the world here.

Remembering Margo St. James

Courtesy of Old Pro Productions.

DSW Newsletter #26 (May 2021)

Hero of the Month: Norma Jean Almodovar

May 15, 2021 A relentless activist for justice, truth, marginalized groups, and simple human decency, Norma Jean Almodovar is a force of nature. With incredible courage, grace, and a great...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Norma Jean Almodovar

NY Senate Passes the START Act

May 24, 2021 The New York State Senate passed the Survivors of Trafficking Attaining Relief Together (START) Act (S.674/‍A.459), which would provide greater protections for survivors of human trafficking by allowing them...
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DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 28, 2021 New York Transgender Advocacy Group (NYTAG) hosted their annual advocacy day on April 28. The full day of programming included appearances from elected officials, a conversation with former...
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DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Remembering Margo St. James

May 1, 2021 DSW was thrilled to sponsor the online international memorial for legendary sex worker rights activist, Margo St. James. In addition to sponsoring the event, DSW’s Melissa Broudo...
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There’s a special court for sex workers, but it’s a far cry from what they need | Prism.com

DSW’s Ariela Moscowitz is quoted:

“Human trafficking occurs across all labor sectors and is a horrific crime,” said Ariela Moscowitz, director of communications at Decriminalize Sex Work, an organization that works to improve public attitudes towards sex work. “It is often conflated with consensual adult sex work which leads to the dangerous assumption that all sex workers have been coerced and need to be ’saved.’ We know this is not the case.”

Prism
Ariela Moscowitz

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 28, 2021

New York Transgender Advocacy Group (NYTAG) hosted their annual advocacy day on April 28. The full day of programming included appearances from elected officials, a conversation with former New York City Council candidate and transgender-rights activist Elisa Crespo, and panels on TGNCNB Youth and the full decriminalization of sex work vs. the Entrapment/‍Equality/‍Nordic Model of governing sex work. DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, moderated the latter panel and DSW’s research and project manager, J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantley appeared as a panelist.

Along with the the other esteemed panelists, Oshiro-Brantly discussed various legal frameworks for sex work. The panelists concurred that, as sex workers, they hope that New York and other US states will adopt full decriminalization. Though each panelist has unique and varied experiences, they all believe that no law should ever be enacted without input from impacted communities. The criminalization of sex work, whether full or partial, puts them and their communities at risk.

For more information on how these models differ and why full decriminalization is the only framework that leads to increased public health and safety and a reduction in exploitation, read our briefing paper Debunking the Entrapment Model, a.k.a. the End Demand Model.

TAKE ACTION! HELP DEFEAT ENTRAPMENT MODEL LEGISLATION.

Please send this letter to your State Representative and help reject the Entrapment Model before it gets a foothold in the United States. With your support, we can fully decriminalize consensual adult sex work across the country and improve the health and safety of our communities.

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

The Panel.

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Courtesy of New York Transgender Advocacy Group (NYTAG).

DSW Newsletter #26 (May 2021)

Hero of the Month: Norma Jean Almodovar

May 15, 2021 A relentless activist for justice, truth, marginalized groups, and simple human decency, Norma Jean Almodovar is a force of nature. With incredible courage, grace, and a great...
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DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 28, 2021 New York Transgender Advocacy Group (NYTAG) hosted their annual advocacy day on April 28. The full day of programming included appearances from elected officials, a conversation with former...
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DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Remembering Margo St. James

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Read More
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Mark Your Calendars

May 1, 2021

DSW is proud to be one of the sponsors of a tribute to legendary activist Margo St. James. We hope you will join us and many others from around the world to celebrate the incredible life and legacy of Margo St. James. The May 1 virtual event is free to attend though one must RSVP. Visit MargoStJames.com to RSVP and for more information.

The host committee states, “Margo St. James, who founded the prostitutes’ rights organization COYOTE (Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics), and later, the St. James Infirmary, left her body on January 11, 2021. We are a group of Margo’s friends, colleagues, and a collective of supporters who are producing a virtual international tribute event on May 1 at 11 am PST / 2 pm EST. The event will run from one to two hours.”

Mark Your Calendars

Courtesy of Old Pro Productions.

DSW Newsletter #25 (April 2021)

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

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Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021 Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution...
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Equality Model vs Nordic Model

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April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some...
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Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021

Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution and unlicensed massage. The news was met with mixed emotions from sex workers and their allies because the policy leaves intact the criminalization of clients. Some welcomed the measure as an incremental step towards the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work. Others worried that the move to decriminalize the sale of sex but not the purchase might be an endorsement of the Entrapment/‍Equality/‌End-Demand/‍Nordic Model.

DSW is fighting for the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work. Unequivocal evidence shows that this is the only legal framework for sex work that increases public health and safety and decreases exploitation. The Entrapment Model offers none of the same benefits and continues to put sex workers at risk as their industry is still pushed underground.

Though DSW is working towards the full decriminalization of consensual adult sex work, we do welcome the incremental step that Vance and others have taken, which will offer some measure of relief to individuals criminalized under our current system. Transgender advocates in Manhattan celebrated the news as they are often targeted and profiled for simply being themselves. Several district attorneys around the country, including Marilyn Mosby in Baltimore, Eric Gonzalez in Brooklyn, and Eli Savit in Washtenaw County have recently announced that they will no longer prosecute prostitution and related charges, and some have taken steps to vacate hundreds of past convictions for prostitution. The clearing of arrest records for prostitution is an especially welcome step as a criminal record can significantly hinder one’s ability to work and access housing and other essential resources.

Implementation of the Entrapment Model in any jurisdiction would be devastating for sex workers and anyone else who cares to decrease exploitation in the sex trade and increase public health and safety for all. The Manhattan DA’s office’s announcement does not mean that Manhattan has adopted this legal framework. Though they will still prosecute clients, the laws have not been changed or codified to implement the Entrapment Model. Along with others, DSW will closely monitor the implementation of this new policy and its effects on the health and safety of sex workers.

DSW has put together resources that succinctly explain the differences between full decriminalization and the Entrapment Model and why FULL decriminalization is the only choice to increase health and safety and decrease exploitation.

Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

The SWOP NYC contingent marches in the 2011 NYC Pride Parade. (Courtesy of Melissa Sontag Broudo).

DSW Newsletter #25 (April 2021)

Hero of the Month: Gizelle Marie

April 6, 2021 Gizelle Marie loves her job as a stripper. She loves it so much, in fact, that she has become a leading voice for progressive reforms within the...
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Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

April 21, 2021 Manhattan district attorney Cyrus R. Vance, following in the footsteps of other New York City boroughs, announced that his office would no longer prosecute individuals for prostitution...
Read More
Decriminalize Sex Work’s Statement on Manhattan DA’s Announcement

Equality Model vs Nordic Model

April 20, 2021 Some are now calling the Nordic Model of Prostitution the Equality Model Attaching the term “Equality” to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model...
Read More
Equality Model vs Nordic Model

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

April 6: DSW’s Melissa Sontag Broudo and J. Leigh Oshiro-Brantly joined other advocates for a panel on decriminalizing sex work organized by Equality New York for their 2021 Advocacy Day. Some...
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DSW Newsletter Archive

The Equality Model

A guide to the Equality Model and the dangers of partial decriminalization prostitution laws

equality model

The Equality Model vs the Nordic Model of Prostitution

The term “Equality Model” has recently been attached to the legal framework more commonly known as the Nordic Model of Prostitution. Attaching the term “equality” to this approach to prostitution law suggests that it is in the best interest of sex workers. Unequivocal evidence shows that it is not.

Nordic Model prostitution laws partially decriminalize sex work while leaving both the purchase and promotion of sex work illegal. 

At first glance, it may seem ironic to use the term “equality” to describe prostitution laws designed to criminalize one side of a sex work transaction. Given that implementing laws that criminalize clients clearly correlates with an increase in violence perpetrated against sex workers, perhaps the “equality” they’re referring to is how these laws equally harm everyone they touch.

In both implementation and outcomes, the Equality Model is anything but equal. Since police primarily use these laws to essentially entrap sex work clients, the Nordic Model rebranding we believe fits best is the “Entrapment Model.”
 
The Equality Model

Decriminalization of Sex Work vs The Equality Model

We compare two types of sex work legislation: the full decriminalization of sex work and the equality model of prostitution legislation.

Decriminalization of Sex Work

  • - Reduces violence and exploitation while increasing public health and safety
  • - Recommended by Amnesty International and the World Health Organization
  • - Improves sex worker health and safety while reducing sex worker homelessness
  • - Empowers sex workers to operate independently, reducing human trafficking

 

The "Equality" Model

  • - Criminalizes the buying of sex but not the selling of sex
  • - Sex workers are financially dependent on criminalized clients
  • - Assumes sex workers need to be "saved" and denies them bodily autonomy
  • - Does not decrease exploitation in the commercial sex industry

 

what is the nordic model

What is the Nordic Model?

To fight the rebranding efforts of Equality Model proponents, it’s important to be ready with a quick reply when someone asks, “What is the Nordic Model?” Prostitution laws have an immediate and powerful impact on the lives of real people in our communities. To advocate for the human rights and safety of sex workers across the country, it is critical to understand the distinctions between different policies.

The Nordic Model of prostitution is based on the theory that the way to “free” sex workers from lives of prostitution is to criminalize clients and third parties. The theory assumes sex workers are victims, but in practice, the law tends to treat them more like criminals. Sex work exists on a spectrum of choice, circumstance, and coercion. Sex work is work and no one should assume that sex workers do not have choice or autonomy. This patriarchal view of sex work is a dangerous threat to the bodily autonomy and freedom of choice that women and other marginalized groups have been fighting to achieve for so long.

Laws based on the Nordic Model target sex work clients with entrapment, making them far more likely to pursue anonymous interactions in remote locations. Keeping sex work in the dark jeopardizes the harm reduction strategies sex workers use to keep themselves safe and leaves them vulnerable to predators and criminals.

 

prostitution laws

Prostitution Laws across the globe: Entrapment Model failures

From added violence to malicious evictions, evidence of Nordic model failure has shown that partial decriminalization prostitution laws are simultaneously ineffective at ending exploitation in the sex trade and harmful to the people they are meant to protect.

Northern Ireland created their Entrapment Model-like prostitution laws in a naive attempt to end demand for sex work. Rather than decrease demand, they’ve experienced an increase in online ads since implementation in 2015. A study conducted by the Department of Justice also found an increase in harassment and anti-social behaviors directed at sex workers since the policy change.

Norway enacted prostitution laws based on the Nordic Model that intentionally evicted over 400 sex workers, mostly migrant women, from their homes. The project was aptly named “Operation Homeless” by Norwegian police.

Swedish prostitution laws enacted in 1999 use landlords as weapons against sex workers. These laws hold landlords liable for promoting prostitution if they don’t evict sex workers simply for having used their homes to provide sexual services.

 

equality model new york

Equality Model New York

The promoters of the newly rebranded Equality Model of prostitution have launched their U.S. campaign in New York. Despite failing to reduce demand for erotic services or deter people from engaging in sex work, the Equality Model New York project has decided to push forward with their entrapment-focused legislation.

This Nordic Model offshoot has been rejected again and again by sex workers and in popular media.

EQUALITY MODEL MASSACHUSETTS

A legislative campaign has also launched with the goal of implementing the Equality Model in Massachusetts. The bill they have proposed is ironically called “An Act To Strengthen Justice and Support for Sex Trade Survivors." Unfortunately the implementation of legislation that criminalizes consensual sex work clients correlates with an increase in violence perpetrated against sex workers rather than a decrease in human trafficking.

This effort to implement the Nordic Model of prostitution in the Massachusetts uses fines charged to convicted sex work clients to fund programs meant to remove sex workers from the profession. Unfortunately the proponents of Equality Model Massachusetts seem to conflate victims of human trafficking and professional, consensual sex workers in their legislative proposal.

 

Sex Worker Jobs

Sex worker jobs are not inherently dangerous. Criminalization makes the work dangerous.

Criminalizing clients keeps the entire sex work industry underground and makes sex worker jobs more dependent on third parties who might mean them harm, leaving them more vulnerable to exploitation.

Sex workers in countries where prostitution laws like the Entrapment Model have been implemented are frequently threatened and harassed by law enforcement. Criminalizing clients results in police raids on sex workers which are  psychologically and physically harmful. These encounters also often result in sex workers experiencing isolation and stigma due to being outed to their community.

 

sex workers near me

Take action! Tell your representative "I stand with sex workers near me and reject this new Entrapment Model legislation!"

Please send this letter to your State Representative and help reject the Entrapment Model before it gets a foothold in the United States. Your efforts will say "I stand with sex workers near me and reject this new Entrapment Model legislation!" With your support, we can fully decriminalize consensual adult sex work across the country and improve the health and safety of our communities.