| But keeping sex work customers criminalized keeps in place many of the harms of total criminalization. The sex industry must still operate underground, which makes it more difficult for sex workers to work safely and independently. Sex workers are still barred from advertising their services. Customers are still reluctant to be screened. And cops still spend time ferreting out and punishing people for consensual sex instead of focusing on sex crimes where someone is actually being victimized.
A recent study of prostitution laws in European countries found full decriminalization or legalization of prostitution linked to lower rape rates, while countries that instituted the Nordic model during the study period saw their rates of sexual violence go up. “Among the prostitution prohibition models, the Nordic model has a stronger effect on increasing rape than criminalization does,” wrote the researchers in a paper published in The Journal of Law and Economics.
Most sex worker rights advocates want full decriminalization of prostitution between consenting adults.
The Maine measure wouldn’t even fully decriminalize engaging in sex work.
The measure keeps in place the crime of promoting prostitution (only renamed as “promoting commercial sexual exploitation”), which includes “publicly soliciting patrons for commercial sexual exploitation.” This is defined as making “an offer, made in a public place, to engage in a sexual act or sexual contact…in return for a pecuniary benefit.” This criminalizes things like soliciting on the streets, obviously, as well as things like quietly offering paid sex to someone in a private conversation at a bar or club. And since sex work advertising would still be illegal, too, basically any way of actually finding customers could get sex workers in trouble—and encourage reliance on pimps.
Promoting commercial sexual exploitation would also include “causing or aiding another to commit or engage in sexual conduct or sexual acts in exchange for a pecuniary benefit, other than as a patron.” Laws like these are often used to go after sex workers working with one another (for instance, a woman who posts an ad for paid sex with her and a consenting friend or a sex worker who drops off another sex worker to see a client).
“Leasing or otherwise permitting a place controlled by the defendant” to be used for prostitution would also count as promoting commercial sexual exploitation—making sex workers who wanted to work together in the same location for safety purposes guilty.
Removing criminal penalties for prostitution in some circumstances is a good step. But this law would still exacerbate harm against sex workers and lead to their persecution by law enforcement.
And even in this mild form, the bill is not guaranteed to become law. “It still faces votes in both chambers, and Democratic Gov. Janet Mills vetoed a similar bill in 2021,” noted the Bangor Daily News. Mills is a former prosecutor and state attorney general and “could be the major obstacle to the bill this time as well.”
For more on state attempts at prostitution law reform this year, see: “States Try To Reform Prostitution Laws—for Better and Worse.” |