Made with Love

Buying sex was 'a rush', married man opens up as a john

ChaosTheory

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https://ca.news.yahoo.com/buying-sex-rush-married-man-opens-john-122855256.html


A Regina man says he found it easy to buy sex from street prostitutes at least once a month for two decades.


The man, who CBC News is referring to as Dave, was arrested three times under Canada's laws relating to
solicitation. But he has never paid a fine nor been sent to jail and he doesn't have a criminal record.


Considering that Canada's prostitution laws are poised to be rewritten, Dave says tougher penalties may have scared him away from the practice, but believes programs to rehabilitate chronic johns would be the most helpful.


"Make sure they're getting the right help," Dave told CBC's Bonnie Allen in an exclusive interview where he spoke openly about his experiences purchasing sex, on a regular basis, over the course of several years and one marriage.


Dave started when he was 16 and a virgin. He says he continued to seek out prostitutes, not for the sex but for the thrill of the illicit encounter.


"It was more or less the rush, the adrenaline rush," he said, admitting he was attracted to the idea of doing something forbidden and dangerous.


Dave says he found all elements of an encounter exciting, even the "cruising" around looking for sex.
"Driving around the area until one of the ladies appeared, trying to avoid the police, thinking that you are better than them and you are smarter than them," he said.


Dave says he liked picking up street prostitutes because it was more exciting — and cheaper — than going to brothels, massage parlours or using an escort service. He said he could buy sex for as little as $40.


After a few months, he said, he was hooked.


" probably averaged out to once a month ... sometimes more," Dave said. "Depends on what was in my head."


Dave said sometimes he was motivated by the urge to escape inner demons.


While each episode would satisfy his urge for excitement, it was quickly followed by a low period.


"You're running on that high [and] after that ... you're ashamed," he said. "You don't want to look at yourself in the mirror. You see somebody that you can't believe what you've just done. You keep saying, 'I'll never do it again', but you know that's not [going to happen]."


It wasn't long before Dave was arrested. He was about 18 years old.


"I went to court that day a young kid scared out of his wits," he said. "I was nicely dressed up. I stood up in front of the judge [and] said ... I'd never do it again."


He said the judge went easy on him and he got off with no record.


"A slap on the wrist really," he says now. "[I was let go] not having to do anything. In hindsight, it was probably the worst thing that happened."


Dave says with no penalty, no deterrent and no counselling, there was nothing to stop him from returning to his habit.


He continued buying sex for another six years until he was arrested a second time. In that case, he was snagged as part of an undercover police operation.


This time, Dave was sent to John School, a diversion program where first-time offenders can avoid a criminal record if they successfully complete the course.


It's a one day program where johns hear from police, health workers, former prostitutes — even former johns — in an effort to educate them and perhaps scare them into making better choices.


But Dave says he simply checked his watch and said what he thought he was expected to say. After graduating, he once again resumed the prowl.


His habit continued even after he was married. He said he would tell his wife he was going out for "beers with the boys" after a softball game.


Dave says he was aware of safe sex practices and would usually use a condom, but admits he had unprotected sex with prostitutes.


His third arrest, this one as married man, led to a major crisis.


"Panic," Dave said. "What do you do? What's the next step? How do I get out of this one? [I was] still trying to come up with lies to cover up."


Dave was allowed to return to John School for a second try at the course. He was given the opportunity, which usually isn't open to repeat offenders, because his wife went with him to see the John School facilitator and counsellor.


In his second go at the school, Dave said the experience was more intense.


"They were really rough on me," he said. "They made a point of making an example of me. And to make sure that I was being truthful and honest."


This time, following the course, there was mandatory follow-up counselling.


"I had to commit to going to counselling," he said. He did and says he has stopped cruising for prostitutes. In time, however, his marriage ended in divorce.


Dave has remarried and says his wife knows all about his past.


He is currently a regular speaker at John School, where he tells his cautionary story.


As for how authorities should deal with the issue, Dave says policing is only the beginning.


He believes johns should be arrested but says more programs, such as John Schools with follow-up counselling are needed for people, like him, who are more than casual users of prostitutes.


"After they leave that John School, there is absolutely nothing," Dave said. "We don't' know what they're doing."
In Regina, where Dave lives, police say they are not targeting prostitutes nor johns because of the current legal confusion surrounding Canada's prostitution laws.


Instead, officers are focusing investigations on human trafficking.


In Saskatoon, by contrast, police say they have arrested eight johns and two prostitutes in 2014.
 
Give me a break....some of us do it because we enjoy it and the ladies enjoy earning the money. Why is all we hear in the media as of late are these pathetic examples of people who are woe is me. It's a joint effort between media and government to bring in draconian laws.
 
I don't understand why from reading some threads on the red board most are giving up and assuming criminalization/Nordic are just around the corner.

The ladies, agencies, indies and johns should all be fighting this and writing in showing the cons they will be losing votes.

Why are we letting a government dictate what goes on in our bedrooms?

I've wrote my MP on several occasions expressing my views on letting people live their lives as they see fit!
 
I don't understand why from reading some threads on the red board most are giving up and assuming criminalization/Nordic are just around the corner.

The ladies, agencies, indies and johns should all be fighting this and writing in showing the cons they will be losing votes.

Why are we letting a government dictate what goes on in our bedrooms?

I've wrote my MP on several occasions expressing my views on letting people live their lives as they see fit!

I'm so glad you mentioned that. This was posted earlier on another forum and gives practical information about how to be effective when you contact your MP. (Member of Parliament, not Massage Parlour, LOL)
 
This is what our GOVERNMENT is forcing onto our ladies if they continue to make the trade illegal and in the process try and eliminate the good clients.

Attack sheds light on plight of Montreal sex workers



It was just before sunrise on Tuesday in eastern Montreal when police received the call.

Someone saw a woman lying motionless in the tall, wet grass across from a rail yard on Préfontaine St. Her face was caked with blood and police said she was barely conscious when paramedics took her to a nearby emergency room.

The victim, 36, remains in critical condition. Because she was found in such a secluded part of the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve district, police haven’t found any witnesses and can’t say if she was beaten or involved in some sort of accident.

But after it was revealed that the woman is a sex worker, at least one expert decried the working conditions imposed on the women in the city’s underground sex trade. Robyn Maynard, an outreach worker for Chez Stella, was in Hochelaga-Maisonneuve Tuesday night talking to sex workers about what happened only hours earlier.

“I could understand why, given the circumstances, people would assume she was attacked,” Maynard told The Gazette. “The sex workers in the neighbourhood are worried. ... Because of how their profession is criminalized, these women have to work in the shadows, out of sight and it exposes them to a much higher degree of risk.”

Maynard wouldn’t reveal any details about the victim or speculate about what happened out of respect for her. However she said the reality of working in an illegal trade is that many of the crimes committed against sex workers go unreported until someone is beaten nearly to death or killed.

Rape and assault may not be commonplace, but they remain an occupational hazard that many workers choose not to share with police.

“Women see a police car and they walk the other way,” Maynard said. “There’s a feeling that the crimes committed against them won’t be taken seriously or that they’ll somehow be blamed for them.”

In recent years, Montreal police have shifted their focus away from arresting sex workers and began doing “client sweeps.” Though the practice of arresting clients — or Johns — has resulted in fewer women being ticketed and jailed, Maynard said it also forces them to operate further into the shadows.

One of the strategies Chez Stella gives women is the practice of working in pairs and “spotting” — a kind of screening process where one person will write down the client’s license plate number, take down a physical description of him and his vehicle. In the event that the encounter goes awry, the John’s information is entered into a database that tracks predatory men.

In the end, the organization chooses to remove morality and judgment from the equation and treat sex workers like human beings with an inherent right to work in a safe environment.

“It’s important to distinguish clients from predators posing as clients,” Maynard said. “Clients engage in something that is consensual. Predators take advantage of the fact that sex work is criminalized, so they can get away with rape or murder. The fact that sex work has to be done in alleyways and dark corners of the city only benefits these people.”

Practices like spotting or working in pairs are becoming increasingly rare, given that they draw more attention from police. In the case of the 36-year-old victim, it seems unlikely she would have been working with a colleague that night because no witnesses have come forward. Detectives have not been able to interview her as she remains in critical condition.

If she was attacked and her condition doesn’t improve soon, police won’t have much evidence with which to arrest her assailant.

Canada’s Supreme Court struck down the nation’s prostitution laws in December, on the grounds that criminalizing sex work only works “at the cost of the health, safety and lives of prostitutes,” according to Chief Justice Beverley McLaughlin. The Conservatives fought to preserve the criminal code’s anti-prostitution laws, but will have to revise Canada’s sex trade laws to address safety concerns outlined by the Supreme Court.

In Vancouver’s downtown east side — where Robert Pickton abducted and killed sex workers for years before he was caught — there’s been a move toward harm reduction instead of criminalization.

“Some shelters will allow women to practise sex work inside their walls so long as the clients show identification and other safety requirements are met,” Maynard said. “In those cases, you see the amount of assaults against women go down drastically.”

Until new laws are enacted in December, sex work on Montreal’s streets — which is estimated to account for only 5 to 10 per cent of the city’s sex trade — will probably continue to occur in the margins.
 
A Regina Hooker

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