• Nearly naked prostitutes prowl streets in broad daylight, but Californi

    From Whitmer Rape Club@21:1/5 to All on Wed Oct 11 19:00:29 2023
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement, alt.california, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics, alt.society.liberalism

    Women wearing only "g-strings" while bending over in front of
    traffic has become an increasingly common sight in National City,
    California, as prostitution issues spiral after the implementation
    of a controversial state law, the city’s mayor told Fox News
    Digital.

    "They're waving to people on the freeway or, just to be honest with
    you, they are bending over for the freeway. I don’t know how else to
    put it; they're showing their wares," National City Mayor Ron
    Morrison told Fox News Digital in an interview this month.

    California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 357 in July 2022,
    which repealed a previous law that banned loitering with the intent
    to engage in prostitution. The law took effect in January this year,
    with Morrison arguing that the moment Newsom’s pen touched the bill,
    pimps in the state knew they could expand their prostitution
    ventures with little repercussions from law enforcement.

    "The moment it was signed by the governor, boom, everyone knew the
    rules were out the window," Morrison told Fox News Digital.

    CALIFORNIA CITIES RATTLED BY PROSTITUTION, HUMAN TRAFFICKING IN
    BROAD DAYLIGHT AS COPS PIN BLAME ON NEW LAW

    "Those that are out there on the street, most of them are wearing
    less than what you would consider a scanty negligee. It is just
    flaunting in everybody's face. And so a lot of people are screaming,
    ‘Hey, you know, can't you get them on indecent exposure?’ And the
    problem is the way our laws read in this state. The definition of
    indecent exposure is as long … as the genitals are covered. Anything
    else is fair game out in public."

    CALIFORNIA PROSTITUTION LAW ALLOWS SEX ABUSE TO 'RUN RAMPANT' IN LOS
    ANGELES STREETS, VICTIM ADVOCATES WARN

    National City is a diverse working-class city of roughly 60,000
    residents just outside San Diego on the bay, Morrison said.
    Prostitution issues are no stranger to the city, with the mayor
    explaining that as an urban area, sex workers have been known to
    cross the San Diego city border – but never at the rate he’s
    currently seeing.

    "Very much beyond brazen," Morrison said of what he’s seeing on his
    streets.

    Prostitutes gather in a downtown area that faces a freeway and are
    most often seen early in the morning and around 3 p.m. Morrison
    added that another new California law that legalized jaywalking has
    compounded the issues as some women stand in traffic to attract a
    john.

    "I was driving on one of the streets the other day, and there's this
    young lady standing there in the middle of the street wearing
    basically a G-string, and that was it, and a couple pasties. But
    she's right in front of my car, I couldn't move. So, I did ask her
    very politely, ‘Would you please move out of the street?’ And she
    looked at me and says, 'If you don't want to talk to me, you can go
    around,'" Morrison said.

    Businesses, ranging from mom-and-pop stores to national hotel
    chains, have sounded off to the mayor that the prostitutes are
    driving away business and have forced some businesses to refund
    families who were appalled at seeing nearly naked women while on
    their California getaway.

    Even a local school covered its windows after prostitutes were
    repeatedly found hanging out near its gates, Morrison said.


    The mayor argues that the issue comes down to Senate Bill 357, which
    he called an "idiotic law" that should be known as the "Safe Streets
    for Pimps Initiative," which has allegedly not only left his town
    and other municipalities in the state dealing with an increase of
    sex workers on the street, but it has also incentivized human
    trafficking.

    "This one has just opened the doors to prostitution, sex
    trafficking, child sex trading, I mean, you name it. This has
    obviously done that. And I don't think anyone that is not just
    purely politically motivated could disagree with that," Morrison
    said.

    The mayor described himself as a "nonpartisan" who has worked at
    various levels of government over more than 30 years, whose main
    focus is to "look out for people in National City and their
    businesses" and not play politics in Sacramento.

    Senate Bill 357 was authored by Democrat state Sen. Scott Wiener,
    who championed the bill as one that would help protect transgender
    women from being targeted by police.

    "[The previous law] allowed police officers to arrest a person, not
    based on what they did but based solely on how a person looks,"
    Wiener told local media earlier this year. "So, an officer could
    arrest someone because they were wearing tight clothing, high heels
    and extra lipstick."

    Fox News Digital previously spoke with members of the Coalition to
    Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (CAST), which is one of the largest
    and oldest direct service providers for sex and labor trafficking
    survivors in the U.S., who said they supported the bill "because we
    know that reducing the criminalization of survivors will help
    prevent human trafficking."

    NATIONWIDE PUSH TO LIBERALIZE PROSTITUTION LAWS PROMPTS CONCERNS
    ABOUT HUMAN TRAFFICKING

    "Traffickers rely on our systems to criminalize victims so that they
    are unable to access safety due to their records and are vulnerable
    to continued exploitation," Leigh LaChapelle, CAST's associate
    director of survivor advocacy, told Fox News earlier this year after
    the law took effect.

    "The impact of these encounters with law enforcement reinforce
    already heightened stigma when someone is arrested for this offense
    due to the difficulties securing employment and safe housing with an
    arrest record relating to the sex trade," LaChapelle added.
    "Violation of this discriminatory law also puts immigrants in
    jeopardy of deportation, loss of residency or denial of reentry due
    to a misdemeanor conviction."

    Prostitution is still illegal in California, but Morrison said the
    new law has effectively legalized the crime as police back off from
    intervening or interacting with the women.

    "Senate Bill 357, which for all intents and purposes made
    prostitution legal because what it said is that officers can no
    longer contact people based on the idea of loitering for the purpose
    of prostitution. So, it basically tells the police your hands are
    off," Morrison said.

    AS CALIFORNIA POLICE FIGHT RAMPANT PROSTITUTION, JOHNS LINE UP LIKE
    THEY'RE AT 'FAST-FOOD DRIVE-THROUGH'

    He noted that some of the girls on the street appear underaged,
    though the amount of makeup the sex workers wear makes it difficult
    to gauge an age, and the city has previously seen girls as young as
    12 working on the streets.

    "A lot of the times [police] found out that these were juveniles …
    or that they were basically being sex trafficked, and they could get
    them out of that. Now, they basically have no legal opportunity to
    even talk to them," Morrison said.

    With prostitution blatantly on the streets, other crimes have also
    followed, including shootings and assaults. Morrison said that just
    weeks ago an eight-month pregnant prostitute was kidnapped, beaten
    and raped.


    "Those [crime incidents] go on our crime stats. We've had shootings,
    everything else involving the prostitutes and the pimps. So, those
    crime stats go on us. These people don't live here in National City
    and people here don't want them, but we're getting the crime stats,"
    he said.

    Morrison said he is working with the local district attorney and the
    police department to craft avenues on how to navigate the state laws
    while cleaning up the streets. The police department has carried out
    "john stings" in the past, but such operations require a team of
    roughly 30 officers, which would translate to half of the city’s
    police force, and weeks of planning, Morrison said.

    "People here are not happy about this in the least. And the problem
    is they expect us locally to do something about it. And we're
    sitting here with our hands behind our back with handcuffs on that
    Sacramento was placed on us," Morrison said.

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/nearly-naked-prostitutes-prowl-streets- broad-daylight-california-law-ties-cops-hands-mayor

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