California Democrats 'Water Down' Sex Trafficking Bill. Good.
The original version was overly punitive.
The original version was overly punitive.
X's child porn detection system doesn’t violate an Illinois biometric privacy law, the judge ruled.
Facing an opponent who has been credibly described as a sexual predator, Biden instead emphasizes Trump's cover-up of a consensual encounter.
An analysis by The Washington Post found that nearly 1,800 police officers were arrested for child sex abuse-related crimes between 2005 and 2022.
Prosecutors say the Buenos Aires Yoga School was a sex trafficking cult, but the alleged victims say this isn't true.
The Justice Department announced last year that it would expand a program to grant compassionate relief to federal inmates who've been sexually assaulted by staff.
A new report argues that the notorious program squanders taxpayer money while keeping people imprisoned without justification or recourse.
It's the war on drugs all over again, folks...
Victor Manuel Martinez Wario was jailed for a total of five days, spending three of those in special housing for sex offenders.
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The ruling has nothing to do with #MeToo. It is about ensuring a fair trial—a principle that applies no matter how unsympathetic the defendant.
The new rules allow students to be found guilty of assaulting a classmate without ever seeing the full evidence against them.
In 2021, the Associated Press uncovered rampant sexual abuse at FCI Dublin. After three years of failing to fix the problem, the Bureau of Prisons is shutting it down.
For sex workers and their clients, Super Bowl season can mean a higher chance of getting nabbed by cops.
Beware the “Equality Model” of sex work law reform in 2024.
Andrew Mitchell, who was acquitted on state murder charges in April, plead guilty this month to abducting and detaining two sex worker victims.
The mere act of publishing sex ads online is enough to send most potential free speech allies scurrying for the exits.
Adam Nesteikis didn't even understand what he had done wrong.
"A lot of people on the registry are on there for consensual behavior, things I think many people agree shouldn’t be crimes," says Meaghan Ybos, the president of Women Against Registry.
In her new book From Rage to Reason, Emily Horowitz explains what's wrong with the sex offense registry.
The issue was rejected because it "jeopardizes the good order and security of the institution."
The outrageous case has led to calls from Congress to pass legislation curbing civil asset forfeiture.
One of the defense's theories was that "the requested immigration records" might "support [the ex-wife's] motive to fabricate because claiming she was a victim of a sexual assault would provide a way to continue her legal residency in the United States without assistance from Appellant after her divorce."
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It is not hard to see why the jury concluded that the incident she described probably happened.
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New bills in six states showcase some right and wrong ways to help sex workers, from full decriminalization to ramping up penalties for prostitution customers.
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"Lifetime registries are wrong," said the plaintiff's attorney. "They're wrong based on the science and they're wrong based on the reality that risk is not static. It is dynamic."
Twenty years ago, the justices deemed registration nonpunitive, accepting unsubstantiated assumptions about its benefits and blithely dismissing its costs.
Bradley Bass' case in Colorado says a lot about just how powerful prosecutors are.
Prison staff were fired in less than half of substantiated incidents of sexual misconduct between 2016 and 2018, and only faced legal consequences in 6 percent of cases.
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Justice Department regulations threaten people with prosecution for failing to register even when their state no longer requires it.
The social changes that paved the way for gay and trans acceptance have made pedophile acceptance less likely, not more.
The U.S. Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals doesn't resolve whether such conduct is substantively constitutionally protected from criminal punishment, but holds that military law didn't put the defendant on notice that the conduct was illegal.
When states misuse sex-offender registries and apply them to any crime that involves a child, individual rights are abused.
Once again, policies billed as helping people coerced into prostitution wind up harming those that cops say they're trying to help.
A former guidance counselor served six years of a 25-year sentence thanks to a public defender's incompetence.
"I'm not saying my kid should get nothing," says Eric Beyer Jr.'s mother. "But to take an 18-year-old kid and put him in jail for longer than he's been alive?"