A short caveat: My analysis in this post is limited to Texas state law only. Laws vary from state-to-state. To understand what the law is in your local jurisdiction, please consult a competent attorney where you live.
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Your question is really three questions. I'll answer them one at a time.
1. Provider ad disclaimers.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cinderbella
If it is legal to advertise yourself as an escort only and compensation is inferred for time only, then how does one get around this typical setup scenario?
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Your question isn't very clear, but I think you're asking whether a disclaimer in a provider's ad can prevent her from being convicted or even charged with prostitution. My answer is, 'OF COURSE NOT!' Your question inspired me to finally try to organize all the random thoughts on the topic that have been swirling in my tiny brain for years into one thread, which is here:
"Disclaimers in Provider Ads -- Do They Negate Criminal Liability?"
2. UC busts without mention of a sex act.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cinderbella
I ask this because I notice that from what I have heard about sting ops is that the girl is contacted off bp and undercover law enforcement tells her he has seen provider x and provider y and girl stupidly does not verify. Girl shows up in her car at hotel usually, but I am sure there are some where undercover LE shows up at her incall. Usually it's the hotel scenero. Undercover LE sticks his head inside her car and asks her rate. She states X.00 and immediately undercover LE asks something she will probably say no to such as: Do you perform a&*$? (word omitted). She says "No", and undercover LE says something to the effect: "Well X.OO is alot but I guess so this time". She is then motioned over to lobby and arrested, etc... Or she walks into hotel room, undercover LE says, "Your donation is here on the dresser, and steps away from her while saying over his shoulder, "All I want is a little h&%# (word ommited). She doesn't answer and is arrested.
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I've handled a LOT of prostitution cases, and I can count on one hand the number where the provider or hobbyist didn't mention a sex act. The SOP in 95% of the cases I've handled involved an agreement on an amount and an offer or acceptance regarding a named sex act, nearly always oral or anal sex.
Let's review. Under Texas law, a person can commit the offense of prostitution in any of four different ways:
(1)
making an offer to engage in sexual conduct for a fee,
(2)
accepting an offer to engage in sexual conduct for a fee,
(3)
soliciting a person in a public place to engage in sexual conduct for a fee, or
(4)
engaging in sexual conduct for a fee.
The core of your question seems to be: Can LE arrest a provider where there's no mention of a sex act? Well, yes. As I've written many times before, a cop can arrest you for anything, even picking your feet in Poughkeepsie. But being arrested on suspicion of having committed an offense and being convicted after a trial on the offense are two quite different things.
In your example, the fact that there was an ad, an in-person meeting between the provider and the UC cop, and a discussion of an hourly rate does not prove up the crime of prostitution under Texas state law because there wasn't an offer or acceptance regarding sexual conduct, which is required for liability under the statute.
One final word on this topic: While it's true that mention of a sex act was part of nearly all the cases I've handled, at the same time, in most of the cases in which I've represented a provider, the client told me there was NO mention of a sex act. However, once I obtained the audio tape, videotape, or offense report that showed such a mention, my provider-client's response nearly always was, "Oh, yeah! I remember that now!" Haha.
3. Fake information posted on the internet by LE
Quote:
Originally Posted by cinderbella
I guess what I am getting at is what if LE set up a phony info via google that if she did try to do some kind of screen he will check out and she avoids mentioning or answering above mentioned questions, is it common for LE to go to lengths to entrap a provider by purposely providing false searchable info and disregarding her attempt to not incriminate herself? I have a sinking feeling that the answer is yes and yes but had to ask anyway. Have you heard of this occuring?
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There's been a number of threads lately where providers have "screened by Google" and then have gotten themselves busted. To me, the question isn't "Can the cops put fake shit on the internet?," because the answer to this question seems obvious to me -- "OF COURSE!" Rather, the question is "Why the fuck are you using Google to screen?"
To answer my own question, I sought out a volunteer provider who allowed me to hook her up to ShysterJon's Magic Brainwave Machine. The machine printed out the following:
"I know that prostitution is a crime and I can spend time in jail if I'm arrested. I also know it's a different kind of crime because of the stigma society associates with prostitution. So if I'm arrested, I may find it hard or impossible to get credit at a reasonable interest rate, go to the school of my choosing, or marry the man I want to.
Accordingly, I know I need to screen very carefully to avoid getting arrested. So to screen I think I'll use (next to an episode of the Rush Limbaugh Show) the most unreliable source of information ever conceived by the human mind -- THE INTERNET. YEAH!!! I'll screen by running the guy's info through Google!"
Who am I to question such lucidity of thought, being a mere lawyer? But my pea-brain tells me that perhaps a better way to screen would be to check with two established, well-known, Eccie-member providers.