Phoenix

Zillions of media reports on the Project Rose mess in Phoenix
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Zillions of media reports on the Project Rose mess in Phoenix  
But some have their facts wrong.  Here is some samples of a report that has errors but is mostly accurate.  Believe it or not this from the ... Russian Times!

Sex workers in Arizona given choice of therapy in church or arrest
Published   March 04, 2014  

Rather than being taken to jail, sex workers apprehended on the streets of Phoenix, Arizona are being handcuffed and brought to a church, where they can decide if they would rather be incarcerated by the state or undergo diversion therapy.

(Dave note most are not from the streets but companions that advertise on the web however later the article states it correctly)

The policy, known as Project ROSE, is a Phoenix program that, according to Vice News, has aimed to help more than 350 people since it began in 2011.

Police sweep the streets and browse the Internet searching for prostitution listings. They may catch dozens of women during any given sting operation but, instead of hauling them into jail, the police handcuff them and bring them to the Arizona State School of Social Work.

(Dave notes they are taken to Bethany Bible Church not School of Social Work).

The program – organized by Dominique Roe-Sepowitz, the director of the Office of Sex Trafficking Intervention Research and a professor of sociology at Arizona State – offers healthcare, housing, and other support services to sex workers. If the women agree to the program they are not arrested and taken to jail.  

They are not initially arrested, but are instead taken into a windowless church room. They meet with local prosecutors and detectives, as well as representatives of Project ROSE, who remind them of their option to partake in the program.

Roe-Sepowitz (says) that she is only trying to help struggling women find their way out of a dangerous lifestyle. She estimated that 35 percent of the women who first arrive at Project ROSE eventually lead healthy, productive lives.

“Once you’ve prostituted you can never not have prostituted,” she said. “Having that many body parts, having that many body fluids near you and doing things that are freaky and weird really messes up your idea of what a relationship looks like, and intimacy.”

Arizona taxpayers foot most of the bill to help the women, paying $3,000 to Bethany Bible Church when the two-day raids are conducted each month.

(Dave notes not each month but every 3-4 or 6 months)

Often, when a woman is arrested, she is bailed out of jail by her pimp and continues to live under his control, surrendering most of if not all of her wages and repeating the cycle. Police, while still arresting many prostitutes and pursuing pimps, now work in conjunction with advocacy groups to help sex workers hoping to escape do just that.

(Dave notes that few arrested have pimps or fit this description - most are independent consenting adults paying for college or to help raise children and choose sexwork as a choice. Most outcall which is legal in almost all the world except the U.S. with no big issues).  

A 2013 study by the Institute of Medicine and the National Research Council examining sex trafficking and the exploitation of minors recommended “better collaborative approaches that build upon the capabilities of people and entities from a range of sectors.”

(Dave notes hardly any are minors but consenting adults)

“These crimes may be overlooked, as they often occur at the margins of society and behind closed doors; victims may not come forward; and those who routinely interact with victims and survivors may lack awareness or tools to properly identify and assist victims,” the researchers said, adding that “many victims go without help” for their entire life.

 That broad rationale does not apply to Project ROSE, according to demonstrators who showed up outside the church last year to protest what they perceive as the imposition of morals on sex workers. Among those upset was Monica J., a student and sex worker activist who was picked up by the Phoenix police in 2013 for “manifesting prostitution.” J. told Vice that Roe-Sepowitz was wrong to claim that someone could never move past selling herself.

“As a social worker, you’re supposed to see your clients as human beings,” she said. “But her way of thinking is that once you’re a sex worker, you can never not be a sex worker.”

J. went through the diversion program but complained that she was forced to listen to officers from the Phoenix vice squad describe girls who started with prostitution and descended into drug addiction, or worse. She complained about the program’s religious overtones and was eventually asked to leave early before her opinions could take with others.

“I wasn’t ashamed about being a sex worker. I kept bringing this up during the diversion program,” J. said. “Girls would ask me why I didn’t feel this way. Well, because I don’t. I have the right to my own body.”

Reader Comments:
Tessa says, "Personally I would take jail over organized religion."
Source: http://rt.com/usa/sex-workers-arizona-church-arrest-698/

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