Backpage.com sex advert website seized by FBI

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Backpage.com sex advert website seized by FBI

The US authorities have taken control of a classified adverts website accused of involvement in sex trafficking.

A notice was posted on Backpage.com’s various international front pages late last week to inform visitors.

The site had previously shut down the adult section of its US site, but critics had alleged that prostitution ads had simply moved to other pages.

The UK edition had carried dozens of sex service ads at the time of its closure, according to Reuters.

An investigation by the news agency’s philanthropic foundation had suggested that as many as one in 20 of the relevant posts on Backpage.co.uk could have involved slavery victims.

One charity said the move only partially addressed the problem.

“Whilst efforts to close websites such as Backpage are welcome, they are a small part of a wider, complex system of sexual exploitation operating in the UK and beyond,” Josephine Knowles, co-director of Beyond the Streets, told the BBC.

“A strategic approach which tackles prevention of demand and support for those wanting to exit and find genuine alternatives is desperately needed for long-term change.”

The US media has also reported that Backpage’s co-founder Michael Lacey was arrested last week and his home raided.

Details of the charges against him have been sealed by an Arizona court, his lawyer was quoted as saying.

No-one else at Backpage has provided comment.

New law

The Californian authorities had previously attempted to close Dallas-based Backpage.com in 2016, when the state prosecuted the business’s chief executive and two ex-owners – including Mr Lacey – over claims they had committed pimping offences and generated millions of dollars by hosting sex trade ads.

However, the case was dismissed on the grounds that the US’s Communications Decency Act said that publishers should not be held responsible for content created solely by their users.

But last month, Congress passed a new law, the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (Fosta). It states that “websites that facilitate traffickers in advertising the sale of unlawful sex acts” should no longer be granted the same protection.

It has been reported that President Trump will sign a Senate-approved version of the act into law this week.

Some sites have already taken counter-measures. Craigslist shut its “personals” dating section last month after reports that it featured several ads for prostitutes.

Reddit has also closed its escorts message board. And Cityvibe and Nightshift have abandoned their online services altogether.

Digital rights advocates have, however, raised concerns, suggesting the new law will “hinder online freedom of expression”.

Prostitutes have also raised concern that sites such as Backpage offered them a safer alternative to trying to find clients on the streets.

Child abuse

A Senate investigation had claimed in 2017 that Backpage.com had “knowingly concealed evidence of criminality” by using software to identify words and phrases in submitted adverts that were associated with child abuse.

Rather than barring the users who had submitted the ads, it was claimed, they were allowed to resubmit the posts with the restricted terms removed.

The site defended itself at the time saying it had spent “thousands of hours and millions of dollars” to help the police tackle the problem, and claimed that its efforts had helped rescue trafficked children and led to the arrest of their pimps.

The site later faced further controversy the same year when the Washington Post reported that one of Backpage’s contractors had attempted to lure sex-related ads away from rival sites in the Philippines by offering free postings as an incentive.

Backpage denied knowingly having facilitated sex trafficking.

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