Her Crime? Sex Work in New Orleans
Friday 15 January 2010
by: Jordan Flaherty | ColorLines

(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: MajoraCarterGroup, jessi.)
Tabitha has been working as a prostitute in New Orleans since she was 13. Now 30 years old, she can often be found working on a corner just outside of the French Quarter. A small and slight white woman, she has battled both drug addiction and illness and struggles every day to find a meal or a place to stay for the night.
These days, Tabitha, who asked that her real name not be used in this story, has yet another burden: a stamp printed on her driver's license labels her a sex offender. Her crime? Offering sex for money.
New Orleans city police and the district attorney's office are using a state law written for child molesters to charge hundreds of sex workers like Tabitha as sex offenders. The law, which dates back to 1805, declares it a crime against nature to engage in "unnatural copulation"—a term New Orleans cops and the district attorney's office have interpreted to mean anal or oral sex. Sex workers convicted of breaking this law are charged with felonies, issued longer jail sentences and forced to register as sex offenders.
Of the 861 sex offenders currently registered in New Orleans, 483 were convicted of a crime against nature, according to Doug Cain, a spokesperson with the Louisiana State Police. And of those convicted of a crime against nature, 78 percent are Black and almost all are women.
Impacts on Women's Lives
The law impacts sex workers in both small and large ways. Tabitha has to register an address in the sex offender database. Her driver's license has the label "sex offender" printed on it. She also has to purchase and mail postcards with her picture to everyone in the neighborhood informing them of her conviction. If she needs to evacuate to a shelter during a hurricane, she must evacuate to a special shelter for sex offenders, and this shelter has no separate safe spaces for women. She is even prohibited from ordinary activities in New Orleans like wearing a costume at Mardi Gras.
"This law completely disconnects our community members from what remains of a social safety net," said Deon Haywood, director of Women With A Vision, an organization that promotes wellness and disease prevention for women who live in poverty. Haywood's group has formed a new coalition of New Orleans activists and health workers who are organizing to fight the way police are abusing the 1805 law.
Activists like Haywood believe that using the law in this way is part of an overall policy by the New Orleans Police Department to go after petty offenses. According to a report from the Metropolitan Crime Commission, New Orleans police arrest more than 58,000 people every year. Of those arrested, nearly 50 percent are for traffic and municipal offenses, and only 5 percent are for violent crimes.
"What this is really about is over-incarcerating poor and of-color communities," said Rosana Cruz of VOTE-NOLA, a prison reform organization that is also a part of the new coalition.
Haywood, Cruz and other activists believe they have an opportunity with the mayoral and city council elections next month to change the system. With all of the candidates attempting to distance themselves from Mayor Nagin, who is prevented by term limits from running again, the new mayor is likely to be open to making changes. This includes hiring a new police chief, as all the candidates have pledged to do. Advocates are hoping this is an opportunity to shift the department's focus. "When there's a new police chief, we can educate them," said Haywood.
Many of the women Haywood's group works with are at the most high-risk tier of sex work. They meet customers on the street and in bars. Most are dealing with addiction and homelessness, and many cannot get food stamps or other public assistance because of felony convictions on their record.
"I'm hoping that the situation will look different because of this coalition," Haywood said. "I can't tell you how overwhelmed we've been from the needs of this population."
Condemned
Miss Jackie is one of those women. A Black woman in her 50s, she was arrested for sex work in 1999 and charged as a sex offender. Her name was added to the registry for 10 years. When the registration period was almost over she was arrested for possession of crack. She says the arresting officer didn't find any drugs on her person, but the judge ruled that she needed to continue to register as a sex offender for another 15 years (the new federal requirement for sex offenders) because her arrest was a violation of her registration period.
"Where is the justice?" she asked, speaking through tears. "How do they expect me to straighten out my life?" Struggling with basic needs like housing, Miss Jackie added: "I feel condemned."
Advocates and former defendants claim that the decision over who is charged under which penalty is made arbitrarily, at the discretion of police and the district attorney's office, and that the law disproportionately affects Black people, as well as transgender women. When asked about the allegations of abusing the crime against nature statue, New Orleans Police Department spokesman Bob Young responded: "Persons are charged according to the crime they commit."
Wendi Cooper's story, however, paints a different picture.
In 1999, Cooper had recently come out as transgender. A Black transwoman, she tried prostitution a few times and quickly discovered it wasn't for her. But before she quit, she was arrested. At the time, Cooper was happy to take a plea that allowed her to get out of jail and didn't think much about what the "crime against nature" conviction would mean on her record. As she got older and began work as a healthcare professional, the weight of the sex offender label began to upset her more and more. "This is not me," she said. "I'm not that person who the state labeled me as…it slanders me."
Cooper appealed to the state to have her record expunged and talked to lawyers about other options, but she still must register for at least another five years and potentially longer. "I feel like I was manipulated, you know, pleading guilty to this crime…And it's hard, knowing that you are called something that you're not," she said. She is also afraid now that the conviction will prevent her from getting her license as a registered nurse or from being hired.
Although some women have tried to fight the sex offender charges in court, they've had little success. The penalties they face became even harsher in 2006 when Congress passed the Adam Walsh act, requiring tier-1 (the least serious) sex offenders to stay in the public registry for 15 years. There's also an added danger to fighting the charges, according to Josh Perry, a former attorney with the Orleans Public Defenders office. "The way Louisiana's habitual offender law works, if you challenge your sentence in court and lose, and it's a third offense, the mandatory minimum is 20 years. The maximum is life," he explained.
Perry estimates that on an average day two or three people are arrested for prostitution in New Orleans, and about half of them are charged under the crime against nature statute. "Right now, there are 39 people being held at Orleans Parish Prison [for] crimes against nature," Perry told a gathering of advocates. "And another 15 to 20 people…charged with failure to register as a sex offender."
Sex workers accused as sex offenders face discrimination in every aspect of the system. In most cases, they cannot get released on bond, because they are seen as a higher risk of flight than people charged with violent crimes. "This is the level of stigma and dysfunction that we're talking about here," said Perry. "Realistically, they're not getting out."
Organizing for Change
Advocates have said the ideal solution would be to get state lawmakers to change the law, but they feel there's little hope of positive reforms from the current legislature. For now, organizers want to put pressure on police and the district attorney's office to stop charging sex workers under the crime against nature statute.
There is a great deal of work that needs to be done. Haywood is working with lawyers and national allies to develop a legal strategy, as well as a broad local coalition that includes criminal justice reform organizations like VOTE-NOLA and activist groups like the New Orleans chapters of Critical Resistance and INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence. "We're trying to organize, but we're also working on the human rights side of how it's affecting their lives," she said. "This is a population that works in crisis mode all the time."
Jennifer, a 23-year-old white woman who asked that her real name not be used in this story, has been working as a prostitute since she was a teenager, and also works as a stripper at a club on Bourbon Street. She recently broke free of an eight-year heroin addiction. Unless the law changes, she will have the words "sex offender" on her driver's license until she is 48 years old.
Haywood said that stories like this show that the law has the effect of forcing women to continue with sex work. "When you charge young women with this—when you label them as a sex offender—this is what they are for the rest of their lives," she said.
Jennifer said it's affected her job options. "I'm not sure what they think, but a lot of places wont hire sex offenders," she said.
Haywood said the women she sees have few options. Many of them are homeless. They are sleeping in abandoned houses or on the street, or they are trading sex for a place to stay. "The women we work with, they don't call it sex work," she said. "They don't know what that means. They don't even call it prostitution. They call it survival."
Jordan Flaherty is a journalist, an editor of Left Turn Magazine, and a staffer with the Louisiana Justice Institute. He was the first writer to bring the story of the Jena Six to a national audience and audiences around the world have seen the television reports he's produced for Al-Jazeera, TeleSur, GritTV, and Democracy Now. His post-Katrina reporting for ColorLines shared an award from New America Media for best Katrina-related reporting in ethnic press. Haymarket Press will release his new book, /FLOODLINES: Stories of Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six/, in 2010. He can be reached at neworleans@leftturn.org <mailto:neworleans@leftturn.org>.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



Comments
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sigh.... why is America
Fri, 01/15/2010 - 12:08 — phoboskitty (not verified)sigh....
why is America turning into a crazy fundamentalist state out of the Hand Maid's Tale??
seriously
this is so crazy. to use,
Fri, 01/15/2010 - 14:26 — Anonymous (not verified)this is so crazy. to use, mis-use this label, it is so stupid. they should never blur the line of what a true sex-offender really is. its a real shame and just bad policy.
true insanity. a vicious
Fri, 01/15/2010 - 17:37 — Anonymous (not verified)true insanity. a vicious domination of women.
when will we work towards compassion instead of hatred,fear and so many forms of enslavement?
Oh no! this is terrible, on
Fri, 01/15/2010 - 19:10 — Anonymous (not verified)Oh no! this is terrible, on top of what happened to this woman to end up in prostitution at 13. Injustice after injustice.
Just a guess but that
Fri, 01/15/2010 - 19:19 — windskull (not verified)Just a guess but that judges name is likely Priscilla Owen(s)
one more way to oppress
Fri, 01/15/2010 - 20:55 — emccready (not verified)one more way to oppress women....just saw the movie Back Yard ...Mexican official entry for consideration for the Oscar.... so many women - including sex workers in Juarez killed...but not just there. Shows how politicians don't care one iota about these women or solving the crimes against them...
so now let's criminalize them? Disgusting! Horrible!
It'a a Police State. It's
Fri, 01/15/2010 - 23:24 — Gary (not verified)It'a a Police State. It's not heading thataway. It is there already, has been for some time, in fact. Can nobody see that?
Justice? Land of the free?
Sat, 01/16/2010 - 01:37 — Gordon UK (not verified)Justice? Land of the free? Sounds more like the fundamentalism we have seen elsewhere.
Shouldn't both parties to a
Sat, 01/16/2010 - 01:54 — Anonymous (not verified)Shouldn't both parties to a "sex crime" be charged equally?
And wouldn't that make Louisiana senator (and user of prostitutes) David Vitter a sex offender as well?
Here's the darkest theory -
Sat, 01/16/2010 - 08:11 — Anonymous (not verified)Here's the darkest theory - maybe the 'authorities' resist changing the law because they are really misogynists. By labeling New Orleans sex workers as criminals, the women are forced to continue in their trade. That leads to lots of prostitutes being readily available for those 'johns' who seek their 'services'.
That ain't no dark theory.
Sat, 01/16/2010 - 09:47 — Anonymous (not verified)That ain't no dark theory. I'd say labeling anyone as a criminal can be exceptionally lucrative. Criminal justice has long been "troubled" since antiquity; whether as vindictive jackboots, political warriors or more benignly, community servants.
These girls need collective bargaining, should attempt to work inside as this has been shown to be safer then walking the street, health care, housing, treatment for addictions and so on.
Why we do not LEGALIZE the
Sat, 01/16/2010 - 14:01 — Anonymous (not verified)Why we do not LEGALIZE the world's oldest profession and regulate, tax and sanitize it? It is a victim less "crime" and has no impact on the society unless it is criminalized which brings about all sorts of abuse, slavery and tragedies.
It seems scarce resources are wasted on issues which has no harm to society including minor drugs such as pot, other narcotics which, if legalized, would have no more harm than alcohol and cigarettes. Hopefully the nation learn from Germany and California by legalizing beneficial conduct of the individuals for making society a better place, raise pleasure revenues for governments and use the funds to regulate high crimes and misdemeanors such as banking fraud, political fraud of wars and graft.... Best to you all rational thinkers....
I hope then that every
Sun, 01/17/2010 - 02:29 — Anonymous (not verified)I hope then that every singel client of every one of these women is also registered as a sex offender...this is a disgusting abuse of power by a corrupt system.
NOPD has a long history of
Sun, 01/17/2010 - 09:18 — morgan1 (not verified)NOPD has a long history of ineptness and corruption. It is easier to pursue victimless crimes than it is to solve murder, robbery, and assaults. Dirty cops are a dime a dozen throughout all police forces in the US but in NO they are blatant and proud of it. That also applies to their politicians and govt as a whole. The city and the state needs a complete redo as it is still one of the most racist states left in the Union.