March 9, 2007
Seattle Times op-edChildhood
prostitution: stolen youth, stolen dreams
by Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles and Nick Licata
It’s time to stop blaming the victim.
Let’s call it what it really is: commercial sexual abuse
of a minor, to put the onus on the perpetrator instead of
the victim.
Currently children younger than 18 are guilty of
solicitation if successfully prosecuted for engaging in
prostitution.
By conservative estimates, between 200,000 and 300,000
children are exploited through prostitution each year in
this country. And the industry is exploding: An estimated 10
million children around the globe are involved in
prostitution, with 1 million more each year joining the
ranks of trafficking victims.
The health implications are staggering for minors
engaging in prostitution: increased risks of physical and
sexual assault; sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV
and AIDS; pregnancy; cervical cancer; abortion; suicide; and
death.
Childhood prostitution takes other tolls, too, including
homelessness and dropping out of school. A sobering 75
percent or more of the girls aged 13 to 18 in our criminal
justice system have been physically abused. Many have been
prostituted, used to produce pornography, or suffered or
witnessed physical and sexual violence. These children pay
steep prices for being paid to engage in sex.
Physical health detriments aside, these youth suffer
significant mental health issues. The majority have been
sexually abused — some as young as toddlers and from
multiple adults —- and can’t form trusting relationships.
This devastation becomes more apparent when many teens,
offered counseling and social services to leave behind life
on the streets, cannot grasp the concepts of choice and
independence.
On the state level, it’s been hard to quantify the
numbers of youth who are trafficked or engaging in
commercial sex, which is a well-hidden economy. We can
confirm that since 2002 there have been 84 convictions of
juveniles for prostitution — but only two for adults
convicted of patronizing. We suspect that hundreds of
juveniles are working as prostitutes. A U.S. Justice
Department report placed Seattle among 12 hub cities where
traffickers recruit teen sex workers.
It’s disturbing to not have the numbers, but we have
stories. Vice unit officers report seeing teenage
prostitutes soliciting on Aurora Avenue North and are aware
that many pimps have these girls working a West Coast
circuit.
To stem this tide, we support a two-pronged approach:
Encourage children and teens to seek prevention and
intervention services, and hold accountable those who
victimize them.
Senate Bill 5718 would direct funds deposited into
the prostitution intervention and prevention account now
managed by the
Department of Community, Trade and Economic Development,
to help these victimized children and teens re-claim their
lives. These funds would be targeted for residential
treatment; counseling services, including mental health and
substance abuse services; and health care. Money would be
used, too, to connect children to school or vocational
training.
In all practicality, a person who pays for sex with
someone younger than 18 should be guilty of commercial
sexual abuse of a minor, not patronizing a juvenile
prostitute. Refocusing the law on the adult who commits the
crime sends the message that these youths’ lives have value
and meaning. If we are serious about reducing commercial
sexual abuse of minors, we must make it less attractive to
johns and pimps.
The number of establishments and settings that permit
commercial sexual abuse of minors would drop by requiring
property owners to abate the abuse and take affirmative
steps to notify law enforcement that abuse is occurring. We
would make it a class C felony to promote travel for the
purpose of commercial sexual abuse of a minor.
Here’s the kicker: An additional one-year penalty would
be tacked on to the sentence of someone convicted of the
most serious crimes of sexual abuse against children, such
as rape of a child, if the offender paid to engage in the
abuse.
Good public policy reflects our values as a society. With
so little of our lives spent in childhood, we owe it to our
youth to keep them safe. For many, this means keeping them
off the streets. But for those already there, we are going
to make it easier to get help and harder to be victimized.
Editor’s note:
Jeanne Kohl-Welles represents the people of the 36th
Legislative District in the Washington State Senate.
Nick Licata represents the people of Seattle and is
president of the Seattle City Council.
Return to Sen.
Kohl-Welles' home page
|