Site linked to sex trafficking seized
WASHINGTON — In the climax of a fight that pitted foes of sex trafficking against advocates of free internet speech, the Justice Department has seized the Backpage.com website and raided the home of its cofounder.
The site, long a haven for sex ads, began shutting down Friday morning, as FBI agents began taking down a network of web pages all over the world. A notice on the site said it had been seized as part of an enforcement action by the FBI, the IRS and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.
Agents raided the Sedona, Ariz., home of Michael Lacey, the site’s co-founder, according to local media reports, but federal authorities would not comment on criminal charges.
Backpage.com has long been under fire from state attorneys general, groups that fight child sex trafficking, and victims of the prostitution business who have tried to sue the company for damages. California prosecutors filed state criminal charges against Backpage last year, but that case and others foundered because of protections in the federal Communications Decency Act, written to protect free speech on the internet.
Congress moved to strip away that shield late last month with a measure to carve out an exception in the communications law after a high-volume political battle. When signed into law by President Trump, the measure will allow states to proceed against websites that knowingly assist or support sex trafficking.
Silicon Valley trade groups and free-speech advocates such as the American Civil Liberties Union fought the new measure, warning that it would create havoc by forcing companies to try to get a handle on wild online speech.
But those arguments were overwhelmed by stories from teenagers about being sold for sex on Backpage. A letter from many attorneys general said they had evidence of teens being trafficked on the site.
Advocates for trafficking victims said the site’s takedown was long overdue — especially since the Communications Decency Act never restrained federal prosecutions, only state ones.
“You heard the stories over and over and over again from kids who were sold there,” said Carol Smolenski, executive director of ECPAT-USA, an anti-trafficking group. “It’s ridiculous that kids could be sold on the internet openly. It was outrageous.”
A report last year by the Senate Homeland Security Committee found that Lacey and other owners, although they reportedly sold Backpage.com to a foreign company, retained significant control through a web of shell companies.