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A New Approach – The John School

From CNN World News

NASHVILLE, Tennessee (CNN) — The accused came from all walks of life: Retirees, dads and twentysomethings. An engineer, a business owner and an auto worker. A man in a wheelchair. Men in need of Spanish or Farsi translators.

Brett Beasley, with Nashville’s Health Department, educates men arrested for trying to buy sex about STDs.

About 40 men somberly entered a classroom on a recent Saturday morning. About half of them wore shiny wedding bands.

All had tried to buy a prostitute’s services and were caught by police. It was their first offense, and a county court referred them to a one-day program called the John School. It’s a program run by volunteers and city officials in conjunction with Magdalene House, a nonprofit that works to get prostitutes off the streets.

“Prostitution doesn’t discriminate,” said Kenny Baker, a cognitive behavioral therapist who is the program’s director. “Most of these men don’t have a prior criminal history, so our goal is to help these folks understand why they put themselves in a bad position, to prevent it from happening again.”

Set in a church in Nashville, Tennessee, the John School is led by former prostitutes, health experts, psychologists and law enforcement officers who talk to — and at times berate — the men about the risks of hiring a prostitute.

Prostitution is based on the law of supply and demand. The thinking is: Women won’t stop selling sex until men stop buying.

So Nashville and a growing number of cities are shifting their focus from locking up suppliers to educating buyers. Across the country, about 50 communities are using John Schools. Atlanta, Georgia, and Baltimore, Maryland, are among dozens more cities that plan to launch similar programs by the end of the year. See where the John Schools are »

“It will make them [offenders] see that this is not a victimless crime, and they are contributing to the exploitation of women,” said Stephanie Davis, policy adviser on women’s issues at the mayor’s office in Atlanta. “It’s hurting them, the man, and it’s hurting their families and its hurting the community.”

No comprehensive effort has been made to track the numbers, but experts estimate 1 million to 2 million prostitutes work in the United States. The FBI’s 2007 Uniform Crime Report lists about 78,000 arrests for prostitution and commercialized vice, but experts say those numbers are extremely conservative because many sex workers and johns aren’t caught.

Experts add that easy accessibility to prostitutes and pornography on the Internet are feeding the problem.

In most communities, prostitution has been a one-sided battle focused on the women who offer sex. Their customers, when they are arrested, are usually cited for a misdemeanor and fined.

By comparison, prostitutes are often charged with more severe sentences and jailed for months, depending on the offense.

But in Nashville, the johns’ faces are shown on a police Web site.

For decades, Nashville battled prostitution by arresting women on the streets and through stings. Still, the problem persisted, irritating business owners and residents.

In the early 1990s, Nashville’s mayor helped launch the John School with the help of the Magdalene House, public defenders, prosecutors and police officers. Nashville became one of the first major cities in the U.S. to focus on the customers, predominantly men.

Only first-time offenders who solicit an adult are eligible for John School. Johns who pick up minors are not eligible and face much tougher sentences.

“If you get caught again and you get me, I will guarantee to put you in jail,” warned Antoinette Welch, a local prosecutor, in speaking to the men in the class. “I’ve had men cry to me that they will lose their jobs or their wives, but you’re all grown up and you make your own decisions.”

The men listened carefully as Welch talked about their records; many had not yet told their wives or significant others about their arrest.

If the john pleads guilty, pays a $250 fee and completes the course without re-offending, the charge can be dismissed after a year. The money paid by the john goes to Magdalene House; the program doesn’t cost taxpayers any money. John School models in other communities may differ.

A woman who called herself Alexis, a 35-year-old former prostitute with dark hair and bright blue eyes, spoke to the men as the class came to an end. Four years ago, she left the streets and now works at a factory.

By the age of 10, Alexis had learned to barter with sex with her stepfather. In her 20s, she found herself hooked on drugs and selling her body. She was arrested more than 80 times. She was hospitalized after someone shot her on the job.

As she told her story, the men were silent. A few blushed, while others stared at the floor.

“These gentlemen are no different than I was on the streets,” she said. “I think everyone has to look at the void they are trying to fill.”

One john, a father of two with salt-and-pepper hair, found himself near tears after Alexis spoke. In July, he tried to pick up a prostitute through Craigslist. He said he was depressed and having problems with his wife.

“I’m so embarrassed,” he said. “These girls are somebody’s daughters. I have a daughter.”

Some evidence suggests that John Schools are working. A 2008 government study looked at the John School program in San Francisco, California. It’s one of the largest programs in the country; more than 7,000 johns have attended since 1995.

According to the study, the re-arrest rate fell sharply after the school was launched, and stayed more than 30 percent lower for 10 years afterward.

But critics call John School a slap on the wrist. On Saturday, one john abandoned the classroom.

Carol Leigh, who founded the Sex Workers Outreach Project, a group that promotes legalizing prostitution in California, said she doesn’t believe the program is an effective deterrent. Last year, she helped advocate on behalf of a law known as Proposition K that would legalize prostitution in San Fransisco. The proposal was rejected by the city.

“John School doesn’t do that much,” said Leigh, who has worked as a prostitute. “The reality is they aren’t spending that much time on the johns and they will just go and re-offend at other venues. This also doesn’t target the violent offenders who are the real problem.”

Melissa Farley, head of the nonprofit group Prostitution Research and Education in San Fransisco, believes johns deserve stronger punishment like longer prison sentences.

A recent study she conducted among johns in Chicago, Illinois, found that 41 percent of them said John School would deter them from buying sex, compared with 92 percent who said being placed on a sex offender registry would scare them from re-offending.

Nashville officials said they haven’t tracked recidivism rates in their city, but the school’s program director said it’s probably deterring a third of the offenders in each class.

At least one college educated, 47-year-old john’s attitude appeared to change on a recent Saturday.

After class he wrote, “There is no good part. I would rather be with my wife. This was quick but it wasn’t worth it.”

August 27, 2009 - Posted by | Community, Crime, Customer Service, Entertainment, Family Issues, Mating Behavior, Relationships, Safety, Women's Issues

9 Comments »

  1. Prostitution is the poster child of victimless crimes. What two consenting adults do behind closed doors is no one else’s business.

    In Lawrence v. Texas, the Supreme Court ruled that moral indignation was not a sufficient reason to ban private homosexual activity between consenting adults — such a ban must serve a compelling public interest. So to avoid applying Lawrence v. Texas to prostitution, all sorts of “compelling” reasons for banning prostitution have been invented, e.g., the hookers are drug addicts, they have been “trafficked,” they are children, they are illegal immigrants, they are exploited and abused by pimps and johns, they are victims of childhood incest, etc., though none of these conditions necessarily applies to any particular situation. By this line of reasoning of guilt by association, there are stronger reasons for banning homosexual activity than for banning prostitution. For example, the gay community’s denial of a strong connection between homosexuality and pedophilia is a big lie. The overwhelming majority of pedophile priests are gay. There is an organization called the “North American Man/Boy Love Association” — I have never heard of a NAMGLA or NAWBLA. Also, gay activity is a disproportionate cause of the transmission of sexual diseases, including AIDS.

    It is claimed that prostitutes are “selling their bodies.” But don’t strippers, porn stars, and even artists’ models also “sell their bodies”?

    I have never looked down upon hookers — I realize that men need sex and that the hookers sell a useful service.

    These governmental anti–prostitution activities are making war on our private, personal lives.

    Larry Fafarman's avatar Comment by Larry Fafarman | August 28, 2009 | Reply

  2. Larry, I couldn’t disagree with you more. When I worked with rape victims, occasionally they were “working girls”. I never met one single prostitute who liked what she was doing. Most of them had been introduced to sex at an early age by some much older male relative, most of them had run away from home or left school for family reasons and had few employable skills and lacked some of the basics – like showing up, like showing up on time – necessary for the normal 8 – 5 world.

    The girls and women I met in the life would leave it in a heartbeat if they could. They meet some very scary men. They don’t love what they are doing, they do what they do for the money, and they often have “issues” in their own personal sexual lives because of what they do. Many deaden themselves with drugs to be able to do their “work”.

    Consent? How about desperation? Desperate to pay the rent, desperate to take care of their babies, desperate to feed themselves, and then desperate to feed the habit that makes their work possible. It’s a nasty business to be in. They have a short shelf-life. They face beatings and rapes at best. Serial killers have a field day with prostitutes; many bottom feeders prey on these working girls.

    The John school is a first step in breaking the male fantasy that makes prostitution so lucrative. Once the women are seen as living, breathing people, the lure is not so strong.

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | August 28, 2009 | Reply

    • –“I never met one single prostitute who liked what she was doing.”–

      I read an interview of a hooker in the legal red-light district of Tijuana who said that her customers treated her well and that she did not mind the sex. Anyway, whether or not hookers like their jobs, it is still none of your business.

      –“They face beatings and rapes at best. Serial killers have a field day with prostitutes”–

      You are a hypocrite because keeping prostitution illegal forces hookers into the shadows where the dangers to them are enormously increased.

      No one is invading your bedroom and telling you what you can and cannot do there. Get the hell out of our private lives.

      Larry Fafarman's avatar Comment by Larry Fafarman | August 28, 2009 | Reply

  3. You sound very cranky. Must’ve touched a nerve. Hey, it’s my blog, I call it as I see it. You can loose all your hostility on your own blog. You are entitled to your OPINION

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | August 29, 2009 | Reply

  4. This shouldn’t even be up for discussion. Prison should only be for violent people. Crimes against person and property. Prositution should be legalized PERIOD. In Nevada where it’s legal you have protected sex and std testing done routinely; hence they have lower std’s than prostitutes in an unregulated market. Netherlands has legalized prostitution and there is no problem. This lady who want’s to have Johns listed as sexual predators is crazy. I don’t doubt she is a right wing extremist or republcian or both.

    Anonymous's avatar Comment by Anonymous | August 30, 2009 | Reply

  5. Ludicrous.

    I’m SO glad I live very close to Canada where prostitution is legal.

    No, prostitutes generally don’t like what they do for a living, but how many people do? I sure would rather have a real girlfriend, but we don’t all have the same options. So what are guys with no recourse for sex supposed to do? Freak out and go shoot up a bunch of innocent folks?

    The last time I checked, countries where prostitution was legal seemed to be doing ok. More likely, the problem is making sex work illegal. If it were legal, then everyone would be safer and healthier on all levels.

    Joe Mahma's avatar Comment by Joe Mahma | August 30, 2009 | Reply

  6. Cranky or not, I agree with Larry. Prostitution at its core is a consensual crime. A good book to read is “Ain’t Nobody’s Business if You Do: The Absurdity of Consensual Crimes in a Free Society”, by Peter McWilliams. Make prostitution legal and monitor it. Set up shelters and job training for those who were “forced” into it. Also, drug counseling, etc, etc. “Johns” would have to produce a valid ID and the women could have actual security rather than pimps and people who abuse them.
    As for your views Intlxpatr…You have a valid view, but I wouldn’t expect vitims of rape to have anything positive to say about the experience, “working girl” or not. Ie. The only prostitues you came into contact with were going to have a negitive view of it. That does not mean ALL prostitutes hate their jobs. Just my 2 cents.

    Matt Collier's avatar Comment by Matt Collier | August 30, 2009 | Reply

  7. Joe, Matt . . . You guys are using your REAL names????

    intlxpatr's avatar Comment by intlxpatr | August 30, 2009 | Reply

  8. I am using a Psudo-Name. Haha.

    Matt Collier's avatar Comment by Matt Collier | August 30, 2009 | Reply


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