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Prostitutes use Web as new `street corner'
More work in suburbs, with cheaper motels, thin police resources
Saturday, September 30, 2006
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Dressed in a revealing halter-top, the 28-year-old woman sits in handcuffs on a motel-room bed in Des Plaines. Nearby, undercover police officers examine her modern-day tool of the trade: an Apple iBook.

“Show us your Web site,” demands Cmdr. Matt Hicks. “We know you are on there.”

Such encounters underscore the new public face of an old profession. Instead of flashing their skin on a street corner, women can work from a motel, armed with a cellphone and a laptop computer.

Traditionally, prostitutes who billed themselves as escorts advertised in alternative weeklies, entertainment-oriented magazines and other publications. Now a simple Web site can be launched for less than the price of a print ad, authorities say.

“The Internet is the street corner of the 21st Century,” said Sgt. Gary Darrow, head of special investigations for the Schaumburg Police Department. “It's easy, it's anonymous and it's free.”

As a result, police throughout the suburbs say the Web is fueling a prostitution business that is both difficult to detect and hard to enforce. Prostitutes can easily be found online in cities such as Naperville, North Chicago, Joliet, Evanston, Schaumburg and South Holland.

Across the country, police are focusing on the Internet. In Pennsylvania, 12 women were recently charged with prostitution after an investigation into advertisements they posted online. Similar stings have been conducted in San Francisco, Baltimore, Oklahoma City and elsewhere.

Robyn Few, founder of the San Francisco-based Sex Workers Outreach Project, said suburban prostitution rings are run in ways similar to any small independent business.

“The Internet gave women and men a tool to become their own boss,” she said. “I look at prostitutes as entrepreneurs. People go into business for themselves.”

Many prostitutes tour the country, staying in a motel in or near a city for one to two weeks at a time, Few said. Others work out of their homes or for regional sex services that use computers to advertise, land clients and make appointments.

Chicago Tribune

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