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Sex sold online by teenagers horrifies Halifax mother

ChaosTheory

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https://ca.news.yahoo.com/sex-sold-online-teenagers-horrifies-halifax-mother-085229360.html
Sex sold online by teenagers horrifies Halifax mother


A Halifax mother is on a quest to stop underage prostitution online after discovering her daughter was appearing on classified sites with near-nude images of herself, advertising the sale of her body for money.

"I felt like I died. I felt like part of me died," said Karen. Her name has been changed to protect her identity and the identities of her family members.

A CBC News investigation reveals the problem of underage prostitution is growing and police are seeing more girls — some as young as 13 — being exploited.

Karen found out nearly a year ago that her teenage daughter was selling sex online. She was told to look up Halifax-area online classified ads under therapeutic services and massages and escorts. She was horrified at what she saw.

"When I saw my daughter's ad, I had a complete meltdown," she told CBC News.

She said lewd images of her daughter were posted online accompanied by a description and a phone number. Karen said her girl has been paid for sex by johns from all walks of life, even though she was not even old enough to drive.

Karen said she learned that there are many girls — at least 40 — in the area selling their bodies for sex.
"You can tell they're underage. They're not fully developed. Some of them don't even have hips yet — that's how young they are. And the descriptions, the way they describe themselves. The wording they use — if it's a girl that is underage, they always use the word 'young,'" she said.

"I'm shocked at the amount of underage girls in this city that are involved in this and they come from every lifestyle, not just girls off the street. They come from good homes. Some of these girls are really good, good girls and that seems to be the type that are preyed upon."

Karen said her daughter has witnessed violence and has explained the rampant use of drugs in "the game," as she calls it.

Karen took months off from work to dedicate time to getting her daughter out of the city's seedy underworld. Her daughter says she's out of it, but that isn't enough for Karen. She is pushing to end underage prostitution.

"I've made up secret identities and have contacted a lot of these ads and set up appointments, have gone and recorded the addresses and phone numbers and taken copies of the ads," she said.
"If I find out there's an underage girl there I will call the police. And I have called the police."

Fiona Traynor is chair of the board at Stepping Stone, an outreach organization for sex workers based in Halifax. She said some young girls may be hesitant to come forward because service providers — and all citizens — have a duty to report any prostitution of a minor.

Traynor said that puts a barrier between offering services and being in conflict with the law.
"I'm not suggesting that Stepping Stone as an organization or anybody else in the community shouldn't be reporting underage sex workers, I'm not suggesting that at all," she said.

"I would point out that it does mean that if someone is an underage sex worker, are they most likely to come to a support organization like Stepping Stone or even the police, asking for help and support to get out of it or whatever it is that they want? Because they would then be at risk of potentially being put into foster care, implicating their parents."

Karen, who has been communicating with police for months, is calling for better resources to tackle the issue.

"They're really understaffed and overworked. I don't feel that our special vice unit here has enough people to take care of this problem at all," she said.

"It's a huge frustration and I do not feel it's hard to shut down these rings at all. If you go on there and you man the ads and you call them and you set up appointments, they give you the addresses. You go to them. I mean it's so easy to find if there's an underaged girl being prostituted out."

Karen is in no way trained to be doing the work she's doing. She tries to involve police at every stage but said she has been assaulted and had her life threatened multiple times. Despite that, she isn't prepared to stop.

"I'm afraid I'm going to die … because I won't stand down. I won't step back," she said.
"I don't know if they're going to leave my daughter alone. It seems like when they get one of these girls, when they get a hold of them, they want to keep them because they've already worked them into the system."

The coverage of this CBC News investigation continues on CBC Radio One and tonight on CBC News Nova Scotia.
 
Heard the CBC report on radio earlier today; gave me mixed feelings.

On one hand I was annoyed at what first seemed to be another anti-prostitution story reinforcing negative stereotypes.

On the other, I admired this mother for taking action to rescue underage girls.

I confess however that I'm a bit apprehensive of any vigilante action, and I hope this lady's modus operandi does not get copied by other religulous crusaders who begin stalking and harassing legitimate working ladies.
 
A former Toronto cop and former RCMP officer wrote an award winning book about the underage ring from North Preston, NS. The book is called "Somebody's Daughter" If/when you see a dancer or any other type of provider with NPF tattooed on their neck, run for the hills! Just some friendly advice.
 
She isn't very clear about who 'they' are, fwiw. She even admits that the girls tend to be working independently and by choice, basically for the money.

She also isn't very clear about how she is proving the sp is actually underage, other than a reference to they must be because they put 'young' in the ad. I know of an sp now retired who often used to boast about her youth, when her advertised age was 23 (and her real age apparently closer to 30). She says she makes the appointment and gets the address, but she doesn't say she actually knocks on the door to talk to anyone. And yet apparently is being assaulted by the 'they' ? And she is somehow confirming her belief that the sp is underage?

I don't agree with underagers posting ads and seeing clients, if only because many of the clients go to sps with the understanding they are not breaking any laws in seeing an 18 year old. Some percentage are hoping they are under 18, but that doesn't take away from the fact 18 is legal and they'd be posting that they are 18. The reporter doesn't mention interviewing LE and finding out if all this effort is leading to apprehensions, and even the sp resource group is hesitant to say it is effective.

The video on the story shows CL therapuetic, she doesn't mention backpage but even if she did, there aren't even 40 ads total posted on either one of those sites in a day. And yet we are to believe, out of all the sps posting ads online in Halifax FORTY of them are under 18? That would mean ALL of the posted ads on those two sites alone are all underage, and yet you'd find it hard to find more than a handful of ads showing an age under 19

The reporter could have done the same thing I did.....confirm what she is claiming.
 
It's grandstanding and she is labeling all Johns evil and all women doing it against their will, which is far from the truth.
 
She isn't very clear about who 'they' are, fwiw. She even admits that the girls tend to be working independently and by choice, basically for the money. . . .

. . . The reporter could have done the same thing I did.....confirm what she is claiming.

Thanks for putting this in perspective and articulating the issues much better than I was able to.
 
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