Saturday, September 28, 2013

NYPD TAKES SEX WORKER'S CONDOMS-HELPS SPREAD VD


Humans are very complicated in terms of their sexual interests, activities, and appetites. Some of us, who appear to be totally "straight" want to have sex with a transsexual.  But we don't know any.  Of course, we've heard that there are transsexual sex workers walking the streets of New York so we drive around and find one.  We find one. We have sex.  But there's no condom protection because the tranny doesn't have one in her possession.  Why?  'Cause the cops, seeing her walk the street, will stop and frisk her, take the condom as evidence of intent to engage in prostitution. Another possibility is that the cops have already done a stop and frisk and confiscated the condom.   So we have sex, go home and give HIV to our wife.  


This is changing in New York.  The No Condoms As Evidence Bill as passed the New York State ASsembly.  It could eventually become law in New York.  Read the details  below.


For Immediate Release: Friday, June 21, 2013 Contact: Sienna Baskin 718-662-6086/646-602-5695/ Andrea Ritchie (646) 831-1243, andrea@streetwiseandsafe.orgNO CONDOMS AS EVIDENCE BILL PASSES NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLYAnti-Trafficking Advocates, Women’s Groups, LGBTQ Organizations, Public Health Advocates And Civil Rights Groups Hail Passage of Critical Public Health Measure and Urge Senate to Take ActionNew York – Today the New York State Assembly passed A2736, known as the “No Condoms as Evidence” bill, sponsored by Queens Assembly Member Barbara Clark.


“Today’s action by the New York State Assembly brings us one step closer to making history as the first state in the country to enact legislation that prohibits police and prosecutors from confiscating and introducing condoms as evidence of intent to engage in prostitution-related offenses,” said Andrea Ritchie on behalf of the No Condoms as Evidence Coalition, made up of over 70 organizations advocating for the bill’s passage. “We want to extend our sincere thanks to Assembly Member Barbara Clark and Speaker Sheldon Silver for showing leadership in putting public health first. We call on New York State Senators who care about public health, sex trafficking, stop and frisk, women’s rights, LGBTQ rights, and human and civil rights to follow suit after the session break.”
Anti-trafficking advocates and service providers have been strong advocates on behalf of the bill.
“As the nation's leading service provider for victims of trafficking and other crimes, we congratulate the Assembly for including trafficking and promoting offenses in this legislation which will allow victims to use condoms while they are in their trafficking situations,” said Michael Polenberg, Vice President of Governmental Affairs at Safe Horizon. “This legislation will help preserve the lives and the futures of thousands of young victims of sexual exploitation. We look forward to seeing the Senate take action.”
“The use of condoms as evidence has created an unacceptable chilling effect and put the lives of LGBT people unnecessarily at risk,” said Sharon Stapel, Executive Director of the New York City Anti-Violence Project. “We urge the Senate to move to passage of a bill that will lift the fear our clients have of carrying condoms.”
“This is a revolutionary moment in the anti-trafficking movement,” Lynly Egyes, an attorney atthe Sex Workers Project at the Urban Justice Center who represents trafficking survivors.
Passing this legislation sends a loud and clear message that lawmakers and law enforcers care
about the health and safety of sex workers and victims of trafficking.”Organizations fighting stop and frisk and other discriminatory policing practices in New York
also applauded the bill’s passage in the Assembly and urged action in the Senate.
“Police and prosecutors’ confiscation and use of condoms as evidence is an often invisible aspect of stop and frisk, and a powerful tool of racial profiling of women of color and LGBTQ youth and people of color,” said Mitchyll Mora, a youth leader and researcher with Streetwise and Safe, a member of Communities United for Police Reform, a New York City wide campaign to end discriminatory policing practices. “The Assembly has done its part in putting a stop to it - now it's the Senate's turn to stand up to protect our right to protect ourselves.”
“As a former sex worker and a current advocate, I welcome the passage of bill A2736, and thank Assembly Member Mosley for the leadership he showed on this issue,” said Audacia Ray of the Red Umbrella Project. “Many community organizations use the free NYC condom program, but increasingly people in the communities we serve are not taking advantage of free condoms because they fear that they will be stopped and frisked, and that condoms will be used against them.”
“New Yorkers should have access to HIV prevention no matter what borough or part of the state they live in. Legislation to end the use of condoms as evidence is essential to ensure all New Yorkers have access to condoms regardless of where they live,” said Rebecca Schleifer, health and human rights advocacy director at Human Rights Watch.
“Taking condoms as evidence of prostitution is a recipe for a public health disaster,” said Hayley Gorenberg, Deputy Director of Lambda Legal. “We need to end the use of condoms as evidence in prostitution and trafficking cases, for everyone’s sake. It’s now time for the Senate to act.”
“It simply does not make sense that New York distributes millions of condoms each year to promote public health only to have condoms confiscated by the police. This bill would encourage all New Yorkers, especially individuals who are regularly stopped by the police, to carry condoms without fear that they will be used against them as evidence in criminal
court. This legislation is good public health policy. And it’s also common sense,” said Socheatta Meng, Legislative Counsel New York Civil Liberties Union.
“I have experienced firsthand how the police profile transgender women like me, confiscate our
condoms and arrest us for walking down the street as ‘trans,’” Yhatzine LaFountain, a memberof immigrant rights group Make the Road New York, recounted. “Condoms are supposed to
protect us, not turn us into criminals. We thank the Assembly Member Moya and the New York
State Assembly for taking a strong position against the use of condoms as evidence.”
Public health advocates and LGBT organizations congratulated the Assembly on moving on the
bill.
New York State gives away 39 million male and 2 million female condoms a year. Yet police
officers routinely confiscate condoms and prosecutors routinely use them as evidence to justify
prostitution-related charges, wasting taxpayer dollars and undermining the state’s efforts to
combat STIs, HIV, and unwanted pregnancies.
An abundance of research documents the harms of the practice. According to a 2012 report from the PROS Network (Providers and Resources Offering Services to Sex Workers) and the Sex Workers Project at the Urban Justice Center, up to 50% of people surveyed have at some point not carried condoms for fear of police repercussions. The report also documents instances where individuals have traded sex without condoms following police confiscation. A 2012 report from Human Rights Watch, entitled Sex Workers at Risk; Condoms as Evidence of Prostitution in Four US Cities, reports that sex workers in New York are terrified to carry condoms, and are putting themselves at risk by not using condoms because they are afraid of arrest.
The No Condoms As Evidence bill (A2736/SB1369) was introduced by Senator Velmanette Montgomery and Assembly Member Barbara Clark. A hearing on a New York City Council resolution in support of the legislation was held earlier this week. Video and testimony of the hearing are available at: http://www.nocondomsasevidence.org/hearing-testimony/

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