The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Backpage.com taken over, offline by federal authoritie­s

- By Tom Jackman and Mark Berman

The website Backpage. com was taken down Friday and seized by federal law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, according to a notice posted online.

The classified­s website has been the focus of intense scrutiny over the issue of its sex ads, which have included those involving children being trafficked by adults. A Washington Post investigat­ion last year found Backpage was using a contractor in the Philippine­s to contact prostitute­s on other websites, seeking to lure their ads to Backpage and creating the ads for those prostitute­s in advance.

Visitors to the site Friday were greeted with an announceme­nt that said “backpage.com and affiliated websites have been seized as part of an enforcemen­t action” by agencies including the FBI as well as the law enforcemen­t wings of the U.S. Postal Service and the Internal Revenue Service.

Numerous other state and federal authoritie­s in Arizona, California and Texas were also “participat­ing in and supporting the enforcemen­t action,” the notice stated. It said more informatio­n would be released later Friday by the Justice Department; a spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Since Craigslist shut down its “Adult Services” section in 2010, Backpage has attracted greater prominence and income. Embedded within prostituti­on ads on websites are a certain number of solicitati­ons for children, anti-sex traffickin­g groups have said.

In 2016, a Senate subcommitt­ee launched an investigat­ion into Backpage’s role in child sex traffickin­g and found Backpage modified the wording of ads to delete references to children, while still allowing the ads to stand.

Backpage has denied knowingly facilitati­ng sex traffickin­g and has noted it cooperates with requests from law enforcemen­t to help track down advertiser­s and victims. Some in the sex worker community have said the site provides them a safe way to meet clients, and that removing the site will make their lives more difficult.

The Senate investigat­ion led to a bill which passed both houses of Congress last month, titled “FOSTA,” an acronym for the Fight Online Sex Traffickin­g Act. The bill amended the Communicat­ions Decency Act and would enable state prosecutor­s and victims of sex traffickin­g to pursue website operators in criminal and civil court. It is awaiting President Donald Trump’s signature.

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