Technology8 mins ago
Brothels
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Are brothels, or girls standing on the corner, legal?
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No best answer has yet been selected by smurfchops. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.They get away with it because the police are supposedly busy chasing hardened criminals. The main problem with prostitution is that while there is a demand for it then there will always be people willing to supply it. If it were legalised and regulated it would be much easier to police and safer for all involved in the "industry".
I used to live in an area of Leicester renowned for the street corner prostitutes and I hated it,men would pull up next to me when I was walking to the shop in daylight with my kids and ask if I wanted "business",it was disgusting! I moved away from the area as soon as I was financially able to.
I used to live in an area of Leicester renowned for the street corner prostitutes and I hated it,men would pull up next to me when I was walking to the shop in daylight with my kids and ask if I wanted "business",it was disgusting! I moved away from the area as soon as I was financially able to.
Prostitution in itself is NOT illegal in the UK.
Soliciting, living off immoral earnings and a whole rook of other offences may apply however.
http://www.sw5.info/law.htm
Soliciting, living off immoral earnings and a whole rook of other offences may apply however.
http://www.sw5.info/law.htm
I love the fact the Government calls them Common Prostitutes lol.....
This is Sex Workers and The Law from Release and they have a PDF with all the laws aswell....
http://www.release.org.uk/store/showItem.php?c ategory=publications&id=3
Lincolns Inn anyone???
This is Sex Workers and The Law from Release and they have a PDF with all the laws aswell....
http://www.release.org.uk/store/showItem.php?c ategory=publications&id=3
Lincolns Inn anyone???
A summary of Ethels link:
As said above, prostitution - exchanging participation in sexual activities for money or other goods - has always been legal in the UK. The introduction of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 made some changes.
The laws on working on the street have become 'gender neutral'. Anyone, male or female, on the street (or on a balcony or in a window) can be found guilty of soliciting for the purpose of prostitution.
Anyone kerb-crawling (approaching other people from or near a vehicle they've just got out of for the purpose of prostitution) is particularly at risk, not least as their vehicle can now be seized.
Working alone indoors, or for an agency or in a brothel remains legal, provided the worker is at least 18. Buying sex from them is also legal.
'Pimping', running an agency or brothel is illegal. But controlling another adult's prostitution is now only illegal if you gain from it (or know that someone else does). Looked at another way, gaining from someone else's prostitution is now legal: it's the control for gain that's illegal.
As said above, prostitution - exchanging participation in sexual activities for money or other goods - has always been legal in the UK. The introduction of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 made some changes.
The laws on working on the street have become 'gender neutral'. Anyone, male or female, on the street (or on a balcony or in a window) can be found guilty of soliciting for the purpose of prostitution.
Anyone kerb-crawling (approaching other people from or near a vehicle they've just got out of for the purpose of prostitution) is particularly at risk, not least as their vehicle can now be seized.
Working alone indoors, or for an agency or in a brothel remains legal, provided the worker is at least 18. Buying sex from them is also legal.
'Pimping', running an agency or brothel is illegal. But controlling another adult's prostitution is now only illegal if you gain from it (or know that someone else does). Looked at another way, gaining from someone else's prostitution is now legal: it's the control for gain that's illegal.
I used to work for a city council and they cleared up the red light district by hiring a 'Prostitution' solicitor who removed them from their houses under a clause in the original deeds to the properties stating the occupier of the house could not 'make bricks, have a fairground, mine (as in coal mine) or run a brothel' I kid you not!