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Sheriff Sues Craiglist For Prostitution Ads

Amerika writes "Craigslist is 'the single largest source of prostitution in the nation,' according to Cook County, Illinois Sheriff Thomas Dart. He has announced that he's filing a lawsuit against the popular classifieds site. Craigslist says it's determined to prevent criminal activity." NewYorkCountryLawyer adds a link to the 28-page complaint (PDF), which "alleges that Craigslist maintains 21 classifications of sex-for-hire, coded as 'w4m,' 'm4m,' 'm4w,' etc." and that it has facilitated child prostitution and kidnapping and human trafficking.

20 of 695 comments (clear)

  1. former state governor seeking stupid sheriff - g4s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is Illinois again I see we are talking about, after all. Maybe the sheriff in question is just upset because he can't get a cut of the local "action" if it's all happens online...

  2. All consentual sexual relationships are... by kannibul · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All consentual sexual relationships are a form of prostitution when you get to the basics of it...be it money, food, protection...

    What about the wife that won't have sex with her husband until he does some chore?

    Isn't that prostitution?

    1. Re:All consentual sexual relationships are... by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not all, but many are, yes. It's a double standard in our society that bugs me. Expecting your date to put out because you bought her a nice dinner is OK, but paying her cash for sex isn't. Go figure.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    2. Re:All consentual sexual relationships are... by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Expecting your date to put out because you bought her a nice dinner is OK, but paying her cash for sex isn't. Go figure.

      Well I don't think either is reasonable, but maybe that's just me.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    3. Re:All consentual sexual relationships are... by Hao+Wu · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What you get is a pleasant evening out with a lady.

      You act like girls don't want to have sex. Do you know how badly most of them would love to skip the phony dinner and go straight to bed... but guys like you make them feel ashamed so they need stupid rituals to validate the affair.

      Then you deprive them of any excitement by paying for dinner without strings attached, still on the thesis that she doesn't want cock, and shouldn't.

      Then you wonder why she went home with "that guy"... really she was only too happy to make some "gentleman" pay for her meal, and then ditch him for what was truly on her mind.

      --
      I suggest you read Slashdot
  3. Streets Department by booch · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think they should probably go after the Streets Department first. Prostitutes have been using the streets to solicit prostitution for centuries. And I'm almost certain that there are more prostitutes using streets than using Craigslist.

    --
    Software sucks. Open Source sucks less.
  4. Not a source by 77Punker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Prostitutes exist with or without Craigslist; it is not a "source" and it does not create prostitutes. They'd be out walking the street if Craigslist didn't give them somewhere safe to advertise. I'd much rather keep them on the web than on my sidewalk.

  5. Re:Prostitutes? by DrLang21 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yet people flock to strip clubs to watch women dance and take off their clothes. Erotic Services with no sex are quite common.

    --
    I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
  6. Read the Complaint by dwm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wish more of the authors of these smug, dismissive comments would read the complaint.

    It makes a compelling case that the primary use of the "erotic services" section of Craigslist is prostitution, both the "consenting adults" variety and the quite non-consenting child sex slavery variety. It also cites specific cases where Craigslist was used to facilitate the abuse of child sex slaves. Is anyone here concerned with that, and that Craigslist is profiting from that traffic?

    Note that the sheriff isn't trying to shut down Craigslist; his office sent 5 letters to Craigslist asking them to better police the "erotic services" section or shut it down. According to the complaint, Craigslist refused. It would seem that the owners of Craigslist value their profits more than the lives of the children whose exploitation they benefit from.

    How often has the phrase "Think of the children" been bandied about on Slashdot with a wink and a sneer? Well, here's a case where there are actual, real, hurting children to think about. How many of you are brave enough to challenge the groupthink around here and do that? Where is the outrage that Craigslist is profiting from human traffic? Some of you need to turn in your liberal credentials at the door.

    1. Re:Read the Complaint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I hear the spectre of child prostitution ads being raised many times in this thread.

      cite one example. I peruse my local craigslist on occasion, and have even used the erotic services section quite a few times. I've never seen any child prostitution ads in there.

      If they're so prevalent, there must be some posted today? something in cache somewhere? an actual ad someone could link to and say "look, a child prostitution ad! take it off!"

      Unless I see some evidence, I'm inclined to think that the children are not as prevalent on craigslist as some would like us to think, and it's just a moral panic excuse to shut down a business run by adults, and only adults.

    2. Re:Read the Complaint by Walkingshark · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So you have some kind of evidence of child abuse (be it sexual or otherwise), then you have a prosecution. Congratulations, where does shutting down a section of craigslist come into this? Oh, you have no evidence of this actually happening, no actually damaged or hurt children? Then you're just another scare monger trying to stop the bleeding by covering it with a curtain.

      If you really want to think of the children, maybe you ought to take all this evidence you have of child abuse to a DA's office and see if you can get the ball rolling there.

      An intelligent person would want this stuff on craigslist, where it is all made into a nice easy searchable electronic database that can be easily monitored, logged, and used in court with a minimum of fuss. It looks to me like this sherrif simply doesn't understand the technology and his lawyers told him he might be able to make a quick buck suing craigslist.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
  7. It's who asked out whom by tekrat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The person that does the asking out to dinner pays.
    After all, the other party was gracious enough to accept.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    1. Re:It's who asked out whom by WNight · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's totally fair.

      But you're right, there is an expectation. And it's not wrong. If you sit around and wait to be asked you're going to be asked by people with their own goals in mind. If someone tries to woo you and you want that behavior to continue (expensive meals, etc) then you need to consider what they're looking for.

      It's pretty much like joining the host in whatever activity they have planned. You aren't required to play cards, or join their orgy, but they probably aren't going to invite you back if you didn't fit in.

  8. Re:Here we go again by sorak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Little aftertought, after reading the ars technica update I believe this is about money.

    The Cook County Sheriff's Department is asking a federal judge to close the Erotic Services section of Craigslist, as well as reimburse the department $100,000 it has cost to pursue Craigslist-related prostitution investigations over the past year,

    Umm...Shouldn't the police force be paying craigslist? Craigslist didn't create the prostitution. They stuck it all in one spot. The only way they could have helped the cops more is if they placed a big red arrow that says "hooker" over the prostitute's heads.

  9. Re:Here we go again by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They stuck it all in one spot. The only way they could have helped the cops more is if they placed a big red arrow that says "hooker" over the prostitute's heads.

    Mod parent up.

    Old school: Go undercover/hit the streets to round up prostitutes.
    New school: Login in to www.craiglisst.com from the comfort of the squad room, set up a date, make arrest. Rinse, repeat.

    That douchebag Sheriff should be thanking them for making it much easier for him.

    --
    Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
  10. Re:He didn't sue the mortgage banks by Qzukk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He said some renters were paying their rent on time and weren't receiving proper notice of the evictions.

    He also said mortgage companies routinely failed to do something they were supposed to: identify a building's occupants before asking for an eviction.

    ...

    Banks must prove that they informed tenants of a 120-day grace period, which state law grants to allow tenants to find new housing before moving out.

    source. Not that the con talking heads bothered to mention any of these trifling little legal issues back when they proclaimed that this was some kind of activism and socialism and satanism and whatever else they could throw at it.

    The bank must follow the law, and the law states the residents of a non-owner occupied property must be notified in advance, which the poor, poor banks just couldn't be bothered to do.

    They were apparently too busy licking the boots of the fed chairman for cash to think "Hmm... renter in good standing making monthly payments, owner in bad standing not making monthly payments. Maybe we should offer them the house in exchange for them continuing to pay. The worst that could happen is they say no and move out." But that would require working for their money and if there's anything we've learned in this crash, its that the leadership of our institutions are deathly afraid of work and deserve money to fall upon them from the federal government.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  11. Re:In other countries... by BaronHethorSamedi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... adults with imaginary friends are given free psychiatric help.

    In the US, we give them political power.

    OK, I'll bite.

    What are you talking about? This is a story about a lawsuit. A strange lawsuit that seems to be trying to enforce criminal statutes on a tort-like theory of public nuisance. It likely won't go anywhere, since it's hard from the complaint to even make out who the aggrieved party is supposed to be. (Is the Sheriff himself harmed in some way by Craigslist's practices? I think he'll have to show that if he wants an injunction. Otherwise, if he thinks something cognizably criminal is going on he could maybe investigate and prosecute. Which he can't, so this whole thing is largely symbolic.)

    Now you come in babbling about political power for imaginary friends. I guess it's OK, though, as there seem to be enough like-minded schizophrenics to get you modded insightful. Perhaps you could move overseas, and avail yourself of some of those marvelous free services...

  12. Re:Prostitution is not illegal... by DesScorp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... where I live. So the Cook County Sheriff can lump it if he doesn't like it.

    And this has exactly what to do with him going after crime in his jurisdiction?

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  13. Regulate and tax it by evilkasper · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have always found it highly questionable that something one can give away for free should be illegal to sell.. (free is relative; everyone pays for it somehow) If they regulated it (and taxed the hell out of it) it would do away with some thugs who want to be big time pimps, and through health regulations it could help reduce the spread of STD's. Just to go ahead and answer the inevitable, no it will not fix everything and there will always be those that operate outside of an established/legal system.

    1. Re:Regulate and tax it by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Interesting that many of your same arguments would work for the legalization of pot.

      I wish there was some chance we could get more of a libertarian govt in the US....go back to more strict reading of the constitution, and less govt. intrusions of adult lives.

      While I'm at it...I guess I'll also wish for a pony.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........