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'ADULT SERVICES': Craigslist helps sell sex online

Prostitutes lure customers using Internet site

The advertising Web site craigslist has been a boon to prostitution locally and nationally, allowing the world's oldest profession to flourish virtually unchecked, a new university study contends.

"It's this whole world of online brothels, but nobody is monitoring it anymore," said Alexis Kennedy, a professor of criminal justice at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.


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Craigslist allows people to post classified ads for everything from cars for sale to help wanted to "adult services." And just as the site has revolutionized the way people sell their trinkets and bookends, it has changed the way men and women sell sex, according to Kennedy.

The site has been under fire by law enforcement officials across the nation almost since its inception because of the ease by which it connects prostitutes to johns. The site's founders have bowed to some of the pressure. Last year craigslist removed its "erotic services" section, where prostitutes could post ads for free, and replaced it with "adult services," where posting an ad costs $10.

But Kennedy's study provides a glimpse of just how rampant -- and brazen -- prostitution is on the site.

She enlisted eight graduate students to target the Las Vegas "erotic services" section and randomly pulled ads over two months in 2007. They sampled and analyzed 12,444 ads, roughly 12 percent of the total "erotic services" ads posted in Las Vegas over the time.

The results revealed that prostitutes operate on the Web with little fear of law enforcement. For example:

• Nearly all of the ads included photos of what appeared to be escorts or escort agencies.

• More than 80 percent of the ads included phone numbers, most with a 702 area code.

• More than a third of the ads specified prices for services.

Craigslist isn't alone in what has become the newest way to facilitate paying for sex. Many more sites exist, and some, like craigslist, also cater to individual cities. One such site that focuses on Las Vegas allows people to post graphic reviews of escorts, including how much the reviewer paid for the "session," whether it was in-call or out-call and whether the escort tried to sell additional services to the reviewer.

Some of the reviews are for local massage parlors, and the reviewers state the name of the "masseuse" and the name and address of the business.

"It's scary because we think of craigslist as being so innocuous, but it's really the tip of the iceberg," Kennedy said.

The media relations arm of craigslist did not respond to multiple requests seeking comment for this story.

Local law enforcement officials acknowledged that resources to combat prostitution on the Web are limited.

"Policing those venues has become very difficult," said Lt. Karen Hughes, who oversees the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department's vice section.

Unlike streetwalkers, who solicit in person and in public, escorts on the Web can talk to johns and arrange meetings in private, out of view of law enforcement.

Detectives are limited to setting up sting operations, which Hughes said her unit does frequently. But she said her unit cannot keep up with the sheer number of advertisements.

"There are just very, very few resources that are dedicated to those types of operations," she said.

Kennedy described the issue as "overwhelming," saying, "It's an insurmountable problem."

Most resources available to combat sex crimes on the Web are devoted to child prostitution. Henderson police have one detective who patrols local sites looking for advertisements from children or teens or from those seeking them. At least seven adults have been arrested since the effort began this year.

Hughes said her detectives are always scanning the sites for underage children and act immediately when they see a child on the Web.

Beyond child prostitution, escorts engender a host of other crimes, such as trick rolls, robberies, assaults and murder.

In Las Vegas, a local couple accused of slaying 17-year-old Nichole Yegge were also accused of prostituting her on craigslist last year.

In April, Boston police charged Philip Markoff, nicknamed the "craigslist killer," with slaying one woman and attacking another. Markoff is accused of luring the women to his hotel rooms through craigslist.

Kennedy hopes her study, which she expects to publish in the Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture, will help pressure craigslist to drop its "adult services" section. Only public pressure will work, she said. Legal avenues have proved fruitless.

In March, an Illinois sheriff, declaring craigslist "the single largest source of prostitution in the nation," sued the site to ban its "adult services" section. A federal judge threw out the suit.

Other efforts have been met with similar results because federal law protects Web sites and content posted by its users.

"There's not a whole lot that can be done. It's just another form of advertising," said Joseph Dickey, a special agent with the FBI in Las Vegas. "It's an issue and will continue to be an issue as long as the Internet is around."

Contact reporter Lawrence Mower at lmower@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0440.

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jm wrote on May 08, 2010 04:03 PM: i believe the only reason its a problem is because the gov. is so stingy they want a cut of everything and since they get no money from prostitution its a problem....go find some sex offenders,robbers,murderers ect. (get a life) i think its these girls personal business so just move on you will not be able to stop it so get over it


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Frances Keogh wrote on December 28, 2009 08:19 AM: Note that the professor of criminal justice is at the University of "Nevada", Las Vegas.
Prostitution is allowed everywhere in
Nevada but Clark County (Las Vegas).
Perhaps Nevada doesn't like their
business going elsewhere...hence the
condemnation of CL.
With or without CL, people will find services like these one way or another.


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Michael wrote on December 27, 2009 02:43 AM: The difference between a prostitute and a wife is that one gets $50 when she leaves and the other gets 50%, (nowadays more!) when she leaves.


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Marky Mark wrote on December 26, 2009 09:30 AM: WOW!!! I feel so much safer now that the police are busting ladies on Craigslist that are trying to make a few bucks with the assets they were given. It's all the fat ugly women that are against prostitution.
Don't the police have more important things to do such as catch carjackers and home invaders? What two consenting adults do in private is none of anyone else's business.


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KB wrote on December 22, 2009 09:08 PM: This story is so full of inaccuracies. Please at least cited this so that others may research this information. You must have text to back up your info.


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Gayle wrote on December 21, 2009 01:22 AM: Big deal. The printing press is used to print escort ads. Truckers use CB radios to contact "lot lizards" at truck stops. The telephone created the "call girl". You name the communications technology and somewhere somebody is using it to sell sex. Of course sex workers are using the internet -- and when some new technologies come along they too will be used to sell sex (and, yes, there's already an app for that). Targeting the open advertising just drives things underground where it's easier to exploit women and trick roll the customers. Decriminalize prostitution in Clark County.


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Paul Williams wrote on December 20, 2009 11:51 PM: Do "THEY" know the amount of money that would be made from letting people walk in and have fun at a brothel. Stripping is ok, waiving flesh in front of a man and getting him interested to spend more is ok. As long as your 18+ years old.

Its the same thing for anyone and anything in this world. You want my services you need to pay me. So why is paying for sex any different. Some people do not want to have a relationship, paying 300 dollars is just simply easier then going threw that pains of relationships. I will say this. And I do Truely Belive this In My Heart.

"These "working gals" Are Much Cleaner then most of our population." There are some people in this world that have never been Tested once, and these girls get tested Monthly, and yet they are the dirty ones?

Forgive me if i am wrong. Is this not a Capitalist Country. And yet they are saying no to making money from sex and drugs? I think if they made sex and drugs legal, business would crash. No one would be buying Ipods and Computers for porn, they would be spending that money on something they get in person.

If someone wants to do something, they should be aloud to do it. Thats what we teach our kids right? DO not let anyone stop your dreams and desires?


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Justasking wrote on December 20, 2009 06:53 PM: The way I see it if a women has a Constitutional right to use her body to kill her unborn child then she has a right to sell her body for sex.

It is her body not the government's.


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Joe wrote on December 20, 2009 06:20 PM: A lot of the ads on erotic services claim to be for independent women but are really posts by escort services.


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paul wrote on December 20, 2009 04:53 PM: Anything that brings in more tourism and money to our state is fine with me....I dont see it was a big deal at all...who cares really. I support the police in going after pediphiles as they should be. As for adults, enough government in our business...good for craigslist, backpage, eros-guide, lovings, sugardaddie, adultfriendfinder, alt, and any other site that allows adults to meet each other with similar interests.

Sex for money is not a crime...otherwise, how do woman like Mrs. Woods extract 300 Million for 5 years of marriage?? Money and sex are tide together in our society, no matter whether its a 1 x thing or a daily thing....

We live in a country that is suppose to have freedom of religion...yet we try to regulate, and make illegal, the most basic of human urges and instincts...sexual reproduction...the thing we must have to ensure the survival of the human race...either thru religious practices or government regulation...what a great way to control people...

If people want to have sex with one another, whether they pay for it in dinners and drinks, or in online services, or in divorce court, who cares....consenting adults should be able to enjoy their bodies how they see fit, without the government chasing them down...

No wonder we are facing bankruptcy in several states and cities...we cannot afford this type of police work...and its a waste of good talent....


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