Chicago Sun-Times

Mom of Chicago victim at White House as Trump signs law to curb sex traffickin­g

- BY SUN- TIMES STAFF Contributi­ng: Sun- Times Staff Reporter Jon Seidel; Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The mom of Desiree Robinson — the Chicago teen who was sold to her death on Backpage. com — was at the White House on Wednesday as President Donald Trump signed a law aimed at curbing sex traffickin­g.

The law passed Congress overwhelmi­ngly. It weakens a legal shield for online services that host abusive content, including sex traffickin­g.

After Trump signed the law, he handed one of the pens he used to Yvonne Ambrose, Robinson’s mother.

The body of Robinson, 16, was found in a Markham garage on Christmas Eve 2016 — her throat slit and her body beaten. Last week in federal court Charles McFee, 26, admitted to a judge he had delivered Desiree to an accused pimp in December 2016. That pimp is accused of shopping Robinson around on Backpage. com, a classified advertisin­g website which, controvers­ially, has included ads for sexual services.

Ambrose has sued Backpage. com and testified before the U. S. Senate last year in favor of the bill. Her attorneys issued a statement from her after the signing ceremony.

“I will live with the heavy pain of losing my sweet daughter every single day for the rest of my life,” Ambrose was quoted as saying.

“But, being at the White House to witness the signing of this monumental bill into law is proof that our fight against online sex- traffickin­g has made a change — a change that will save the life of someone else’s daughter. It is the change that Desiree deserves, and the one that she would have wanted for others. We refuse to be intimidate­d. We will continue to fight to save others from the horrors of online sextraffic­king and hold accountabl­e every person responsibl­e for these terrible and sickening crimes.

The protection­s signed by Trump Wednesday make users of such sites as Facebook liable for the content. The legislatio­n grew out of frustratio­n that classified­ad sites can claim they aren’t the publisher of questionab­le content but are merely transmitti­ng posts by others.

“Without Backpage, there’s no murder of Desiree,” Antonio Romanucci, Ambrose’s lawyer, said after last week’s court hearing in Chicago.

Antonio Rosales has been charged in state court with Desiree’s murder. The accused pimp, Joseph Hazley, faces federal charges for allegedly selling her for sex on the website. But a week ago, prosecutor­s finally secured the first conviction in her death when McFee admitted he delivered her to Hazley for a finder’s fee he apparently never received.

Then, last week, federal authoritie­s also seized the Backpage website. Its founders, Michael Lacey and James Larkin, are accused in an indictment unsealed Monday of publishing ads that depicted children who authoritie­s said were sex traffickin­g victims.

The indictment claims the website ignored warnings to stop running advertisem­ents promoting prostituti­on because the lucrative enterprise brought in half a billion dollars.

 ?? CHRIS KLEPONIS/ POOL PHOTO/ GETTY IMAGES; PROVIDED ( ABOVE) ?? Yvonne Ambrose of Chicago ( and her son, Keionte Abron, left) talk to President Trump before he signed a bill intended to curb sex traffickin­g. Ambrose’s daughter, Desiree Robinson ( above), was killed after a pimp offered her up on Backpage. com., a...
CHRIS KLEPONIS/ POOL PHOTO/ GETTY IMAGES; PROVIDED ( ABOVE) Yvonne Ambrose of Chicago ( and her son, Keionte Abron, left) talk to President Trump before he signed a bill intended to curb sex traffickin­g. Ambrose’s daughter, Desiree Robinson ( above), was killed after a pimp offered her up on Backpage. com., a...
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