The hotlink in the OP’s post is to a story about a fire, but I did manage to find some information about the case in Elgin, Illinois. This letter to the editor from an advocacy group for providers called Sex Workers Outreach Project-Chicago was especially enlightening:
"Elgin police should not have charged woman in hotel battery"
Without more information, it's hard to say why the provider in Elgin was charged with prostitution. I've read five articles about the case and none of them explain the police's reasoning. But I can venture two guesses based on my experiences: Either she refused to cooperate in the investigation of the client or she lied about her connection with him. It's possible that after making the initial report of the assault she got cold feet and didn't want to pursue the case against the client. The cops may have threatened to prosecute her for prostitution if she didn't cooperate and when she refused, they filed the case against her.
The other scenario would be she told a made-up story to the police so as to not incriminate herself as a prostitute. The cops could have seen through her story and charged her, in effect, with the crime of POTP (pissing off the police). (I just finished a case like that.)
Although I hate the police with a passion, I doubt they pursued the case against the girl in Elgin out of sheer spite, or out of over-zealousness. Police are like fisherman. They catch a little fish, then they may use it as bait to catch a bigger fish. (For example, LE may arrest a provider for prostitution, then threaten to jail her unless she gives evidence against her pimp.) So my experience is if a provider makes a report of a violent crime to the police, the police will not pursue a prostitution case against the girl because they want her cooperation in the investigation of the assailant.
Unfortunately, every few months a DFW member provider is kidnapped, raped, or otherwise brutalized. Some of these events are discussed here, but most are not. Some choose to make a report to the police, but most do not.
It's alarming how common these crimes are, and it's disturbing how many providers refuse to make a police report because they're afraid of exposing their profession to LE or maybe people in their personal lives. They may think that making a report won't erase the crime, and that's true. But the difference between jungle law and the rule of law is we look out for others. Sure, self-interest is our primary motivation, and it should be. But part of us should care what happens to others. It's what makes us human and distinguishes us from lower forms of life. That's why I encourage any provider who's victimized by a violent client to go to the police. If she doesn't, she's partially responsible for what happens to the other victim or victims, in my view.
btw, while we're on the topic of providers making reports to the police, I'll point out something not widely know, I think: Under Texas law, a provider or hobbyist may be granted what the criminal justice system calls 'transactional immunity' for giving testimony or other evidence against the other party to the prostitution offense:
Quote:
TEXAS PENAL CODE SEC. 43.06. ACCOMPLICE WITNESS; TESTIMONY AND IMMUNITY.
(a) A party to an offense under this subchapter [i.e., laws regarding prostitution] may be required to furnish evidence or testify about the offense.
(b) A party to an offense under this subchapter may not be prosecuted for any offense about which he is required to furnish evidence or testify, and the evidence and testimony may not be used against the party in any adjudicatory proceeding except a prosecution for aggravated perjury.
(c) For purposes of this section, "adjudicatory proceeding" means a proceeding before a court or any other agency of government in which the legal rights, powers, duties, or privileges of specified parties are determined.
(d) A conviction under this subchapter may be had upon the uncorroborated testimony of a party to the offense.
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See
Texas Penal Code § 43.06.
I don't think, as a practical matter, that this law comes up often, but it does come up, usually in the context of providers testifying against whorehouse owners. But you should be aware of this law in case you're naive enough to think your paid sex partner would implicate his- or herself by ratting you out.