The Rape Relief Files - 1986
Prostitution: Legal History
(This
page contains all content (excluding images) in the original print
issue
of The Rape Rape Relief Files. Color changes in the text indicate
separate articles.)
Update
in Vancouver
Yellow pages comparison for Vancouver
for 1984 and 1986 show an alarming increase in the number of businesses
listed under the heading "escort services."
January
18, 1986. The Wave-In
About 100 chanting and banner-waving prostitutes and their supporters
gathered at two Vancouver corners in the pouring rain to call
for the review and repeal of the new Federal law, Bill C-49.
Chronology
of Canadian Prostitution Law
Bill
C49 Mocks the Constitution
Prostitution
Update: Toronto, Vancouver, Winnipeg
SUMMER 1986: UPDATE IN VANCOUVER
THE PROVINCE January
17, 1986. In an article entitled "Hooker Law Working"
Const. Slater reports he had not seen any prostitutes in Mt.
Pleasant on his patrols through the area late Tuesday. A check
by the VANCOUVER SUN newspaper also found the area hooker-free.
By March 18, the Province
was headlining "Hookers just may reclaim streets",
and by June 9 Mt. Pleasant residents paraded with signs demanding
that their neighbourhood be hookerfree. On March 27, the Mayor
of Vancouver was back to the Attorney General to ask for another
injunction -- this time against a bawdy house.
It is clear that, at
least in our city, the anti-street soliciting law is not working.
Despite massive repression and brutality by the police and protests
from residents, the situation has not changed, according to
reports from those same residents. Women are visibly out on
the streets again.
Because of their courage
and ingenuity and resistance and outright defiance, what some
have called a legal sledgehammer has not succeeded. The price
has been paid by women on the streets - 6 of them with their
lives. Murders and disappearances and 408 arrests by July 4,
1986, according to the police. Only 30% of arrests have been
johns, 708 have been prostitutes.
On April 10, 1986, because
a prostitute challenged the new law, a Vancouver provincial
court judge ruled that C-49 was unconstitutional. The police
put '67 cases on hold; women continued to work the streets.
May 7, 1986. The B.C.
Supreme Court ruled that the law was not unconstitutional and
overturned glower court ruling. Since then, 341 arrests have
been made. The police are back at the entrapment, harassment
and brutal treatment of prostitutes and so are the courts. The
convictions since the Supreme Court ruling in May now include
probation restrictions to stay out of particular named areas
of cities, and one woman was confined to her home between the
hours of 6 pm and 6 am. The courts have been forced by women's
necessity and women's defiance to use the injunction tactic
again, in addition to fining and holding without trial.
But women continue to
solicit,several old areas and moving into new ones new ones.
Women have ducked into shopping malls and skytrain stations
to dodge police, and to avoid attracting police attention many
have been working by themselves on many, streets.
Although word from the
provincial Attorney General to city police is to enforce arrest
of men who are beating women they live with, whether or not
the women want to lay charges (and the cops are doing so), they
are not doing so when the woman beaten is a prostitute.
Welfare rates have not
increased, but control of recipients has. More documentation
is required from MHR before a welfare cheque is issued (drivers'
license, birth certificate and SIN card). A wallet full of plastic
or no cheque.
The Family Maintenance
Act is being enforced. Women with children who leave men who
beat them are required to sign a form giving permission for
the state to locate the father and require financial support
whether or not the woman wants that, and regardless of the danger
that doing so puts her in.
B.C. has more children
in group homes than any other province, on a per capita basis.
Social workers from the hospital delivery room to the welfare
office and classroom document the (new) mother's behaviour toward
the child, investigate her occupation, her living situation,
and are more often than ever challenging her parenting.
Meanwhile, there are
no new start-up funds for daycare, no increased subsidies for
daycare.
We'll keep you posted
......
Top
A
simple comparison of the yellow pages for Vancouver for 1984
and 1986 show an alarming increase in the number of businesses
listed under the heading "escort services" (from
19 lists in '84 to 39 in '86), as well as the size and sleaziness
of the graphic and printed materials in the display ads. Generally,
the '86 ads were larger and more sexualised, with women's bodies
draped over them, for example. The '84 ads were clearly advertising
genuine 'escort:' (or at least pretending to) and did not appear
so much to be a cover for prostitution. Ads in the older directories
had sales pitches directed at those who needed escorts for business.
It
is also true that some massage parlours really are all about
massage -but not many anymore.
The
history of prostitution law illustrates that none of the three
approaches (regulation, prohibition and rehabilitation) was
successful in eliminating the trade in female sexuality because
of the pervasive class, race and sex discrimination inherent
in their formulation or enforcement. Most blatently, sex discrimination
was evidenced in the failure to enforce these laws against men.
JANUARY
18, 1986. THE WAVE-IN
About 100
chanting and banner-waving prostitutes and their supporters
gathered at two Vancouver corners in the pouring rain to call
for the review and repeal of the new Federal law, Bill C-49.
They were part of a nation-wide street-demonstration.
About 50
hit the streets in Toronto, 30 in downtown Calgary, 60 in Montreal,
and 25 in Ottawa.
The new
law is an attempt to control street prostitution. It makes it
illegal to disrupt pedestrian or vehicular traffic or to communicate
or try to, with anyone to sell or purchase sex in a public place
including a motor vehicle.
Feminists
and prostitutes alike are alarmed by the sweep of arrests of
women in the city. Forty-seven arrests so far and, of course,
the majority are women, not the johns. No known pimps have been
picked up.
Marie, the
most experienced of the organisers in ASP (the Alliance for
the Safety of Prostitutes), fears several effects of this new
police activity.
-
the very young prostitutes who disappear from the streets
cannot be traced. The government officials won't reveal whether
they have been incarcerated or whether, as is the street rumour,
they have been taken out of town by pimps.
-
men (johns) are being ordered to appear in court, but women
accused of prostittion are being held in jail awaiting trial
(and 'roughed up').
-
women who are prostituting without pimps are in a worse position
again, because there is no one to go their bail.
Many progressive
people have expressed opinions that this new law is blatantly
against our Constitution and will be struck down. But, in the
meantime, it provides police with legal cover for this harassment
of prostitutes in particular, and women in general.
The wave-in
was designed to show the public that the actions for which the
prostitutes are being arrested are not in themselves dangerous
to anyone.
Lots of
feminists had to face just how much we were still distancing
prostitutes when we agreed to stand on a corner and wave at
the men.
Top
Chronology
of Canadian Prostitution Law
1839
In Lower Canada the police were authorized to apprehend "all
common prostitutes or night walkers wandering in the fields,
public streets or highways, not giving a satisfactory account
of themselves." It was aimed solely at women and specific
offensive behaviour was not a prerequisite for detention. Persons
in the habit of "frequenting houses of ill fame" could
also be arrested.
1851-1881
Many Canadian municipalities passed by-laws suppressing houses
of prostitution, prostitutes, inmates and frequenters.
1858
After Lower Canada and Upper Canada united into the Province
of Canada, this legislation extended to the United Territory.
It also authorized the arrest of inmates of bawdy houses.
1865
The Contagious Diseases Act (CDA) was designed to protect military
men from venereal diseases. The statute authorized the detention
of diseased prostitutes for up to three months at certified
hospitals. It may never have been enforced since no hospitals
were ever certified to detain diseased prostitutes. The statute
expired in 1870.
1867
The newly created federal government passed an act which "prohibited
all persons from procuring the defilement of women under the
age of 21..."
An
Act respecting "vagrants" was also passed in which
common prostitutes, keepers of bawdy houses and houses of ill-fame,
frequenters of such houses and all persons who supported themselves
for the most part by the avails of prostitution, were liable
to arrest.
Vagrants
were condemned to a maximum of two months imprisonment, $50
or both.
1871
An oact made it a requirement for women convicted under the
Vagrancy Act more than once to serve their sentences in the
Quebec Female Reformatory. Minimum sentence was five years in
contrast to the maximum penalty under the Vagrancy Act of two
months.
1874
Vagrancy Act amended to increase penalties involved to a maximum
of six months at hard labour.
1880
The federal government decided io regulate against the prostitution
of Indian women and "An Act to amend and consolidate the
laws respecting Indians" was introduced. The act prohibited
the keepers of bawdy houses from allowing Indian women prostitutes
on the premises.
1879-1899
Legislators began to enact a rash of provincial statutes to
remove young girls from the custody of parents who lived in
a socially unacceptable manner and to transfer them to newly-established
industrial refuges for girls.
1882
An Ontario Grand Jury recommended that imprisonment as well
as a fine should be inflicted on keepers of bawdy houses, that
present laws should be strictly enforced, and that "every
publicity be given to those who frequented brothels."
1984
To ensure that native Canadians could' be convicted of being
brothel keepers, the Indian Act (see 1880) was amended to state
specifically that keepers of "tents and wigwams,"
as well as houses, fell within the bawdy house provisions.
1886
An amendment to the Indian Act provided that every Indian keeping
or frequenting a disorderly house, tent or wigwam used for such
purpose was also liable. The federal government repealed this
provision in 1887 and added a new one meant to apply only to
Indian women prostituting themselves.
1886
An Act respecting offences against public morals and public
convenience was created. It made it an offence to entice a woman
to a brothel, or to knowingly conceal her. It forbade men to
seduce and have illicit connections with any woman of previously
chaste character. Bawdy house provisions were re-enacted with
additional prohibitions against being an inmate.
1892
Enactment of the Criminal Code. The federal government adopted
a statute against procuring women for unlawful carnal connection
and made it unlawful for parents or guardians to encourage the
defilement of their daughters or wards. Conspiracy to defile
was also prohibited. Provisions under the Indian Act were inserted
into the Criminal Code but restricted to unenfranchised Indian
women only.
This
legislative picture would remain in place until 1972. Most of
the statutory amendments in the 20th century did no more than
add a few peripheral offences against prostitution-related activities
and fine-tune the penalties.
1907
Definition of a bawdy house amended to include "a house,
set of rooms or place of any kind kept for the purposes of prostitution
or occupied or resorted to by one or more persons for such purpose."
1909
The penalty for procuring women increased from a maximum of
two years to a maximum of five years.
1913
The procuring provisions were extended to include everyone who
"on the arrival of any woman or girl in Canada, directs
her to any common bawdy house"; or who "for the purposes
of gain, exercises control, direction or influence over the
movements of any woman or girl in such a manner as to show that
he is aiding, abetting or compelling her prostitution with any
person or generally."
1913
Men who lived off the avails of prostitution of another person
were subjected to a reverse onus clause which stated: "where
a male person is proved to live with or to be habitually in
the company of a prostitute (...) and has no visible means of
support or to live in a house of prostitution, he shall, unless
he can satisfy the court to the contrary, be deemed to be living
on the earnings of prostitution."
1913
It was made clear that habitual frequenting was no longer a
prerequisite to conviction: "everyone found in any disorderly
house" was now to be subject to conviction.
1913
The procuring penalty was increased to include whipping on second
and subsequent convictions.
1915
The penalty for being an inmate of a common bawdy house was
increased from a maximum six months to a year; keepers and inmates
of bawdy houses who had been convicted three or more times were
required to serve a minimum term of three months, with a maximum
of two years.
1918
The Criminal Code was amended to create a new federal offence
of "corrupting children through such behaviour as indulging
in 'sexual immorality' in the home."
1920 The procuring penalty was increased to a maximum of
ten years.
1939 The Supreme Court of Canada (The King v. Betty Cohen)
found that the habitual use by one woman of her own premises
for prostitution was sufficient for a conviction to be made
for the offence of keeping a common bawdy house.
1947 Maximum sentence for keepers and inmates of bawdy houses
was increased to three years.
Another new offence was added: "Everyone who knowingly
takes or transports( ... ) any other person to any common bawdy
house is guilty of an offence and liable on summary conviction."
1968
The Supreme Court of Canada (Patterson v. The Queen) indicated
that isolated instances of prostitution were not sufficient
to brand a place a common bawdy house - there must be some evidence
of habitual use.
1972
Section 175(1)(c), commonly referred to as "Vag. C"
and in place since 1867, was repealed and replaced by a soliciting
offence (195.1). "Every person who solicits any person
in a public place for the, purpose of prostitution is guilty
of an offence punishable on summary conviction."
NOTE:
The following Provincial Appeal Court and Supreme Court of Canada
decisions reflect the four problems inherent in this law: What
constitutes soliciting? Does the customer solicit? Can a male
be a prostitute? What is a public place?
1972
An Ontario County Court (R. v. Patterson) held that males could
not be prostitutes.
1973 The B.C. Supreme Court (R. v. Obey) held that males
could be prostitutes.
1978 The Supreme Court of Canada (R. v. Hutt) held that
"soliciting" means conduct which is "pressing
or persistent."
Judgement also indicated that a car was not a public place but
this is not binding because it was not one of the grounds of
the appeal.
1978
The B.C. Court of Appeal (R. v. Dudak) held that the customer
could not be convicted of soliciting. They gave approval to
their earlier Obey decision (1973) which said a prostitute could
be either a female or male person.
1978
The Ontario Court of Appeal (R. v. DiPaola and R. v. Palatics),
held that both customer and prostitute could be convicted of
soliciting (for the purpose of prostitution).
1978 Regarding the use of a premise for prostitution,
the Ontario court of appeal (R. v. Ikeda and Widjaja), held
that twice in the same room on one night was not sufficient
to brand a place as a common bawdy house.
1980-1982
Montreal, Calgary, Vancouver, Niagara Falls and Halifax enacted
bylaws dealing with street prostitution. The content of the
by-laws was quite similar. The first, enacted in the City of
Montreal in 1980, forbade remaining in public places (defined
as including any place to which the public has access, by right
or explicit or implicit invitation) for the purposes of prostitution,
or approaching others for the same purpose in such a place.
The Calgary by-law enacted in 1981 forbade being, remaining
or approaching another on a street for the purpose of prostitution.
Punishment was by way of substantial fines, which increased
in quantum for subsequent offences. The Calgary enactment became
the model for subsequent by-laws. Vancouver, Niagara Falls and
Halifax enacted their by-laws in the spring of 1982.
1981
The Montreal by-law was declared ultra vires by the Superior
Court of Quebec.
1981 The Supreme Court of Canada ruled in R. v. Whitter,
R. v. Galjot that "pressing or persistent" meant repeatedly
soliciting the same person.
1982 The B.C. County Court of Cariboo (R. v. Wise) found
a motor vehicle to be a public place.
1982 The Alberta Court of Appeal (R. v. Cline) held that
a person who is already a prostitute could not be procured.
1982
The Ontario Court of Appeal (R. v. Pierce and Gollaher) held
that a parking space, habitually resorted to by a prostitute
in various motor vehicles belonging to her customers, was a
"place" for the purposes of the definition of a bawdy
house.
1983 Bill C-127, proclaimed January 4, 1983, made several
changes to the Criminal Code:
-
"prostitute"
now means "a person of either sex engaging in prostitution";
-
any person (rather than "any female person") who
is not a common prostitute or a person of known immoral character
is protected under the procuring section;
-
any person (rather than any male person) living on the avails
of prostitution is liable;
-
a person can be convicted of procuring upon the evidence of
only one witness.
1983 The Supreme Court of Canada (Westendorp v. The Queen)
found the Calgary by-law to be invalid and ultra vires the power
of the City of Calgary.
1983 The Justice Minister tabled in the House of Commons
proposals to amend the soliciting section of the Criminal Code
which would ensure that the offence applies to anyone who solicits,
whether it be the prospective customer or prostitute, and which
would include within the definition of a "public place"
a motor vehicle in or on a public place. He also announced the
creation of a special committee to make further recommendations
on both prostitution and pornography. The Committee is to report
its findings no later than December 31, 1984.
Reprinted
from Pornography & Prostitution (Canadian Advisory Council
on the Status of Women)
Top
On Sally
De Quadros, Margo St.James, Kathleen Barry and Marie Arrignton
Sally had
supported herself and two children for most of her life as a
prostitute. When she joined our collective she was urgent to
educate us and to find ways together to aid prostitutes, particularly
to prevent violence to prostitutes.
Through
correspondence, Sally set up a meeting with Margo St. James,
who was visiting her family in Bellingham. Lee, Sally and Eileen
drove across the border to meet Margo and the women who were
filming "Hookers in Davie". Margo encouraged Sally
to stay close to feminists and get on with the organising. Margo
was fresh, energetic and brave, but Sally and Marie gradually
rejected her tactic of 'glamourising' prostitution.
The collective
suggested Joni replace Lee in the small work group. That group,
now Marie, Joni and Sally, organised educational days for the
collective (to reveal to each other what we knew and didn't
know about prostitution). The group also began to do "street
strolls" to meet the Vancouver women prostitutes.
Joni found
the strolls frightening, but continued to be helpful to Sally
and Marie through the production of their first report to the
Fraser Commission (a government investigation into prostitution
and pornography).
Marie first
met Kathleen Barry at a NCASA Conference (U.S. rape crisis centres)
She had been sent by the Canadian Association of Sexual Assault
Centres of which we are a member group. Marie introduced the
rest of us to Kathleen's book, "Female Sexual Slavery",
which was enormously helpful in opening the dialogue about prostitution
among feminists.
Sally and
Marie are now very critical of Kathleen's race/class analysis,
and her reliance on police and courts, nationally and internationally.
Marie and
Sally broke away from our collective to devote full time to
organ= ising an Alliance for the Safety of Prostitutes. By 1984,
ASP looked to the U.S. "Pros" and the English Collective
of Prostitutes for more radical, in fact revolutionary, leadership.
we've followed too, a little more slowly.
Bill
C49 Mocks the Constitution by
Marie Arrington
Bill
C-49, passed by the Conservative government, has set women's
rights back to the days when the vagrancy law enabled police
to accost women in the street and demand that they give a good
accounting of themselves. I grew up knowing that I always had
to carry a dollar in my pocket and keep moving constantly at
a bus stop. I had to make sure that I did not look "suspicious,"
whatever that meant.
What
the Bill says
Bill
C-49 is replacing section 195.1 of the Criminal Code. It goes
many steps backwards. It states that "every person who,
in a public place or open to public view, stops or attempts
to stop any motor vehicle, blocks any pedestrian traffic going
into or out of any building, stops or attempts to stop any person
or in any manner communicates or attempts to communicate with
any person for the purpose of engaging in prostitution or of
obtaining the sexual services of a prostitute, is guilty of
an offence punishable on a summary conviction."
"Public
places" includes any place to which the public have a right
of access by invitation-which means clubs, hotels, lobbies of
apartment buildings, motor vehicles, etc. This law gives unprecedented
powers to the police. The police decide who is working, who
is attempting to sell or buy sex, who is attempting to communicate.
The police can now conclude that by a woman's mannerisms, dress
or behavior, she is trying to engage in prostitution. To incriminate
herself, that woman does not have to say a word. The police
now have the power to make the decision. A woman who has never
had income from prostitution, if she should be charged, will
have to prove that she is not a prostitute.
Working
conditions for prostitutes
There is no place prostitutes can work without the threat of
being charged under this law. If you work out of your own home
you may be charged under the bawdy house provision in the Criminal
Code. A prostitute is not presumed innocent; if charged, she
will now have to prove that she was not soliciting. It is her
word against that of the police officer,- and street people
are all very aware that the courts take the word of an officer
before that of a whore.
Customers
not charged
We in the Association for the Safety of Prostitutes, in our
fight against the Criminal Code amendments, predicted that prostitutes
would be charged and tricks would not. The politicians and the
vigilantes all argued that the tricks would be just as vulnerable.
We argued that even if charges were laid against both, the penalties
would be unequal.
By now all our fears-possibly excepting an increased homicide
rate-have become a reality. Prostitutes are being arrested in
record numbers and tricks are not. As of February 19, 1986,
in Vancouver 117 women has been arrested and 57 men; in Toronto
180 women and 53 men; in Calgary 22 women and 0 men.
We do not even know if the men were all tricks or if male prostitutes
are in the male total. In their charge the police do not state
which are prostitues and which are customers, so we suspect
that many of the males arrested are hustlers. In any event,
the difference in arrests is staggering.
Unnecessary
booking
The manner in which prostitutes are arrested compared with the
treatment of the tricks also deserves to be looked at. Without
exception, every prostitute arrested in Vancouver has been taken
down to the police station, even though this is a summary conviction,
which means that the person charged needs only to promise to
appear; booking is not necessary. Only one trick had to post
bond and had his name published. He was from out of province.
All the charged prostitutes' names are available; many women
were handcuffed when taken in. Some have claimed that they were
"slapped around"; a few were arrested by as many as
five officers. Many women were approached by undercover police
and solicited by them, but the women were charged. Some women
say that they were not even working but were charged anyway.
The police had been taking pictures of street prostitutes for
the past few years. We always claimed that it was for this purpose,
but they denied it.
Sentencing unfair
When convicted, tricks in Vancouver have been given suspended
sentences; in Niagara Falls and Halifax, $100 fines; in Winnipeg,
conditional discharges. Prostitutes have been sentenced to thirty
days cell time in Niagara Falls, to fines in Halifax and to
cell time in Vancouver.
Feminists, fearing that the police and the courts would repeat
past inequalities in applying the law, have called for a review
of C-49 after three years. We of ASP across Canada demand that
this review be made within the next six months and that the
law be repealed. As the evidence shows, this law is not applied
equally to prostitutes and tricks, and we don't believe it ever
will be. For one thing, the police are using entrapment. There
are many more male police officers to be used undercover than
female officers, so which sex gets trapped?
Women the scapegoats
In the spring, new changes will be
made to the laws concerning pornography and prostitution. Women
fighting pornography have been asking both the federal and provincial
governments to pass certain laws. This is like asking the fox
to watch over the chicken coop. We know that the laws will be
applied to the women working within the sex trade and not the
men producing it or profiting from it. Women will be punished
and made into outlaws. Already Mr. Crosbie has stated that juveniles
will be charged, and indeed juveniles have been charged under
C-49, but the added laws will punish them even more.
Stop this insanity of punishing the poor and the vulnerable!
It makes a mockery of the constitution of this country.
Hookers'
Defense Fund
Bill C-49 is being challenged in court on constitutional grounds.
Your support and contributions are needed for the fight. We
have started a Hookers' Defense Fund, and contributions are
needed for appeals and copies of transcripts, etc. We are also
trying to raise money to help women who may be incarcerated
and need to send their children to the care of family members.
We have found that if prostitutes' children are apprehended
by the Ministry of Human Resources, they never get to go back
to their mothers, and we don't want that. Your donation is needed
and appreciated. Address: Hookers' Defense Fund, c/o ASP, Main
Post Office Box 2288, Vancouver, B.C. V6B 3W5.
Priorities-March
1985
Top
Prostitution
Update
(TORONTO)
Women all across Canada have been staging demonstrations to
protest Bill C-49, the new law which gives police increased
powers to arrest prostitutes.
On January
17th, women held "wave-ins," to show support for prostitutes.
The wave-ins were organised by the Alliance for the Safey of
Prostitutes (ASP).
In Toronto,
about 75 women gathered at the comer of Church and Carlton Streets,
waving, yelling, and 'distributing pamphlets and petitions against
the Bill. The Bill is considered by opponents to be a definite
attack on prostitutes, because it ignores the more important
issues related to prostitution, such as violence at home and
on the street, and the lack of choices and money many women
have.
In selling
the Bill, the government stressed its effectiveness in arresting
johns as well, but in Toronto, the number of arrests show clearly
that it is prostitutes who are getting arrested most often.
There are also reports of police entrapment in arresting both
hookers and johns.
A big danger
with Bill C-49 is the amount of power given to police. A woman
who waves, nods or winks "in a public or visible place"
can now be arrested if she is assumed to be selling sex. In
a court, it would be the woman's word against the word of a
police officer, leaving little chance for women to fight the
charge.
It has
yet to be seen how the law will be defended in court, but there.
isn't much cause for optimism. The law is very loosely worded,
and too much of a conviction is based on police testimony.
Unfortunately,
a pattern for Bill C-49 may have started with the first two
women in Toronto who pleaded guilty. Both were given relatively
low fines (the fines can go as high as $2000), but, as an indication
of whom this law is going to hurt, one of the prostitutes was
14 years old, and the other was a welfare mother.
- Susan
Wilkes
(VANCOUVER)
For prostitutes in Vancouver, Expo preparation has been an excuse
for increased harassment.
According
to Alliance for the Safety of Prostitutes spokesperson Marie
Arrington, "The whole fight that lead to Bill C-49 started
in Vancouver. It was a call for a. clean-up for Expo,"
she said.
Now that
the legislation is in force, ASP has noted increased police
violence towards hookers. These women are also having to deal
with increasingly less safe conditions as they attempt to evade
police.
Arrington
said the women no longer have time to decide if a potential
customer is a cop, or maybe violent. The women are also no longer
able to work in groups, which gives them some safety, but are
working alone trying to avoid the police. "I'm doing a
lot of crisis calls in the middle of the night," said Arrington.
As well,
young females have started disappearing off of the streets as
pimps take them back east where there is a much higher degree
of organised crime.
Women not
working as prostitutes and women of colour are also being hassled.
Women who are working as prostitutes are not the only ones being
hassled. And it is worse if you are not white. Arrington says
recently a black woman out on a date with a white man was stopped
and accused by the police of hooking. And Arrington's daughter,
who was not working, was hauled into a station, accused of soliciting,
and threatened with deportation. She is black and was bom in
Alberta. The reprinted from Herizons increased harassment and
violence will probably result in some deaths. "We're predicting
women are going to be dying," said Arrington. "We
don't see anything good coming out of Expo or this new law at
all."
One woman,
Michele Lee McLean, is challenging her charge of soliciting
under the Charter of Rights. Her lawyer, Tony Serka, is arguing
that the law is vague, uncertain, that it limits freedom, is
inconsistently worded in the two official languages and attempts
to control traffic which is a provincial jurisdiction.
- Marrianne
van Loon
(WINNIPEG)
To date, 51 persons have been charged under Bill C-49, more
of them are johns than prostitutes to show that in Winnipeg
the police are equal opportunity enforcers, Public sentiment,
gauged in a Brandon university study, is that this legislation
is unnecessarily harsh.
- Brigitte
Sutherland
A couple of days after the passing of Bill C-49, the federal
anti-street prostitution bill, a young woman called our crisis
line. She said that her former pimp was at the door, harassing
her, and she was frightened. Over the years, we have received
many calls from prostitutes who were trying to escape either
the controlling violence of a pimp, or had been beat up by a
customer and didn't know where to go. As a result of this legislation,
we expect an increase of calls.
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