Talkin' Dirty
Sex
industry is topic at convention
LV
REVIEW-JOURNAL
Jul.
14, 2006
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal
By DAVID KIHARA
Wearing
a T-shirt with the words "Will Work For Sex" on the
front, Robin Head stood outside Palace Station and proudly said
that she worked in the sex industry.
Head,
who said she was the former owner of an escort service in
Houston, was among 150 sex workers, business owners, academics
and social workers who gathered in Las Vegas this week for a
convention that brought prostitutes, pimps and professors
together to talk about the sex industry.
"This
is the first of its kind," said Robyn Few, a former
prostitute and the executive director of Sex Worker Outreach
Project USA.
"In
the past, these (conventions) have been led by academics for
academics, or led by sex workers for sex workers. This brought
them all together."
The
event was sponsored by national organizations like Sex Workers
Outreach Project-USA, COYOTE and Desiree Alliance, and the
attendees came from as far away as Hong Kong to discuss
everything from better Web sites to the creation of prostitution
advocacy groups. It also included workshops on tantric sex and
lectures ranging from decriminalizing prostitution to how to
deal with disabled clients.
Kate
Hausbeck, a University of Nevada, Las Vegas sociology professor
who participated in the convention, said, "Overall, the
biggest issue was looking at criminalization policies and
asking, are they doing anything to stop prostitution? Are they
protecting and empowering women? Are they making our communities
safer? Are they improving the health, safety and well-being of
prostitutes?"
The
convention's organizers chose Las Vegas because Nevada is the
only state in the nation that has legal brothels. It is
empowering for prostitutes from elsewhere to be shown that
"there is legalized prostitution in our country," Few
said. Nevada has 28 operating brothels in 10 rural
counties.
But
the nation's only legal bordellos aren't a model for all
advocates of legalized prostitution, said Priscilla Alexander, a
67-year-old advocate of prostitutes' rights. "Nevada
brothels often hire women to work for just weeks at a time,
require prostitutes to live on the premises and mandate costly
STD tests too frequently, she said.
"Most
sex workers don't want to work in those restrictive
conditions," she said.
Few
said that even if the convention fails to advance the call for
legalizing prostitution, it did accomplish another of its goals
because it helped sex workers feel less isolated, Few
said.
The
term "sex worker" applies to not just prostitutes but
anyone who earns money by providing sexual services: adult film
actors, nude models, exotic dancers and phone sex workers, for
example.
"A
lot of people came out of the closet," Few joked, saying
that some a of the lecturers and outreach workers admitted
during the convention to working in the sex industry. "It's
like AA."
Others
who attended the four-day conference looked at it primarily as a
way to teach younger sex workers how to be safe in an industry
often equated with violent pimps and drug-addicted street
walkers, not with the well-dressed and generally playful group
who stood outside Palace Station.
Natasha
Sommers, a transgender adult entertainer from Seattle, spoke at
the convention about ways to educate and empower the "next
generation of sex workers."
"When
you are a sex worker, you are considered less than human,"
Sommers said, standing next to a conventioneer wearing a T-shirt
that said "Sluts Unite."
On
Thursday, a handful of conventioneers held a demonstration at
the Regional Justice Center in downtown Las Vegas.
"Our
number one goal is to end the criminalization of
prostitution," said Barbara Brents, assistant professor of
sociology at UNLV. "Here are a system of laws created that
are not designed to deal with the problem."
One
sex worker who demonstrated on the front steps of Clark County's
courthouse, who identified himself as Starchild, said consensual
sex between two people shouldn't be a crime simply because money
is exchanged.
"No
one is getting hurt," he said.
Dressed
in a fishnet shirt, the candidate for the San Francisco Board of
Supervisors said he has worked as an escort and doesn't want any
more regulations in the sex industry, saying that there is no
evidence that regulations could make sex work more safe.
In
Nevada, brothels are legal only in counties that approve them.
Prostitution is not legal in Clark County.
The
Metropolitan Police Department has recently started cracking
down on prostitutes in Southern Nevada. At the end of June, the
Metropolitan Police Department's vice unit conducted a weekend
sweep of street prostitutes that netted 184 arrests during the
two-day operation, dubbed Operation PIMP, for Prostitutes
Incarcerated by Metropolitan Police.
Lt.
Curt Williams of the Las Vegas police vice squad said Thursday
that he didn't think prostitution should be legalized because of
the other crimes associated with it, such as robberies, beatings
and drug use.
"From
our perspective, we don't think that legalizing it
(prostitution) could alleviate those problems," he
said.
But
to Elizabeth Nanas, a 33-year-old former sex worker-turned
academic, the police are part of the problem. Nanas, who worked
as a stripper and then as an escort for several years, said she
was harassed by police while working and once was arrested after
giving an officer in Michigan a sexual favor, she said.
"As
a 'criminal,' I realized there was no justice for me," she
said outside Palace Station. "Who could I go to when the
cops are the ones who commit the crimes?"
She
said that experience led her to pursue a career in academics and
advocacy so she could help other sex workers. As one of the
organizers of the conference, she was proud that so many people
involved in the sex industry, even some "johns,"
attended the convention.
Few
said she was also pleased that the convention and demonstration
downtown brought attention to sex workers.
"As
long as it's criminalized we'll never be safe," she
said.
Alexander
said sex workers' claims of rape and violence too often are
ignored by police, and some departments use scant evidence, like
carrying condoms, as cause for arrests.
But
she said one of the most pressing threats to sex workers were
anti-human trafficking laws passed on the federal and state
level that can be interpreted as applying to strippers, dancers
and escorts.
"Most
human trafficking is not about sex work, it's about
construction," Alexander said.
Federal
officials say 14,500 to 17,500 people are trafficked to the
United States a year; about 75 percent of federal prosecutions
have involved sex trafficking.
The Associated
Press contributed to this report.
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