Canada's Prostitution Laws Unconstitutional

R. Richard

Literotica Guru
Joined
Jul 24, 2003
Posts
10,382
A Toronto judge has struck down Canada’s prostitution laws, effectively decriminalizing activities associated with the world’s oldest trade.

“These laws, individually and together, force prostitutes to choose between their liberty interest and their right to security of the person as protected under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,” Justice Susan Himel of Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice said in Tuesday’s landmark decision.

The long-awaited judgment had been on reserve for nearly a year.

Himel said that while she has concluded the laws amount to a serious violation of the Charter, she has imposed a 30-day “stay” on her decision to give lawyers for the federal and provincial governments, as well as the women at the centre of the case, an opportunity to make fuller submissions on whether her decision to invalidate the laws should be placed on hold for an even longer period of time.

Rona Ambrose, minister for status of women, said the Conservative government is “very concerned” about the court decision and is considering an appeal.

Himel said she is not persuaded that striking down the provisions without enacting something in its place would pose a danger to the public, as the federal government argued.

“I am mindful of the fact that legislating in response to prostitution raises difficult, contentious and serious policy issues and that it is for Parliament to fashion corrective legislation,” wrote Himel.

“This is wonderful,” dominatrix Terri-Jean Bedford told reporters at the University Ave. courthouse.

Bedford and prostitutes Valerie Scott and Amy Lebovitch had asked the court to strike down Criminal Code provisions dealing with prostitution, contending the laws violate their constitutional right to security of the person and freedom of expression.

They argued that restrictions on keeping a common bawdy house, communicating for the purposes of prostitution and living on the avails of the trade force sex workers onto the street and expose them to violence.

In an affidavit filed with the court, Bedford described scars she has from being hit on the head with a baseball bat by a customer many years ago when she worked as a street prostitute.

The women argued that if the law permitted sex workers to conduct their business indoors, they could employ safety measures such as the use of security guards and monitoring devices.

But when the case was argued in Toronto last fall, lawyers for Ontario’s attorney general suggested there are already measures that women on the streets can employ to ensure safer working conditions, including simply warning each other about customers with a propensity for violence.

Lawyers for the federal government maintained that prostitution is inherently dangerous no matter where it is practised.

The Criminal Code prohibitions, Canada argued, are meant to prevent the commercialization of the sex trade and protect women from exploitation.

In her ruling, Himel said the criminal prohibition on keeping a common bawdy house is overly broad because it has the potential to punish sex workers who do not create the kind of neighbourhood disruption the legislation was designed to prevent.

Most prostitutes in Canada are “independent operators” and the impact of their business, while working discreetly from home, could be different from a large brothel employing many prostitutes, the judge said.

Although prostitution itself is not illegal in Canada, almost everything associated with it is, a situation that was once described as “bizarre” by a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada.

The Supreme Court dismissed a slightly narrower challenge to the country’s prostitution laws in 1990.

At that time, the court ruled that restrictions on communicating for the purposes of prostitution was a justifiable limit on free expression because the law was meant to discourage the nuisances of street prostitution and related activities such as drug trafficking.

As part of their case, Bedford, Scott and Lebovitch pointed to a report from a Parliamentary committee that was released in 2006, several years after the Supreme Court had considered the constitutionality of the legislation.

The report concluded that restrictions on communicating had merely shifted prostitution from certain neighbourhoods into others.
 
Hear, Hear:

Nothing disgusts me more than to be channel surfing and finding 'Cops', real cops, with cameras and a cable tv show glorifying them as they harass hookers. It's disgusting and repugnant to see those who are sworn to 'protect and serve' boosting their numbers by exploiting and picking on those not able to defend themselves. Most, if not all, of these women have been brutalized by close relatives, society, and then those sworn to protect and serve. It reminds me of the Cicely Tyson character in 'Sounder' telling the deputy sheriff that 'You got yo'self one lowlife job, now, doncha?'
 
Well, the Conservative government of Stephen Harper will appeal the decision; after all, someone has to protect those fallen women from themselves.

It'll take a while longer, but our Supreme Court will uphold, I'm sure, the well-reasoned decision of Justice Himmel and deliver us from this "bizarre" situation where the sex trade is legal as long as you don't actually engage in it.
 
Are they maybe looking for volunteers?

No! Emphatically!! Such slatterns can only be protected by men who have no need of harlotry, no need of womanly pleasures, no need of women at all. It is from their own ranks that such men will be found!
 
Well, the Conservative government of Stephen Harper will appeal the decision; after all, someone has to protect those fallen women from themselves.

It'll take a while longer, but our Supreme Court will uphold, I'm sure, the well-reasoned decision of Justice Himmel and deliver us from this "bizarre" situation where the sex trade is legal as long as you don't actually engage in it.

Actually, it probably needs to be challenged because this SCO ruling challenges the multiple previous decisions made by the SCC.
 
Actually, it probably needs to be challenged because this SCO ruling challenges the multiple previous decisions made by the SCC.

yes, it needs the SCC to make it stick, but the SCC decisions in favour of the limitations were based on much narrower, and non-Charter of Rights and Freedoms, issues. Remember, there was a significant minority position even on those issues.
 
No! Emphatically!! Such slatterns can only be protected by men who have no need of harlotry, no need of womanly pleasures, no need of women at all. It is from their own ranks that such men will be found!

Are you saying they're all gay? :rolleyes:

Actually, I think ALL such laws should be overturned, except those that actually do protect the working girls. :(
 
New Zealand probably has the most sensible laws relating to prostitution. They are framed entirely as health and safety and planning regulations.

They have been very successful in taking prostitution off the streets and making the profession safer. Inevitably therefore certain conservative politicians are trying to reintroduce 'moral' restrictions which will increase the dangers again.

However sexworkers have found an ally in senior police who say that they don't want a reversal to the bad old days.
 
Some background.

A woman was elected to the Italian parliament, with the mission to end prostitution in Italy. She managed to browbeat enough politicians that they passed laws that actually shut down the illegal brothels that had operated since before the Roman Empire.
The girls who had worked in the brothels then came and talked to the woman politician. They pointed out that they had been forced out of their safe, clean, comfortable brothels and they were now forced to work in the streets, with no one to protect them, in rain freezing cold, sweltering heat and no one to screen prospective customers. They wanted their brothels back.
The woman politician was unable to get her fellow politicians to vote for sin.
The only sane solution, of which I'm aware, to the prostitution problem is the legal brothels in Nevada. The legal brothels are safe, clean and the girls get paid, all under state law and regulation.
 
Now, if only sanity about this issue will spread (one state at a time, of course) south of the border. I fully agree with legalizing prostitution and making it easier to manage (as opposed to the current system, with pimps who can beat their hookers at a whim and not fear retribution from women too afraid to risk arrest by reporting them).

Despite the recession, pimps are one class of people I want to put out of work...at least in their current profession.

Of course, as a libertarian and constitutionalist, I favor legalizing a hell of a lot of things.
 
Now, if only sanity about this issue will spread (one state at a time, of course) south of the border. I fully agree with legalizing prostitution and making it easier to manage (as opposed to the current system, with pimps who can beat their hookers at a whim and not fear retribution from women too afraid to risk arrest by reporting them).

Despite the recession, pimps are one class of people I want to put out of work...at least in their current profession.

Of course, as a libertarian and constitutionalist, I favor legalizing a hell of a lot of things.

I have never been able to figure out the rationale for having prostitution illegal, outside of It's a sin! That's not a reason, as far as I can see. I think of it as being something like the anti-marijuana laws or Prohibition: Government meddling in what is essentially a personal decision, and does no harm to anybody. Any harm that comes from any of these three bans is more because of the illegality of the act rather than the act itself.
 
I have never been able to figure out the rationale for having prostitution illegal, outside of It's a sin! That's not a reason, as far as I can see. I think of it as being something like the anti-marijuana laws or Prohibition: Government meddling in what is essentially a personal decision, and does no harm to anybody. Any harm that comes from any of these three bans is more because of the illegality of the act rather than the act itself.


To curtail human trafficking and to boost the supply of good, moral women as wives.
 
To curtail human trafficking and to boost the supply of good, moral women as wives.

If prostitution were legal, white slavery would probably cease to exist. How many women are held in slaves in legal brothels?

If it weren't for the opprobium placed on them, prostitutes would be considered no less moral than any other person who performs a personal service, such as a barber or a masseuse or a hairdresser.
 
If prostitution were legal, white slavery would probably cease to exist. How many women are held in slaves in legal brothels?

No women are held as slaves in Nevada's legal brothels. The reason is quite simple, Nevada's legal brothels are licensed. A brothel license is a valuable thing. If a brothel owner were caught holding a legal prostitute as a slave, the brothel owner would not only be imprisoned, but would lose the valuable license. In Saudi Arabia, they cruelly amputate the hand of a thief. Here, we gently amputate the bank account and means of making a living.
 
Ontario Appeals Court today struck down the prohibition of brothels.

Check you favorite news source for Canada.
 
Bravo Canada! :D

If it wasn't for the bible beaters in this country we'd have legal prostitution in all 50 states. It only makes sense 'cause it's gonna happen regardless. I wonder how many of those 'holier than thou' types patronize hookers?

What we really need is to be saved from people who want to save us from ourselves. ;)
 
Bravo Canada! :D

If it wasn't for the bible beaters in this country we'd have legal prostitution in all 50 states. It only makes sense 'cause it's gonna happen regardless. I wonder how many of those 'holier than thou' types patronize hookers?

What we really need is to be saved from people who want to save us from ourselves. ;)

I think it's a combination of the bible thumpers, pimps and cops and politicians who get paid off by the pimps to keep it illegal.
 
I think it's a combination of the bible thumpers, pimps and cops and politicians who get paid off by the pimps to keep it illegal.

Of course. I want the government out of peoples' bedrooms, but I don't want the preachers in. If the sexworkers have strong protections against exploitation and personal violence, and can organize and bargain collectively, if they wish, and appropriate precautions against the spread of disease are taken, why not?
 
I think you just put the current election in a nutshell. Which would you rather have, the government telling you how to run your business or telling you how to run your sex life? Sheesh!
 
It'll be like all the rest of the things we've tried. We wanted legal pot and got it, then lost it, because we didn't bitch enough about it (it's easy to get anyway and nobody cares :D)
We wanted same sex marriages legalized and got it, but we bitched enough about it and kept it.
Now we want pay-as-you-play sex legal and we just have to bitch enough to be able to keep it.
"Come up to Ontario, we'll get together, have a few laughs. Yippee-kay-yaa MF :D
 
Of course. I want the government out of peoples' bedrooms, but I don't want the preachers in. If the sexworkers have strong protections against exploitation and personal violence, and can organize and bargain collectively, if they wish, and appropriate precautions against the spread of disease are taken, why not?

They have free health care already, just need a licence to say she's clean and good to go, but don't tell anyone, it's still a secret, lol :D
 
Of course. I want the government out of peoples' bedrooms, but I don't want the preachers in. If the sexworkers have strong protections against exploitation and personal violence, and can organize and bargain collectively, if they wish, and appropriate precautions against the spread of disease are taken, why not?

The worse thing is the government getting into people's bedrooms at the instigation of the preachers. That should be a violation of the First Amendment, but it probably would not be ruled as such. :(
 
Back
Top