Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada lands on ‘Dirty Dozen’ list

- By Brian Joseph Las Vegas Review-journal

A national organizati­on that calls out corporatio­ns and other U.S. institutio­ns for fostering sexual exploitati­on took the unusual step Monday of naming Nevada as one of America’s top promoters of sex traffickin­g.

Nevada is the first state to ever make the National Center on Sexual Exploitati­on’s annual “Dirty Dozen” list of “major, mainstream facilitato­rs of sexual exploitati­on.”

The Washington, D.C. advocacy group, which was founded in 1962 to document the links between pornograph­y, child abuse and sex traffickin­g, placed the Silver State on its “ignominiou­s” list because it says legalized prostituti­on in Nevada’s rural counties has turned the state into a “magnet for sex trafficker­s and prostituti­on tourists.”

“In the age of #Metoo, it’s important that people understand that the exchange of money, or something of value, to obtain a sex act is, itself, a form of sexual coercion,” said Lisa Thompson, the center’s vice president of policy and research, during a news conference unveiling its 2019 Dirty Dozen. “It’s time for Nevada to reform

its prostituti­on laws by criminaliz­ing those who sexually exploit others for pleasure and profit,” she said.

The center’s list includes the world’s largest online retailer, Amazon, for selling childlike sex dolls and how-to books on sex traffickin­g; the premium cable network HBO, for producing shows like “Game of Thrones,” which incorporat­e graphic rape scenes; and the Massage Envy chain of spas, for allegedly mishandlin­g reports of sexual assault.

But the organizati­on, once known as Morality in Media Inc., saved some of its harshest criticism for Nevada, calling it “home base for pimps and sex trafficker­s.” The organizati­on wrote: “States and local communitie­s profiting from prostituti­on (by tourist revenues), like pimps, are complicit in sexual exploitati­on. It’s time for Nevada to join the 21st century by recognizin­g that sexploitat­ion is nobody’s job.”

Thompson said Nevada has the largest commercial sex trade in the country, adjusted for population. “It’s 63 percent higher than the next highest state of New York and double that of Florida,” she said.

Thompson was referring to a 2018 study by Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska, which analyzed commercial sex advertisin­g on 435 Backpage.com sites associated with various cities and locales around the country.

In naming Nevada to its “Dirty Dozen” list, the center also cited a recent audit by the Lyon County Sheriff ’s Office, which found that 34 percent of the brothel workers who registered to work in the county in 2017 displayed signs of potential sex traffickin­g. In November, nearly 81 percent of Lyon County voters rejected a plan to outlaw brothels in the county.

The center said on Monday that Lyon County residents who voted against the brothel ban are complicit in the sexual exploitati­on of “countless women.”

County Manager Jeff Page said in an email that critics have tried to tie

for reportedly providing schools with Chromebook­s without child protection­s and for providing pornograph­ic images on Google Images and Youtube.

for producing shows like “Game of Thrones” and “True Blood” that include “eroticized rape scenes.”

Massage Envy, for allegedly mishandlin­g reports of sexual assault.

for producing content with “gratuitous nudity and graphic sex acts” and that allegedly normalize sex traffickin­g.

for being the only state with legalized prostituti­on, which the center says has turned Nevada into a magnet for sex trafficker­s.

a media streaming company, for allegedly facilitati­ng access to porn.

Sports Illustrate­d Swimsuit Issue, for sending “the message that women’s bodies are for public consumptio­n.”

an online video game distributo­r, for reportedly distributi­ng pornograph­ic content.

for allegedly hosting pornograph­y and facilitati­ng prostituti­on and sex traffickin­g.

United Airlines, legal brothels to sex traffickin­g, but no one has provided “tangible evidence” that it has occurred at Lyon County brothels.

Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford said in a statement Monday that “sex traffickin­g is a global problem” that can only be fought through “cross-agency collaborat­ion.”

“Just last week, we signed an agreement joining the Southern Nevada Sex Traffickin­g Multidisci­plinary Team to strengthen the fight against sex traffickin­g in Southern Nevada,” Ford said. “We’re proud to be a part of this collaborat­ive effort to address a common problem in our communitie­s and make an impact in the lives of those being victimized.”

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