The Decline of Rock Parallels the Decline of America
How This WNBA Player Got a Technical Foul Was Amazing
Why Tim Walz Is Probably Happy This Graham Platner Social Media Post Has...
Watch a Lib Mom Have a Total Breakdown at Her Kid's Middle...
Austin Metcalf's Dad Absolutely Torched The View's Sunny Hostin Over These Remarks About...
This MS NOW Contributor Had the Most Laughable Take on Algae in the...
This Ex-ESPN Host Said *What Now* About Trump and Obama's Nuke Deal
Did You Hear New York Socialists' Creepy Chant Following Tuesday's Primary?
Ted Lieu Vows Lawfare Against Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche
AAG McDonald Told the Nation Just How Much of Our Money Was Stolen...
Chicago’s Mayor Just Got Busted for Lying About the City’s Green Energy Promises
If Citizens Lose Faith in Elections, Accountability Dies
Leadership 101
President Trump Torches Republican 'Losers' After Senate Advances War Powers Resolution
Marco Rubio Landed in the Middle East Yesterday. Here's What He Had to...
Tipsheet

Wait–Did California Just Decriminalize Child Prostitution?

Wait–Did California Just Decriminalize Child Prostitution?

I’m not so sure that this is a good idea, folks. I understand the reasons, but does anyone else think there is a better way to combat child prostitution? In California, Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown just signed legislation that decriminalized child prostitution in the state (via Sacramento Bee):

Advertisement

Cementing a major shift in how California handles sex crimes, Gov. Jerry Brown on Monday signed legislation decriminalizing prostitution for minors.

By prohibiting law enforcement from arresting people under the age of 18 for soliciting or loitering with intent, Senate Bill 1322 effectively shields those young people from criminal penalties. Advocates argued that young sex workers should be treated as victims, not criminals.

[…]

While embracing the idea of treating young sex workers as victims, law enforcement groups warned that removing penalties would remove a crucial tool for detaining young people and keeping them away from their abusers.

For any lawyer, wouldn’t any levelheaded prosecuting attorney exhibit some discretion over whether to charge an abused 15-year-old girl with solicitation? Like most policies coming out of California, it shouldn’t shock us if this move backfires, which will have tragic consequences. We’ll see how this works out, though the notion of decriminalizing this horrific enterprise seems to be done without much foresight.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos