State attorneys general go after Internet sex trafficking
Note: The following letter to U.S. Senators about Internet sex crimes was signed by Montana Attorney General Tim Fox.
——————
July 23, 2013
Dear Senator Rockefeller, Senator Thune, Representative Upton, and Representative Waxman:
Every day, children in the United States are sold for sex. In instance after instance, state and local authorities discover that the vehicles for advertising the victims of the child sex trade to the world are online classified ad services, such as Backpage.com.
The involvement of these advertising companies is not incidental — these companies have constructed their business models around income gained from participants in the sex trade. But, as it has most recently been interpreted, the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (“CDA”) prevents state and local law enforcement agencies from prosecuting these companies.
This must change. The undersigned Attorneys General respectfully request that the U.S. Congress amend the CDA so that it restores to State and local authorities their traditional jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute those who promote prostitution and endanger our children.
It is ironic that the CDA, which was intended to protect children from indecent material on the Internet, is now used as a shield by those who intentionally profit from prostitution and crimes against children. Federal courts have broadly interpreted the immunity provided by the CDA, and recently the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington held that the CDA preempts state criminal law.
As online advertising of child prostitution goes unchecked, sex traffickers are able to expand their businesses, magnifying the scope of the problem. In the last few months alone, law enforcement agencies throughout the nation have linked sex-trafficking operations to Internet advertisers.
For example, on March 28, Miami police arrested a man for advertising the sex services of a 13-year-old girl on Backpage.com. The perpetrator had tattooed his name across the girl’s eyelids, marking her as his property. Two months earlier, two men were arrested in Fairfax County, Va., for prostituting four minors on Backpage.com. And on April 10, four males and one female were arrested in St. Paul, Minn., for running a prostitution ring of eight girls and women ages 15 to 40. The girls and women were advertised on Backpage.com. These examples offer just a small sampling of the countless instances of child sex trafficking that occurs every day in the United States.
In order to better combat such crimes, we recommend that 47 U.S.C. § 230(e)(1) be amended to the following: “Nothing in this section shall be construed to impair the enforcement of section 223 or 231 of this title, chapter 71 (relating to obscenity) or 110 (relating to sexual exploitation of children) of Title 18, or any other Federal or State criminal statute.” (Note: “or State” added.)
Federal enforcement alone has proven insufficient to stem the growth of Internet-facilitated child sex trafficking. Those on the front lines of the battle against the sexual exploitation of children — state and local law enforcement — must be granted the authority to investigate and prosecute those who facilitate these horrible crimes.
Respectfully,
Chris Koster Missouri Attorney General
Marty Jackley South Dakota Attorney General
Bob Ferguson Washington Attorney General
Luther Strange Alabama Attorney General
Michael Geraghty Alaska Attorney Genera
Tom Hornel Arizona Attorney General
Dustin McDaniel Arkansas Attorney Genera
Kamala Harrisl California Attorney General
John Suthers Colorado Attorney General
Joseph R. “Beau” Biden III Delaware Attorney General
Pamela Jo Bondi Florida Attorney General
Samuel S. Olens Georgia Attorney General
Lenny Rapadas Guam Attorney General
David Louie Hawaii Attorney General
Lawrence Wasden Idaho Attorney General
Lisa Madigan Illinois Attorney General
Gregory Zoeller Indiana Attorney General
Tom Miller Iowa Attorney General
Derek Schmidt Kansas Attorney General
Jack Conway Kentucky Attorney General
James “Buddy” Caldwell Louisiana Attorney General
Janet Mills Maine Attorney General
Douglas F. Gansler Maryland Attorney General
Martha Coakley Massachusetts Attorney General
Bill Schuette Michigan Attorney General
Lori Swanson Minnesota Attorney General
Jim Hood Mississippi Attorney General
Tim Fox Montana Attorney General
Jon Bruning Nebraska Attorney General
Catherine Cortez Masto Nevada Attorney General
Joseph Foster New Hampshire Attorney General
John J. Hoffman Acting New Jersey Attorney General
Gary King New Mexico Attorney General
Eric T. Schneiderman New York Attorney General
Roy Cooper North Carolina Attorney General
Wayne Stenehjem North Dakota Attorney General
Mike DeWine Ohio Attorney General
Scott Pruitt Oklahoma Attorney General
Ellen F. Rosenblum Oregon Attorney General
Kathleen Kane Pennsylvania Attorney General
Peter Kilmartin Rhode Island Attorney General
Alan Wilson South Carolina Attorney General
Robert E. Cooper, Jr. Tennessee Attorney General
Greg Abbott Texas Attorney General
John Swallow Utah Attorney General
William H. Sorrell Vermont Attorney General
Vincent Frazer Virgin Islands Attorney General
Patrick Morrisey West Virginia Attorney General
Peter K. Michael Acting Wyoming Attorney General