Mark Your Calendars for January 29

JANUARY 29, 2021 – New York Anti-Trafficking Network & Start Coalition Teach-In

The New York Anti-Trafficking Network and the START Coalition will host a Teach-In on January 29 at 3pm EST. Join advocates, survivors, and elected officials for a conversation on the impact of the criminal legal system on survivors of human trafficking.

Many trafficking survivors have criminal records resulting from their exploitation. Gaps in the current law in New York State leave too many burdened with these records without any remedy. Learn how the START ACT -S.00674/A.00459 (Survivors of Trafficking Attaining Relief Together) provides improved criminal record relief for survivors and gives them a Fresh START.

Speakers currently confirmed include bill sponsors Senator Jessica Ramos and Assemblymember Richard Gottfried.

Register here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_3ieX-sHPRxmoSxFN1FAv-Q

The event is appropriate for practitioners, survivors and anyone interested in helping survivors of trafficking to rebuild their lives!

(Photo: START Coalition)

DSW Newsletter #22 (January 2021)

Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

January 7, 2021 Alex Andrews is on a mission and she’s happy to have you get in her way. She’ll ask you to join her (and you likely will) within...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January 15, 2021 In a major win for sex workers and other marginalized populations, Washtenaw County’s new prosecutor announced their office will no longer prosecute the buying and selling of...
Read More
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

January 11, 2021 In a 2016 report, Amnesty International called on countries around the world to decriminalize consensual, adult sex work in order to protect the safety, health, and human...
Read More
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

January 9, 2021 PornHub invited DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, to share her expertise on legal issues related to sex work in their two-day “Sex Worker Survival Guide.” The event...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars for January 29

JANUARY 29, 2021 – New York Anti-Trafficking Network & Start Coalition Teach-In The New York Anti-Trafficking Network and the START Coalition will host a Teach-In on January 29 at 3pm...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars for January 29
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars for January 29 Mark Your Calendars for January 29

DSW Newsletter Archive

Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January 15, 2021

In a major win for sex workers and other marginalized populations, Washtenaw County’s new prosecutor announced their office will no longer prosecute the buying and selling of consensual adult sex. Advocates, sex workers, and allies are hopeful that other jurisdictions will follow in the footsteps of Washtenaw County, which includes Ann Arbor.

The evidence-based approach stems from the desire to reduce harm for marginalized communities.  An article published in the Detroit Free Press reads, “The policy directive that Prosecutor Eli Savit issued Thursday applies to both people who sell sex and those who solicit it.”

Savit's policy cites research showing that criminalization forces sex workers to operate in a black market and in isolated areas, exposing them to violence and exploitation. It acknowledges that the threat of prosecution makes sex workers and survivors of trafficking less likely to report crimes and exposes them to increased risk.

“As with other prohibitionist policies, the criminalization of sex work actually increases the risk of sex work-adjacent harm,” Savit said in an announcement on the prosecutor’s office website. “Forcing sex workers to operate in the shadows increases their susceptibility to physical assault, sexual assault, and trafficking.”

Under the policy, the district attorney will continue to prosecute human trafficking, any solicitation of sex involving minors, any instances of individuals forced into sex work, and other related crimes.

The Detroit Free Press reached out to DSW for comment. Legal director Melissa Broudo responded, “It does feel like the tide is turning, that elected officials are being responsive to facts and data on this issue.” Broudo agreed with others interviewed by the Free Press that Washtenaw County’s new policy would have a significant impact on those who participate in sex work.

Courtesy of Eli Savit.

DSW Newsletter #22 (January 2021)

Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

January 7, 2021 Alex Andrews is on a mission and she’s happy to have you get in her way. She’ll ask you to join her (and you likely will) within...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January 15, 2021 In a major win for sex workers and other marginalized populations, Washtenaw County’s new prosecutor announced their office will no longer prosecute the buying and selling of...
Read More
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

January 11, 2021 In a 2016 report, Amnesty International called on countries around the world to decriminalize consensual, adult sex work in order to protect the safety, health, and human...
Read More
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

January 9, 2021 PornHub invited DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, to share her expertise on legal issues related to sex work in their two-day “Sex Worker Survival Guide.” The event...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars for January 29

JANUARY 29, 2021 – New York Anti-Trafficking Network & Start Coalition Teach-In The New York Anti-Trafficking Network and the START Coalition will host a Teach-In on January 29 at 3pm...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars for January 29
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars for January 29 Mark Your Calendars for January 29

DSW Newsletter Archive

January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

January 11, 2021

In a 2016 report, Amnesty International called on countries around the world to decriminalize consensual, adult sex work in order to protect the safety, health, and human rights of sex workers, and to combat the egregious abuse and exploitation of human trafficking.1 Numerous other national and international organizations including the World Health Organization, the American Civil Liberties Union, UNAIDS, the Global Alliance Against Trafficking in Women (GAATW), Human Rights Watch, and others have supported that conclusion.2 Human trafficking is a critical issue, not only because of the seriousness of the crime, but also because of its significance in human rights issues more broadly which are “both a cause and a consequence of trafficking in persons.”3

The Freedom Network USA is the nation’s largest coalition working to ensure that trafficked persons have access to justice, safety, and opportunity. Their human rights-based approach to combatting trafficking aligns with DSW’s views on how to end this horrific, exploitative practice.

The Freedom Network USA offers the following guidelines for identifying a person who is being trafficked4:

Human trafficking can happen in any industry, and to persons of any gender, age, and nationality.  Stereotypes seen in media are not always representative of real-life situations. However, some common red flags to look out for include:

    Person shows signs of abuse, malnourishment, exhaustion, or fearfulness.

    Person is not being paid, being paid very little, or is working excessive hours or in dangerous working conditions.

    Person is not allowed to leave home or premises or is closely supervised and restricted in movement.

    Person does not have access to personal documents such as ID, passport, visa, or social security card.

    Person is under 18 and is working in the commercial sex industry.

Again, this list is not comprehensive, and each individual experience is different.

We have a long way to go in the eradication of this grievous crime. The 2020 Trafficking In Persons (TIP) Report made several recommendations for how the U.S. could better address human trafficking. The TIP Report noted that advocates for survivors routinely report a failure of law enforcement to investigate or prioritize labor trafficking. NGOs note insufficient resources dedicated to investigating and prosecuting labor trafficking cases, as opposed to trafficking primarily involving sexual labor, and a lack of familiarity with how forced labor takes place. Indeed, in 2019, 95% of cases opened were investigating trafficking in the sex trade and only five percent were other types of labor trafficking cases.5

Our society’s overemphasis on “sex trafficking” erases and obscures the experiences of so many other survivors of forced labor. This bifurcation can lead to a lack of understanding on how to truly combat the issue, and  what trafficking in the sex trade might look like. The Freedom Network USA offers the following definition6:

When a minor (under 18) is given anything in exchange for any sex act OR when an adult (over 18) is trapped or forced into commercial sex by someone else.

Because sex work is generally illegal in the US, sex trafficking victims are often unwilling to seek help and are sometimes refused assistance and protection. Traffickers can be family members, including parents and spouses, friends, and partners. Traffickers often manipulate a person’s isolation, substance use, or dependence, in addition to using violence and threats. Both immigrants and US Citizens are victims of sex trafficking.

It is important to note that victims of trafficking may work alongside individuals who are not being trafficked. They may be working in restaurants, agriculture, factories, or as a 2015 investigation by The New York Times detailed, in nail salons. Traffickers may be parents, spouses, or friends who exploit their victims’ vulnerabilities — immigration status, drug dependence, and social isolation.

One of the most critical ways to support survivors of trafficking is through restitution and relief bills that allow individuals access to resources to help them restart their lives after exploitation. The US has notably decreased protection efforts, granting fewer trafficking specific visas in 2019, and has failed to adapt federal vacatur laws for any survivor of trafficking who has a criminal record as a result of their exploitation.7 In addition to the decriminalization of consensual, adult sex work, these are critical policy efforts that must be made to protect victims.

As noted by so many human rights organizations, the conflation of consensual adult sex work and human trafficking has lead to detrimental outcomes for both sex workers and victims of trafficking. Where sex work is criminalized, trafficking victims are less likely to be identified or to seek help. The decriminalization of sex work has been shown to reduce the rate of trafficking.

Watch DSW’s video on this important issue here:

Human trafficking and sex work

If you suspect someone is being trafficked, call Call the National Human Trafficking Hotline at
1-888-373-7888.

If you believe someone is in immediate danger,
please call 9-1-1.

 

________________________
1 https://www.amnestyusa.org/files/briefing_-_sex_workers_rights_-_embargoed_-_final.pdf
2 https://journalofethics.ama-assn.org/article/decreasing-human-trafficking-through-sex-work-decriminalization/2017-01#:~:text=In%20order%20to%20decrease%20human,the%20full%20decriminalization%20of%20prostitution.&text=By%20removing%20punitive%20laws%20that,thereby%20reducing%20marginalization%20and%20vulnerability.
3
United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. Recommended Principles and Guidelines on Human Rights and Human Trafficking. http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Publications/Traffickingen.pdf. Published 2002:3. Accessed November 18, 2016.
4 https://freedomnetworkusa.org/the-issue/
5 https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/2020-TIP-Report-Complete-062420-FINAL.pdf, 516
6 https://freedomnetworkusa.org/the-issue/#trafficking-defined
7
https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/2020-TIP-Report-Complete-062420-FINAL.pdf, 516

Human Trafficking and Sex Work

DSW Newsletter #22 (January 2021)

Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

January 7, 2021 Alex Andrews is on a mission and she’s happy to have you get in her way. She’ll ask you to join her (and you likely will) within...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January 15, 2021 In a major win for sex workers and other marginalized populations, Washtenaw County’s new prosecutor announced their office will no longer prosecute the buying and selling of...
Read More
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

January 11, 2021 In a 2016 report, Amnesty International called on countries around the world to decriminalize consensual, adult sex work in order to protect the safety, health, and human...
Read More
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

January 9, 2021 PornHub invited DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, to share her expertise on legal issues related to sex work in their two-day “Sex Worker Survival Guide.” The event...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars for January 29

JANUARY 29, 2021 – New York Anti-Trafficking Network & Start Coalition Teach-In The New York Anti-Trafficking Network and the START Coalition will host a Teach-In on January 29 at 3pm...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars for January 29
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars for January 29 Mark Your Calendars for January 29

DSW Newsletter Archive

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

January 9, 2021

PornHub invited DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, to share her expertise on legal issues related to sex work in their two-day “Sex Worker Survival Guide.”

The event brought together a diverse group of presenters for a “how-to,” appropriate for individuals with any amount of experience in sex work. PornHub promised, “presentations, panels and conversation … a place where those with industry knowledge and real experience teach basic harm reduction strategies in the areas of health (mental and physical), safety (in person and online), financial security and business savvy.”

Recordings of the presentation and discussions can be found on PornHub’s sexual wellness site: https://www.pornhub.com/sex/, though they haven’t been posted as of the date of the publishing of the newsletter.

December 2, 2020: DSW’s J. Leigh Brantly participated in an internal Inclusion and Diversity Panel for upper management at Clinique. They spoke about the intersectionality of gender, sexual orientation, and the reality of sex work history for many trans people, due to discrimination and exclusion in corporate workplaces.

Courtesy of PornHub.

DSW Newsletter #22 (January 2021)

Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

January 7, 2021 Alex Andrews is on a mission and she’s happy to have you get in her way. She’ll ask you to join her (and you likely will) within...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January 15, 2021 In a major win for sex workers and other marginalized populations, Washtenaw County’s new prosecutor announced their office will no longer prosecute the buying and selling of...
Read More
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

January 11, 2021 In a 2016 report, Amnesty International called on countries around the world to decriminalize consensual, adult sex work in order to protect the safety, health, and human...
Read More
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

January 9, 2021 PornHub invited DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, to share her expertise on legal issues related to sex work in their two-day “Sex Worker Survival Guide.” The event...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars for January 29

JANUARY 29, 2021 – New York Anti-Trafficking Network & Start Coalition Teach-In The New York Anti-Trafficking Network and the START Coalition will host a Teach-In on January 29 at 3pm...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars for January 29
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars for January 29 Mark Your Calendars for January 29

DSW Newsletter Archive

Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

January 7, 2021

Alex Andrews is on a mission and she’s happy to have you get in her way. She’ll ask you to join her (and you likely will) within three minutes of meeting. Practical, passionate, and purposeful, Andrews is determined to change the way contact with the legal system plunges individuals into a vicious cycle that can be and feel impossible to break. She would like to see each state fully decriminalize consensual adult sex work. While Andrews fights for this ultimate goal, she’s making allies and ensuring sex workers impacted by the legal system have the resources they need to thrive.

“Find your place,” says Andrews. She points out that the National Rifle Association (NRA) comprises only five percent of gun owners in this country. She can imagine how much more powerful sex workers would be nationwide if just five percent committed themselves to fighting for the decriminalization of their own lives and the lives of others. “We all have value. We have to agree to disagree on some of the smaller issues so that we can come together on a national level. We all want full decriminalization but in the meantime, we need to reduce the harm caused by systemic failures,” she implores. Andrews is proud to be part of a diverse community with such “a vast range of skills, talents and lived experiences.” After pulling herself out of a miserable spiral of jail, probation, court fines, and instability, she wants to support others as they do the same.

The “scar of incarceration,” is deep and painful. Andrews knows firsthand. She recalls the sound of metal doors clanging behind her, the click of handcuffs around her wrists, and the incredible uncertainty and fear that comes with arrest. “What happens next? How long do I sit here? I’m going to lose my apartment. I’m completely alone.” Andrews grew up with a supportive family but knew she couldn’t turn to them during these darkest moments. She found herself in a turbulent cycle that led to twelve arrests. She believes that because she lived in fear of another arrest and acted from this place, she continued to make bad decisions that made this fear a reality. It was hard to find stable housing, to pay her court costs, and to get out from under the thumb of predatory bonds people.

With a license in cosmetology, Andrews kept a “vanilla” job as often as she could but it wasn’t enough to pay the bills. She broke her kneecap after slipping down a flight of stairs while working in a strip club and began to escort — it was impossible to dance, cocktail, or work in a salon while she healed. She knows she is lucky to not have had any negative experiences while engaging in sex work — it was her choice and she enjoyed it but the negative consequences of criminalization continued to weigh her down.

At the age of 38, Andrews was finally free from the vortex of probation, court costs, and arrests. She recalls sitting on her patio with her husband and for the first time in so many years, feeling at peace. It took about thirty seconds for her to feel compelled to ensure others could experience that same feeling.

Naturally, she had a passion for working with individuals who were incarcerated, isolated, and stuck in the vicious cycle of the legal system. She connected with people incarcerated in Central Florida who had experienced unspeakable violence at the hands of the legal system. The letters Andrews received and conversations she had were transformational. She was overwhelmed by the extent to which people had been cut off from society and disenfranchised due to their arrests and she knew she needed to work to change the system. Andrews joined the SWOP Orlando Chapter in 2015. She had been doing this work for a while on her own and credits SWOP with giving her the language and tools to expand her advocacy.

Today, Andrews just completed her 4th year on the National Board of SWOP-USA and as a co-founder and co-executive director of SWOP Behind Bars, an organization that supports individuals who have been incarcerated. She works to “reduce the shame, discrimination, and stigma of sex work by...using [herself] as an example to demonstrate that sex workers are just like everyone else.” Andrews was reticent to be named a “DSW Hero,” citing Monica Jones, Annie Sprinkle, Margo St. James, and many others as the “true heroes,” in whose footsteps she follows. She’s about to embark on her annual trip to The Super Bowl to bail out sex workers who are wrongly arrested under the criminal legal community’s guise of fighting human trafficking.

Andrews and her team will be on the ground again, this time in Tampa, bailing individuals out. Not only will they pay sex workers’ bail, but they’ll also cover court fines and other costs — part of Andrews’ never-ending quest to prevent people from getting stuck in that vicious cycle that causes lasting trauma and instability. She and her team will prioritize trans people and people of color as they’re less likely to have other supports. They’ll also be doing outreach — know your rights presentations, safety planning for arrest and critical to Andrews, preparing individuals for what to expect should they be arrested. She wants to do what she can to prevent others from experiencing the deep uncertainty and shame she did upon arrest. Help her and her team with their on the ground efforts here: https://swopbehindbars.giv.sh/c92f

Big picture, Andrews thinks we have a “unique opportunity with the incoming administration for national work on decriminalizing consensual adult sex work.” She wants sex workers and others to come together and to work together to fight predatory laws such as SISEA (Stop Internet Sexual Exploitation Act), which would curtail free speech and infringe on sex workers’ ability to support themselves. She has ambitious goals — housing first, social supports that address the issues of instability that keep people from living comfortable, fulfilling lives. She knows they’re lofty but she’s not easily discouraged. She’s sure that if everyone fighting for the same ultimate goal — decriminalization — works together, they can achieve it. “There are so many personalities, so many skill sets … they’re all valuable and all critical to serving our community.”

Courtesy of Alex Andrews.

DSW Newsletter #22 (January 2021)

Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

January 7, 2021 Alex Andrews is on a mission and she’s happy to have you get in her way. She’ll ask you to join her (and you likely will) within...
Read More
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews

Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January 15, 2021 In a major win for sex workers and other marginalized populations, Washtenaw County’s new prosecutor announced their office will no longer prosecute the buying and selling of...
Read More
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work

January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

January 11, 2021 In a 2016 report, Amnesty International called on countries around the world to decriminalize consensual, adult sex work in order to protect the safety, health, and human...
Read More
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month

DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

January 9, 2021 PornHub invited DSW’s legal director, Melissa Broudo, to share her expertise on legal issues related to sex work in their two-day “Sex Worker Survival Guide.” The event...
Read More
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise

Mark Your Calendars for January 29

JANUARY 29, 2021 – New York Anti-Trafficking Network & Start Coalition Teach-In The New York Anti-Trafficking Network and the START Coalition will host a Teach-In on January 29 at 3pm...
Read More
Mark Your Calendars for January 29
Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews Hero of the Month: Alex Andrews
Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work Washtenaw County Decriminalizes Consensual Sex Work
January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month January Is Human Trafficking Awareness Month
DSW Staff Share Their Expertise DSW Staff Share Their Expertise
Mark Your Calendars for January 29 Mark Your Calendars for January 29

DSW Newsletter Archive