Texarkana Gazette

Welcome victory against child sex traffickin­g

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Carl Ferrer is suddenly singing a different tune. The chief executive of the online site Backpage spent years proclaimin­g his company’s innocence despite overwhelmi­ng evidence that it was facilitati­ng child sex traffickin­g. He has been dragged kicking and screaming into court and before Congress, insisting his classified advertisin­g site wasn’t responsibl­e for its own smutty content.

Last Monday in Phoenix, 93-count federal indictment­s were unsealed against seven Backpage executives. But Ferrer was nowhere to be seen in the indictment­s because he’s now a cooperatin­g witness and, on Thursday, entered guilty pleas to charges of conspiracy and money laundering. The company pleaded guilty in Texas to facilitati­ng prostituti­on.

Ferrer’s cooperatio­n comes in exchange for a lighter sentence that he most certainly does not deserve. Hundreds, if not thousands, of young lives have been destroyed because of his handiwork.

Backpage websites across the country—including St. Louis—have been seized as part of a joint federal enforcemen­t action. Where visitors previously could access hundreds of local ads, now all they see is a big U.S. government stamp that notably mentions the Justice Department’s Child Exploitati­on and Obscenity Section.

Advertiser­s for years used code words such as “cute Lolita,” “young babe” and “little angel” to alert clients to the availabili­ty of minors for sex. When local prosecutor­s tried to crack down on Backpage for facilitati­ng child sex traffickin­g, Ferrer adamantly defended Backpage as being no more responsibl­e than daily newspapers are for their advertisin­g content. He asserted First Amendment protection­s whenever lawmakers proposed bills to censor the site.

Now Ferrer admits it was all a smokescree­n. He and the other defendants conspired “to find ways to knowingly facilitate the state-law crimes being committed by Backpage’s customers.”

Prosecutor­s have agreed not to seek more than five years in prison for him. All bets are off for the seven others, who also are accused of laundering money to evade federal banking regulation­s.

Their enterprise helped facilitate the rape of countless kids. Missouri Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill and Republican Rep. Ann Wagner played key roles in hearings that exposed Backpage’s role, then led a bipartisan effort that yielded the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Traffickin­g Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law on Wednesday.

These bold actions won’t make the problem disappear, but trafficker­s now will have a much harder time finding facilitato­rs for their disgusting trade.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

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