| Laws like these—sometimes called “manifesting” for the purpose of prostitution, sometimes “loitering” for prostitution purposes—are common in cities and states around the country. But there’s been a growing movement against these laws, which make it easy for police to hassle and arrest people without cause.
In 2021, New York state repealed its loitering for prostitution statute. California did the same in 2022.
Such laws basically let police arrest people that look to cops like they’re sex workers—a situation that has led some opponents to label them “walking while trans” laws, given how likely they are to be used against transgender people. Police may also use them to arrest people who have previous prostitution convictions, or anyone whom they think is dressed too provocatively or lingering on the street too long. The criteria for arrest depends much more on what cops think is going on than what’s actually going on.
This can lead to their use against people who aren’t engaged in prostitution at all. Or it may lead to police arresting sex workers who, yes, sometimes engage in prostitution, but without having to actually prove that they’re doing so at the time of arrest.
In other words, it lets police circumvent due process.
The Dallas statute specifically stated that “among the circumstances which may be considered” a violation is “that such person is a known prostitute or panderer.”
Other circumstances include “repeatedly beckon[ing] to, stop[ping] or attempt[ing] to stop, or engag[ing] passers-by in conversation, or…to stop motor vehicle operators by hailing, waving of arms, or any other bodily gesture.”
The case that led to the law being struck down involved the arrest of Iqbal Jivani, who “was in a known prostitution area and stopped to engage passers-by in conversation,” per a police complaint. Jivani’s lawyer argued that the arrest violated Jivani’s Fourth Amendment rights.
“Municipal Court Judge Jay Robinson found that the charge did not violate the Fourth Amendment, but said the ordinance was unconstitutionally vague and overbroad,” reports The Dallas Morning News. “The Dallas city attorney’s office appealed, and Wade affirmed Robinson’s ruling.”
“Everything about this ordinance is highly dependent on the mindset of an arresting officer,” wrote Judge Wade. Under the right circumstances, she noted, a woman in a high-crime area could be arrested for trying “to summon a cab if a police officer is watching.” |