'The Truth Is Backpage.Com And Other Sites Are Making  Millions Of Dollars By Exploiting Our Children And Allowing Them To Be Taken  Advantage [Of] By Predators.'
The Communications  Decency Act 'Was Not Intended To Allow Companies To Legally Sell Children On The  Internet'
SEN.  ROB PORTMAN (R-OH): "…the Communications Decency Act was never intended to  protect those that engage in illegal conduct and it was certainly never intended  to protect online predators and sex traffickers." (U.S. Senate, Commerce Committee, Hearing,  9/17/2017)
·         SEN.  PORTMAN (R-OH): "…we have an opportunity to fix this flaw in the justice  system. Courts have made it clear that their hands are tied until Congress  changes the Communications Decency Act to hold online sex traffickers, like  Backpage, accountable." (Sen. Portman, Op-Ed, "History Will Judge Those Who  Don't Stop Sex Trafficking," The Guardian,  9/19/2017)
SEN.  JOHN McCAIN (R-AZ): "This bill includes long-overdue changes to current law  that has for too long protected Backpage and other websites from being held  liable for enabling these horrific crimes. …there is broad, bipartisan  support to change the status quo and hold all those facilitating online sex  trafficking accountable." (Sen. McCain, Press Release,  2/27/2018)
·         SEN.  McCAIN (R-AZ): "This legislation is critical to eliminating legal  protections for websites like Backpage.com that have knowingly and recklessly  facilitated the online sex trafficking of innocent young women and girls.  Importantly, our bill would criminalize commercial activity that assists,  supports, or facilitates a violation of federal sex trafficking laws and would  enable state law enforcement officials – not just the Department of Justice – to  take action against individuals or businesses that violate federal sex  trafficking laws. We cannot allow these heinous crimes to go unprosecuted. It is  our duty to end the victimization and exploitation of men, women and children  through sex trafficking, and deliver the victims of this monstrous crime the  justice they deserve." (Sen. McCain, Press Release, 11/8/2017)
SEN.  JOHN CORNYN (R-TX): "We must do all we can to ensure victims of human  trafficking receive the justice they deserve, and the first step is holding  those who facilitate this heinous crime accountable… Child sex traffickers and  their enablers should not be able to hide on the internet any longer." (Sen. Cornyn, Press Release,  8/2/2017)
All  50 State Attorneys General: "The recent news highlighting the  potential complicity of online classified-ad company Backpage.com in soliciting  sex traffickers' ads for its website once again underscores the need to expand,  not limit, the ability of all law-enforcement agencies to fight sex. The  undersigned Attorneys General once again respectfully request that the United  States Congress amend the CDA to affirm that state, territorial, and local  authorities retain their traditional jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute  those who facilitate illicit acts and endanger our most vulnerable citizens…. It  is both ironic and tragic that the CDA, which was intended to protect children  from indecent material on the internet, is now used as a shield by those who  profit from prostitution and crimes against children." (50 State Attorneys General, Letter To Congress,  8/16/2017)
Endorsements From  Anti-Trafficking Advocates: National Center for Missing  and Exploited Children, Shared Hope, Polaris Project, ECPAT-USA, Rights4Girls,  World Without Exploitation, PROTECT, National Children's Alliance Trafficking in  America Taskforce, Covenant House, Coalition Against Trafficking in Women  (CATW), Living Bread. Lynch Foundation for Children, Legal Momentum, Freegrance,  Grace Farms Foundation, African American Juvenile Justice Project, DeliverFund,  Survivors for Solutions, Fair Girls, Courtney's House, Teens Against Trafficking  Faith Community: Faith & Freedom Coalition, Family Research Council,  Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, Concerned Women for  America, Focus on the Family, Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America,  National Council of Jewish Women,The Catholic Association, Friends Committee on  National Legislation, United Methodist Church Civil Rights: National Urban  League Law Enforcement: National District Attorneys Association, Major County  Sheriffs of America, Fraternal Order of Police, National Association of Police  Organizations, Major Cities Chiefs and Police Organizations Industry: The  Internet Association, Oracle, 21st Century Fox, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, IBM,  Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), CoStar Group, The American  Hotel and Lodging Association, The Walt Disney Company, Marriott International,  Mastercard. (Sen. Portman, Press Release, 3/14/2018)
'On Christmas Eve 2016  …Yvonne Ambrose Should Have Been Enjoying The Company Of Her Family And  Celebrating'
SEN.  ROB PORTMAN (R-OH): "On Christmas Eve 2016, while Yvonne Ambrose should have  been enjoying the company of her family and celebrating the holiday, she was  instead grappling with the news that her 16-year-old daughter, Desiree, was  found murdered in a parking garage that morning. As the heartbroken mother  has described, Desiree was being sold for sex on Backpage.com – the leading  website for online sex trafficking – when she was murdered. Yvonne is, sadly,  one of many mothers whose daughters have been exploited on the internet. For  too long, websites like Backpage, that knowingly run ads selling underage girls,  have escaped liability and justice. Courts have ruled that the website is  protected by broad immunity from a 1996 law called the Communications Decency  Act. When the law was enacted, the goal was to protect website operators acting  in good faith who lacked knowledge that third parties were posting harmful or  illegal content on their sites. Now it protects knowing sex traffickers." (Sen. Portman, Op-Ed, "History Will Judge Those Who  Don't Stop Sex Trafficking," The Guardian, 9/19/2017)
YVONNE  AMBROSE: "[My daughter Desiree Robinson] was only 16- years-old and just  wanted to make friends. We now know that adult men found Desiree on social  media, reached out to her, pressured her and used her to make money. She was  preyed on and sold online by pimps who took advantage of her. Desiree didn't  know what Backpage.com was or the harm that would come from this website. On  December 23rd, 2016 a 32-year-old man by the name of Antonio Rosales was looking  through Backpage.com for a child to have sex with. … Desiree was driven to  Antonio's residence by the pimp with the intent of having sex with this  32-year-old man, a man twice her age. This was the last night of my daughter's  life and her pictures were posted and moderated by Backpage.com and this was the  reason for her demise. On Christmas Eve, December 24th, 2016 Desiree, my baby  was brutally murdered and now my life is changed forever. She had been beaten,  raped, strangled, and if that wasn't bad enough, he slit her throat all because  she said no, she didn't want to do this again. She screamed for help and there  was no one around to help her. … The truth is Backpage.com and other sites  are making millions of dollars by exploiting our children and allowing them to  be taken advantage [of] by predators. If we don't speak up now, these websites  will continue to profit of trafficking our babies. It could be your child, your  niece, your nephew, your cousins, your friend's children is next if you don't  stop this." (U.S. Senate, Commerce Committee,  Hearing, 9/17/2017)
·         MS.  AMBROSE: "I'm sure when this act was put into place in '96, the Internet  was in its infancy and it was not intended to allow companies to legally sell  children on the Internet, but somehow a dollar has become more important than  a human life. If you're going to fix this problem, fix it. … I pray that  Desiree's life can make a difference, so no one else has to ever endure this  pain again. I'm asking you, the U.S. Senate to amend Section 230 and be the  change you want to see in this world, not only for the justice for Desiree, but  for all the countless Jane Does out here and the other little girls to come who  don't have a voice. We have to be the change now to protect our babies from  websites like Backpage.com that open the door for predators without any  accountability. My name is Yvonne Ambrose. I am the mother of the late Desiree  Robinson. And I'm asking you, the U.S. Senate, to change Section 230 and support  the bipartisan legislation, the Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act, not only for  my baby, but for the protection of yours and others to come." (U.S. Senate, Commerce Committee, Hearing,  9/17/2017)
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