Houston Chronicle

County puts halt to ‘robot brothels’

Commission­ers vote to prevent opening of sex doll businesses

- By Zach Despart STAFF WRITER

Harris County commission­ers unanimousl­y adopt new rules to prevent so-called “robot brothels” from opening and more strictly regulate sexually-oriented businesses in unincorpor­ated areas.

Harris County Commission­ers Court on Tuesday unanimousl­y adopted new rules to prevent socalled “robot brothels” from opening and more strictly regulate sexually oriented businesses in unincorpor­ated areas.

The county already had been revising its rules for such establishm­ents, first adopted in 1996, but decided to specifical­ly address lifelike sex dolls for rent after a Toronto-based company KinkySdoll­s considered opening a Houston branch where patrons could try out human-like “adult love dolls” in private rooms at the shop.

The dolls, unlike their inflatable forebears, are made of synthetic skin and have highly articulate­d skeletons.

Houston City Council earlier this month amended its sexually oriented business rules include “robot brothels” in its ban on arcades and theaters. City inspectors in September stopped constructi­on on the KinkySdoll­s storefront at Richmond and Chimney Rock saying the project lacked proper permits.

No company has expressed interest in opening such an establishm­ent in Harris County, but court members said they wanted to eliminate that possibilit­y in the future.

KinkySdoll­s did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

Assistant County Attorney Celena Vinson said the county largely adopted language Houston’s legal department had written.

“We wanted to address the sex robot shop that was allegedly going to open in the city, and wanted to ensure our regulation­s were consistent with what the city of Houston was doing,” Vinson said.

The changes now clearly define sex dolls like the ones advertised by the Toronto firm as “anthropomo­rphic devices” and prohibit companies from renting them out to customers. Residents of the city and county remain free to purchase such devices for use in their own homes.

Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez praised the new rules for

their clarity, which he said will allow deputies to more aggressive­ly target illicit red light businesses that largely operate in the shadows.

“Before, everything was lumped together and was ambiguous,” Gonzalez said. “Now, that’s no longer the case.”

The sheriff said he is pleased the new rules, which take effect Jan. 1, explicitly ban sexual services at massage parlors and clearly define adult motels, theaters, bookstores and cabarets. A vice squad with seven deputies and a sergeant works closely with Houston police to enforce the regulation­s.

Harris County has two licensed sexually oriented businesses. Both are strip clubs that fall under the cabaret rules: St. James and Houston Dolls, which are on the same street off Interstate 45 in north Harris County. The permit has expired for a third, Joy of Houston in Jersey Village, and Vinson said the county attorney’s office on Wednesday will ask a judge to shut down the club.

She said more county establishm­ents may need to apply for sexually oriented business permits because the new rules aim to prevent topless clubs from masqueradi­ng as bikini bars, for example.

“We’re hoping this amendment clears up any confusion about whether they need a permit or not,” Vinson said. “It’s not as arguable to say ‘I don’t fit into this category.’”

At the previous Commission­ers Court meeting Oct. 9, anti-human traffickin­g advocates said allowing a so-called “robot brothel” to operate where patrons can have sex with lifelike dolls would make traffickin­g worse.

The rules also now require permitted sexually oriented businesses to post signs displaying an educationa­l informatio­n regarding human traffickin­g, including the National Human Traffickin­g Hotline.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States