Escorts cashing in on Sask. boom cause concern
http://www.leaderpost.com/news/Escorts+cashing+Sask+boom+cause+concern/10282338/story.html
BY BARB PACHOLIK, LEADER-POST OCTOBER 11, 2014
REGINA — There’s the “upscale & stunning blonde from Montreal visiting” Estevan.
Or the “new arrived Asain (sic) baby” who’s in Yorkton for four days.
And “captivating, sweet Kinky Krissy ... new to Swift Current.”
Also, “sexy Stacy,” currently available in Regina.
They are a small sampling of the escorts on offer in sexually-explicit, online ads circulating in Saskatchewan, where the economic boom has attracted interest from “adult service” providers.
And that, in turn, has caught the attention of police on the hunt for human traffickers.
For the second time this year, Regina officers recently joined with 25 police agencies in a national investigation to assist those working in the sex trade against their will.
Called Operation Northern Spotlight, the officers in each city used ads on the Web to book “dates” with escorts over two nights last week — then met to talk.
“Almost all the girls we meet, they say they’re independent,” said Sgt. Rob Huber, who is in charge of the vice section at the Regina Police Service. “But when we see that the hotel room is booked by some guy down east ... and sometimes there’s three rooms booked, and there will be three different girls, I would say they’re controlling a couple girls at a time.”
Although local officers joined the national initiative, it was an extension of the work they do routinely.
While the lower-priced, street-level sex trade has held its own, the high-priced adult services have exploded in Saskatchewan. Some escorts take bookings a month or so before dropping into the city, settling into a hotel, then moving on after a couple days or weeks.
“We kept seeing Web sites and increased girls, and we thought, let’s just see who’s doing this and who’s travelling. So we started making contact with these girls.”
According to Huber, most of the women — the majority of the escorts police see are female — are polite, despite discovering that next date is a police officer seeking information and offering assistance.
Usually that help means leaving behind a business card and letting them know the door is open — “if they want to get out or if they have bad dates or having trouble with whoever, they can give us a call,” explained Huber.
The national operation helps police learn more about how the escorts move around. Those who have surfaced in Regina often come from points east of Manitoba, usually Toronto, Montreal and Quebec.
Of the nine women Regina officers met with last week as part of Spotlight, only one was local. In January, for the first phase of the operation, they met with 21 women.
Despite denials by the women, Huber suspects most are turned out by someone who reaps the bulk of the lucrative profits. “But until that girl basically tells us, we don’t have a victim.”
And without a victim, there are no grounds for human trafficking or pimping charges.
While Spotlight led to no sex trade-related charges in Regina, nationally police charged nine people last week with 33 offences, including forcible confinement, trafficking in persons, living off the avails, and making and distributing child pornography. Police also ensured the safety of 18 people working in the sex trade as minors or against their will, including a 12-year-old.
The escorts Regina police have encountered over the past two years have ranged in age from 19 to 65 (she apparently looked half her age).
Regina police connected with 138 different escorts last year. This year, the number has grown to 165. “If that was only our mandate to do, it would probably be double that. There are lots that come through here,” said Huber.
Browsing through the ads, Huber said police know the province’s large cities aren’t the only draw.
“Weyburn and Estevan are seeing the same problem we are. They’re down there, Moose Jaw, Carlyle.”
The women tell police: “There’s money out here. And the boom is on. The guys here are paying more for sex than down east — and less competition,” said Huber.
He’s not aware of any human trafficking charges having been laid in Saskatchewan.
Still, “we’re hoping some day, some girl will open up to us and tell us the story, and we’ll go from there.”
bpacholik@leaderpost.com