Bill C-36 tabled (New Prostitution Law)

SkyRider

Banned
Mar 31, 2009
17,572
2
0
This proposed law is as illogical as passing a law that says it is legal to sell beer but is illegal to buy it. Defies common sense.:confused:
 

DigitallyYours

Off TERB indefinitely
Oct 31, 2010
1,540
0
0
As to challenging the law with respect to not the sentence, but the finding of guilt, I believe johns have no standing* complaining about how it looks from SPs standpoint. So it may be doomed.
A person charged always has standing to argue that their own Charter rights were violated by the specific actions of the LE.

A person can also, at trial, argue that the law itself, is illegal and therefore, is of no force or effect. The illegality of the law can be based on whatever reason, not just that it violates that person's Charter rights. These usually fail because by the time a law is enacted, it has been analyzed to death and shouldn't be unconstitutional. But a person is always free to try this line of argumentation.
 

lovelatinas

Retired
Sep 30, 2008
6,677
1
38
charges on small stuff like shoplifting or found-in are routinely dropped now and will be in the future. What you give is you are not clogging the system.

Especially in circumstances where everybody expects the law to fall anyways.
That's is if the judge isn't a moralist conservative.
 

Serpent

Active member
Jan 1, 2006
1,863
0
36
I find it sad that people are practicing lines for their day in court. You guys do know that people arrested for breaking a law have no expectation of anonymity and are named in the papers(which have online versions and therefore, you're now infamous for all eternity)?
 

kbiii2

Member
Jan 25, 2012
151
12
18
A successful challenge might be raised by the providers (just like Bradford) and/or an arrested client under SECTION 15(1) of the Charter which deals
with equality and the right of equal protection and equal benefit under the law regardless of race .......... SEX, ..........."etc".

Section 15(2) allows an exception to equal treatment if the goal is to ameliorate conditions of disadvantaged individuals or groups ........... "etc".

There is no question the mainly male clientele are being discriminated against here and probably the still legal female providers as well since they
cannot freely communicate with their clients without fear that they will lose business due to the arrest of their client. The law is telling them they
can freely carry on business but at the same time trying to eliminate their customer base.

It's also hard to see how the providers can really be considered a disadvantaged group if enough of them are willing to present themselves as
basically nothing more than business women just trying to make a good living and get ahead in life like the rest of us. I thought that would
be the approach the providers would take from the start, but they seem to have not pushed the issue.

I think this discrimination issue has been brought up before with no clear agreement as to what the legal result might be.
 

elise

A car, not a girl.
Sep 22, 2004
404
0
16
I find it sad that people are practicing lines for their day in court. You guys do know that people arrested for breaking a law have no expectation of anonymity and are named in the papers(which have online versions and therefore, you're now infamous for all eternity)?
And that is only if you are charged.
Once convicted, try travelling with a criminal record, you can be denied entry into the US or other countries, get put in your car or plane and told to go home. Feel free to rehearse your lines for the border guard why you should be let in...
 

bobcat40

Member
Jan 25, 2006
570
10
18
I already have my perfect defense...If caught I will say I am the one selling the sexual services and therefore I am the victim. ;)
 

elise

A car, not a girl.
Sep 22, 2004
404
0
16
A person charged always has standing to argue that their own Charter rights were violated by the specific actions of the LE.

A person can also, at trial, argue that the law itself, is illegal and therefore, is of no force or effect. The illegality of the law can be based on whatever reason, not just that it violates that person's Charter rights. These usually fail because by the time a law is enacted, it has been analyzed to death and shouldn't be unconstitutional. But a person is always free to try this line of argumentation.
A charter defence requires good lawyers. Good lawyers usually cost lots of money with no guarantee you will win. The chances of getting a free lawyer is slim. Will you escape being noticed by the media if you start to clear the first hurdles (the crown appeals would be instant if you did). Dumping $100k in legal fees? Cheaper and safer to go to Amsterdam.
 

oxygen8

New member
May 20, 2007
12
0
1
right? As far as I can see, here, on other forums, on twitter, everywhere...... the ONLY people freaking out, panicking, cancelling incall appointments, closing their terb accounts and retiring are YOU GUYS.

Most of the providers I've spoken to are educating themselves, reading the bill, networking with colleagues, arranging events and protests, planning next steps.

Respectfully, this forum is A) considered to be a safe space to discuss such issues, and B) comprised of escort aficionados. I very much doubt that such a frank discussion would take place anywhere else.

I've scanned the comment sections of many major articles on this issue to date and not one commenter has come within twenty feet of revealing that they purchase sexual services. So, once again, respectfully, I believe that the tenor of this discussion in this forum is likely the closest that you are going to get to the truth.

Despite the outrage (which always subsides in life), I don't believe I've seen one client commenter on this site ( and I've been reading for about 20 minutes) say anything to the effect that they will ignore the law if implemented. Don't get me wrong, they're trying to figure it out, but so far they have come up empty.

This is the place where the good clients come from. This is significant.

The ambiguity of this legislation ( and probably done purposefully, but it doesn't change it's reality), takes the experince of an impulse luxury delight, to a stressful, fear filled experience that will require steps and hoops to jump through to just feel somewhat confident that the law is satisfied, but will not be exempt from the risk prosecution, no matter how unfounded.

I admire you optimism.

I admire you tenacity on the issue.

I admire your creativity in searching for solution.

I admire your understanding that this has not received Royal Assent.

I admire your breasts in that Jays jersey above all.

.... but at the end of the day, if the customer is freaked out, and for the most part think that the juice is not worth the squeeze, industries as once constructed go away.
 

elise

A car, not a girl.
Sep 22, 2004
404
0
16
This proposed law is as illogical as passing a law that says it is legal to sell beer but is illegal to buy it. Defies common sense.:confused:
Yep. Thats exactly why it was written that way. The want to stop it as completely as possible, the SPs are the victims so don't touch them. They are only there because of the johns who are the cause of all the problems anyway.

No customers = no SPs, all problems with prostitution solved.
 

canada-man

Well-known member
Jun 16, 2007
31,963
2,892
113
Toronto, Ontario
canadianmale.wordpress.com
After Bedford @AfterBedford · 2h
"child pornography" shouldn't grouped in the same sections of our CC with adult "advertisements of sexual services" Because LOGIC. #BillC36
ReplyReplied to 0 times RetweetRetweeted 2 times2 FavoriteFavorited 2 times2


After Bedford @AfterBedford · 2h
That #BillC36 ref's sections of our CC that are "Offences Tending to Corrupt Morals" is telling. This isn't about safety of sexworkers.
 

MadonnaLove

Banned
Dec 1, 2012
1,976
11
0
GTA
For the past years in calls have always been illegal and its a criminal offence if found in a bawdy house. That didn't stop ladies from offering them or men coming to them.They will be legal December 2014. We were always taking a chance of getting a record. Its a bill it hasn't been passed.
 

AK-47

Armed to the tits
Mar 6, 2009
6,697
1
0
In the 6
Already first arrests have been made (although these are the good type of arrests):

http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews/canada/archives/2014/06/20140606-161444.html



8 arrested, 4 sought in human-trafficking probe

Members of a notorious Scarborough street gang were behind a suspected human trafficking ring that forced young teen girls to work as sex slaves in the GTA and outside the province, Toronto Police alleged Friday.

Investigators started their probe about a year ago after discovering "an alarming trend" of young girls, aged 14 to 17, who were being forced into prostitution.

The sex crimes unit took over the case in March and subsequently identified "several" victims with ties to members of east-end gang, The Galloway Boys.

"Through further investigation, it is alleged these victims were being forced into prostitution while under threat, physical violence, control and coercion from members associated to a local street gang known as the Galloway Boys," Insp. Joanna Beaven-Desjardins said.

On Thursday, with help from Peel and Durham Regional Police, 11 search warrants were executed in the city and eight people were arrested on 44 human trafficking-related charges.

Four other suspects remain at large.

Beaven-Desjardins said "less than 10" victims have been identified but it's believed there are "many more out there."

The girls involved were allegedly forced into sex slavery for about a year.

Tchello Whyte, 25, Anthony Talbert, 21, Shanicka Providence, 18, Markus Cole, 20, Alia Alexandria Abdellatif, 25, -- all of Toronto -- and three 17-year-olds who can't be identified under provisions of the Youth Criminal Justice Act, have all been charged.

Brian MacKenzie, 22, Darren Letts, 22, Jason Bartley, 19, and Kamille Fraser, 21 -- all of Toronto -- are still sought
 

The Fox

Feeling Supersonic
Jun 4, 2004
818
566
93
Yep. Thats exactly why it was written that way. The want to stop it as completely as possible, the SPs are the victims so don't touch them. They are only there because of the johns who are the cause of all the problems anyway.

No customers = no SPs, all problems with prostitution solved.
there will still be customers, just Johns who don't give a crap about breaking the law, don't give a crap about a job losing a crap job and don't give a crap about taking a shower
 

spraggamuffin

Well-known member
Oct 6, 2006
3,296
160
63
They got me at sex workers are able to advertise their own work. Their work being sexual services.

But it's illegal to advertise sexual services and you could be jailed for 5yrs or fined $5000.

Am I just stupid?
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts