San Diego Union-Tribune

NEWSOM URGED TO RESTORE PART OF ANTI-LOITERING LAW

Leaders say without it, sex-traffickin­g crackdowns tougher

- BY LYNDSAY WINKLEY lyndsay.winkley @sduniontri­bune.com

Civil rights groups and county leaders on Thursday urged Gov. Gavin Newsom to restore a provision of state law that prohibited loitering with the intent to engage in prostituti­on.

The call came two days after local and state leaders announced a monthlong investigat­ion into human traffickin­g and sexual exploitati­on in National City and San Diego had resulted in 48 arrests and the identifica­tion of 16 suspected traffickin­g victims.

Of those victims, eight were children between the ages of 13 and 17.

While discussing the operation, several law enforcemen­t leaders said cracking down on human traffickin­g and sexual exploitati­on had been complicate­d by a state bill that passed last year. The Rev. Shane Harris, president and founder of the People’s

Associatio­n of Justice Advocates, National City police Chief Jose Tellez and others echoed those sentiments on Thursday.

Senate Bill 357, signed by the governor in July, voids a misdemeano­r law against loitering in public for the purpose of engaging in prostituti­on.

Anti-loitering laws have been contentiou­s nationwide, in part because they are often vague in their definition of what constitute­s loitering, which gives police wide latitude to arrest or disperse individual­s. Before it was passed,

SB 357 deeply divided Democrats in the Legislatur­e, and the Assembly approved it with only one vote to spare.

Supporters of the bill said police used the misdemeano­r provision to disproport­ionately discrimina­te against sex workers and LGBTQ people, including many who are Black and Brown. They raised concerns the previous law worsened conditions for sex workers and led to unsafe and violent situations, especially for transgende­r women.

Opponents said SB 357 would remove a crucial tool to stop sex traffickin­g, especially of children, and would hamstring victim outreach efforts. They also argued that police used the loitering law to hold johns and pimps accountabl­e for taking advantage of young women and girls.

On Thursday, Harris said supporters of the bill “utilized the racial conversati­on and the civil rights conversati­on to create what is a disaster in policy that has failed to protect the most vulnerable of our society — the children.”

Harris, who spent 13 years in the foster care system, said the risk of sexual exploitati­on is particular­ly high for foster youth. According to the National Center for Juvenile Justice, it has been estimated that 60 percent of child sex traffickin­g victims have histories in the child welfare system.

Harris said he sent a letter to Newsom and other state officials on Wednesday, asking that the change in the law be repealed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States