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Media and Public Appearances & Interviews

http://www.lvcitylife.com/articles/2007/12/13/news/local_news/iq_18460027.txt

http://noisyroom.net/blog/2008/01/23/i-interview-a-former-sex-slave/

http://pajamasmedia.com/phyllischesler/?cat=-208&s=jody+williams

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/30/opinion/edherb.php

http://www.lvrj.com/news/9612332.htmlhttp://www.pahrumpvalleytimes.com/2007/Sep-07-Fri-2007/news/16519321.html

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/27/opinion/27herbert.html?ex=1194235200&en=094d01adf7a5a7c5&ei=5070&emc=eta1

January 23rd, 2008 4:39 pm

An All-American Hero: Jody Williams, a Former Sex Slave.

NEWSFLASH! Jody Williams Talks About The Spitzer Scandal. And She Says Things that No One Else Is Saying.

Spitzer Should Also Apologize to the Prostitutes and Donate Money to their Recovery and Rehabilitation

Governor Spitzer does not seem to “grasp the fact that he’s done much more in this recent scandal than betray the trust of his wife and the duty of his office. We are not talking an affair here - we’re talking about the services of a prostitute who, for all we know, could be under the age of 18 and possibly even a sexual trafficking victim. What –does- everyone think that if an escort service is based on US soil and charges a lot of money that they don’t use trafficking victims or women who are forced into engaging into prostitution? Give me a break. ”

I am talking with Jody Williams, who helps women escape from prostitution. Here are her comments on the Spitzer Affair.

I personally ran one of the highest paid escort services in Los Angeles in the 1980’s right alongside Alex, The Beverly Hills Madam. I was in fact dubbed the High Tech Madam because of using sophistated technology in my work before the internet was even invented. Since retiring I’ve devoted my life to helping prostitutes escape sex work. Why? Because I know that men like Spitzer who make the laws are making laws that favor johns’ and pimps and that do not favor the prostitutes.

Has anyone ever asked why our government will spend approximately $2000 per prostitute to have them arrested, prosecuted and incarcerated and then simply kicked back onto the streets after release from prison when for roughly $500 per prostitute they could offer them proven techniques and services of rehabiliation that would get them into new, legit, lives where they don’t have to turn tricks, be in porno or live out the rest of their days on SSI or welfare? Because if we started getting these women into becoming respectable members of society instead of revolving through the system as victims - then their tales about abuse and exploitation at the hands of men like Spitzer would not continue to be ignored.

Spitzer is apologizing to his wife and to the press - but where is his apology to the actual prostitute? Wait a minute - talk is cheap - where is his donation to a group that would help her get out of prostitution and into a new life ? We as a public don’t ask for that because we assume that this escort is over 18 and not a victim of some kind - but we don’t have proof of that. And who are we to believe? Spitzer who doesn’t want to go to jail and wants to save his marriage and career? Which is another fact everyone seems to be missing - men like Spitzer are the ones creating these laws that put women in jail for prostitution that are doing so simply to feed their kids, support a drug habit while no funding is available for rehab facilities for her to check into, or is being forced through a lack of education and support services to not have any other option or by an actual pimp/trafficker into doing this - while john legislation is being opposed that would put men in jail for engaging in the same act totally voluntarily I need to add.

Enough with the cheap apologies - I want to see men like this donate publically the same amount of money they spent on a good time to be donated into groups that help these women get rehabilitated. Groups that the government won’t fund (gee I wonder why). Maybe because guys like Spitzer and in charge of the money don’t seem to think these women are victims - much like I imagine if you poll a few rapists they might say the same about their victims as well. Ever heard a rapist who didn’t say his victim didn’t “enjoy it” or “ask for it” or “really wanted it”. Why isn’t the press catching on? These johns are saying the same things about their prostitutes to avoid responsibility for their actions. Prostitution isn’t sex anymore than rape is sex or child molesting is sex.

Jody Williams - Trafficking and Prostitution Services - Nevada www.tapsdirectory.org (775) 482-3285

ORIGINAL STORY
According to Las Vegas ex-prostitute Jody Williams, founder of Sex Workers Anonymous, we should compare the “promotion of prostitution with the way the tobacco companies market cigarettes. “They’re taking advantage of your ignorance of the industry,” she told the Pahrump Valley Times on September 7, 2007 at a press conference.

Williams said ex-prostitutes came to her organization suffering from a variety of physical and emotional disorders. “Women in prostitution suffer from the same combat stress that Vietnam and combat vets do, but they have fewer services than vets do,” she said.

The illegal pimps are replaced by “the legal pimps” in the brothels, Williams charged.

“The current law in Nevada which allows legal prostitution and talks about wanting them to use their earnings to generate tax dollars for the state of Nevada actually makes the state of Nevada a third pimp for these women,” Williams said.

I do not believe that any Presidential candidate has been seriously questioned about this issue–not in the recent Nevada primaries, and not elsewhere. They should be–because the issue is that of slavery. It is easy to decry historical examples of the human slave trade but we have an even bigger global slave trade currently underway: that of sexual slavery.

This is the saddest subject for me and one about which I know too much. I have been writing about this subject from the mid 1970s on and I continued to soldier on during the great feminist Sex Wars when feminist anti-prostitution abolitionists /anti-pornography activists were demonized as puritanical man-haters who were willing to endanger abortion rights, the First Ammendment, and woman’s sexual freedom . In turn, the anti-Censorship activists were also demonized as faux-feminists, heartless Stalinists, and First Ammendment fanatics.

Neither side took any prisoners. Both sides made important points. I made it a point not to demonize anyone and to try to keep working with everyone. Outsiders often under-estimate the ferocity of this struggle among American feminists. In the short run, the abolitionists lost, both in the universities and in feminist movement circles.

Now, thirty-three years later, most feminists on both sides of the aisle understand that sexual slavery (or “trafficking”) cannot be confused with sexual freedom. And many feminists work on legislation for the American government that is meant to enforce the laws against pimps and sometimes against Johns. Some of these feminists are also God-fearing conservatives; some are not. Some are abolitionist refugees from the great feminist Sex Wars or from the domestic violence shelter movement.

In the early 1990s, I read every study and every book about prostitution and about serial murder that I could find. Why? Because I was putting together a “dream-team” for Aileen Carol Wuornos, the so-called first woman serial killer in Florida. (This is the woman whom Charlize Theron brilliantly impersonated in the film Monster). Although Wuornos had wanted us to testify, her lawyer, a public defender named Trish Jenkins, never called my “dream team .” This omission became one of the grounds upon which her death sentence was appealed. Of course, after a decade on Death Row, the same state that had executed Ted Bundy executed Wuornos too. I wrote a book about her but I never published it. That’s a story for another day but suffice it to say: I told the story through her eyes. And yes, I corresponded with and met her and an incredibly sordid cast of Florida scavengers and pirates.

I learned how dangerous “the (prostituted) life” really is, how prostituted women become third- and fourth-class citizens, isolated, practically invisible, and how hard it is to ever return to “straight” life. Prostituted women turn to drugs and drink in order to endure the soul-scorching “work.” They do not become rich. Girls are also no longer as desirable or as marketable once they look older than twenty five. Twelve-year olds (or those who can pass for twelve) are in high demand.

Prostituted women are also the ones whom serial killers prey upon and whom college-age men and kinky Johns gang-rape, torture, rob, and kill. Despite all the myths and lies, there is nothing glamorous about this life. If this were truly desirable work, the daughters of millionnaires would swell the ranks–and this is not the case.

I do not favor legalizing prostitution. It is not a “victim-less” crime. The prostitutes are the victims. (Of course, I do not favor fining or jailing prostitutes; Johns, perhaps, but not prostitutes).

The real heroes are the prostituted women who have themselves miraculously escaped from slavery and who turn right around and help other girls and women to do so. Even the Biblical Moses was reared as a Prince of Egypt; liberators may require just such training in order to endure what a struggle for liberation entails. Slaves–? They turn on each other and on their liberators too. A slave-liberator? They are rare.

Jody Williams is one such incredible hero. How many of us would dare to return to Hell over and over again, risking everything? And, where is “north” for a sex slave on the run? Jody insisted on using her real name for this interview. She lives in Las Vegas. Once Jody began organizing, helping other prostitutes escape, and naming names, she endangered herself in terrifying ways. According to Williams, police and other state officials in Las Vegas personally profit from both legal and illegal prostitution.

Hence, her phone lines were cut as were her computer cable wires. Her electricity and water were mysteriously shut off–and were only restored with the intercesson of a sympathetic elected official. Her daughter was run down in broad daylight by a car and sustained many broken bones.

These things all happened within 24-60 hours after she participasted in a press conference about sex trafficking last fall in Las Vegas. Jody’s own health has been seriously compromised. Despite this, she soldiers on against extraordinary odds.

Here is part of an interview I conducted with her on the phone and via email. If you are moved by reading this and wish to make a donation to her work, please contact me at my Blogsite and I will put her in touch with you.

Phyllis: How old are you? What is your educational background?

Jody: I’m 47 years old now. I left high school at 15 and started community college at 16. I dropped out at 19 to be in the sex industry. I’m now a few classes away from my BA degree.

Phyllis: Where did you grow up? What is your family background?

Jody: I grew up in Los Angeles and left home because I could not cope with living with my mentally ill abusive mother any longer. I got a job as a cocktail waitress so I could continue on with college after my father ripped off my college money. It was there I met the people who indoctrinated me into the sex industry. This was in Tarzana, CA about 1980.

Phyllis: What do you tell people who insist that prostitution is a “choice?”

Jody: One could argue that when a man says he’ll kill your kids in the other bedroom if you scream for help while he rapes you and you decide to protect the children to cooperate–that this means you were not raped. For a long time when I thought about quitting, I knew it would mean I could potentially be hurt and/or killed or set up with the police if I did so. This may mean I “chose” not to take that kind of punishment by continuing–but I wouldn’t call that a choice. Choice means having “other options.” Sometimes you don’t have other options even when a gun isn’t pointed directly at your head.

Phyllis: How did you finally manage to escape from the sex industry?

Jody: I tried for years to find help to get out of the sex industry - but found I could not do it without help and I couldn’t find the help I needed. I did not abuse drugs and the only programs offered at that time were drug programs. I was lucky enough to meet a group of Veterans who were able to help me through the adjustment through the 12 steps of Narcotics Anonymous and through their understanding of PTSD.

Phyllis: What set you on your current path of helping other women who want to escape?

Jody: When I went back to some old friends to do “amends” I found everyone was either dead, dying or in prison and I was the only one left basically. I realized we needed to make help more available.

Phyllis: Why do women return to the sex industry after they’ve tried hard to leave it behind?

Jody: I don’t believe women “change their mind” to return. I think they sometimes second guess their decision out of fear that someone may come to harm if they don’t return. I think sometimes the drugs wear off and it’s the detox talking. Sometimes it’s depression setting in which makes you doubt everything. Sometimes it’s the brainwashing kicking in the pimps have programmed there to return the women like homing pigeons. So when a woman starts talking about “returning” I say we need to carefully examine where those feelings are coming from. It’s never been really them wanting to go back either.

Phyllis: What is happening for you right now, after the fallout from going public last fall?

Jody: After being hit by that car, my daughter has been confined to total bedrest. So my finances are non-existent right now. This gives me a choice - either stop my work helping these women or start reaching out to outside funding sources for help. Actually this is a blessing in disguise. If I were to have died - then my work would have ceased entirely.

I realized after being so sick like this that I need to set up a system that will go on after I die to help these women - so that’s what I’m working on now. I’ve had more difficulties with the police than I can tell you about. I had trouble with the police when I was in the business and now that I’m out of it trying to help women.

Phyllis: How do you financially manage to do rescue work?

Jody: I used to fund everything out of my paychecks - but the last couple of years I’ve been on SSI and can’t do that anyone. I’ve had to look into fund raising and it’s not something people want to donate to usually. I’m between a rock and a hard place with funding right now because of this problem.

Phyllis: Thank you so much for your time and for your amazing work

_____________________________

Pissing off the pimps
Former madam launches grass-roots group to help prostitutes who want to get off the streets
CAR TIRES SLASHED. Phone lines ripped out. The power cut off.

This is the price you pay for trying to help prostitutes in Las Vegas, says Jody Williams.

"There's always an initial moment of intimidation," said Williams, founder of the grass-roots group Trafficking and Prostitution Services. "But the pimps didn't scare me when I was in the business, so they certainly don't scare me now."

For six years, Williams worked as a prostitute and madam in Southern California. After being busted in 1985, she looked for a way out of the business -- with little success. There was Alcoholics Anonymous. And Narcotics Anonymous. But no help for people addicted to the money and power of the sex industry.

So Williams started Prostitutes Anonymous (now Sex Workers Anonymous) in 1987.

"I was in my 20s and making $30,000 a week," said Williams of her work as a madam. "I had more than one house. I had seven cars. Then all of a sudden I have the court system telling me that I have to go straight and get a job for 8 bucks an hour. I mean, I needed a little help wanting to do that and knowing how to do that."

Williams moved from Los Angeles to Las Vegas in 1996, in hopes of helping sex workers here. But she was not welcomed by the cops, courts and nonprofit organizations, she said. They ignored her or told her they weren't interested in her help.

"I have a history of helping sex workers since 1987," said Williams. "I have a reputation. It's not like I'm a stranger, but it was like I'd landed on Mars."

This fall, after the introduction of the Nevada Coalition Against Sex Trafficking, Williams decided to launch Trafficking and Prostitution Services. She said the Coalition Against Sex Trafficking wanted to focus on law, while she wanted to focus on helping sex workers directly.

"I wanted to focus on direct services to the victims," said Williams. "So I just said, 'Screw it!' I'll do it myself."

Williams runs Trafficking and Prostitution Services out of her cluttered condo in southwest Las Vegas. She gets about 10 referrals a week. She, in turn, refers the sex workers to counselors, lawyers and landlords who can give them a safe place to live. The group's website,
www.tapsdirectory.org, also includes a resource list and recommended reading and viewing.

"Without Jody's assistance, I might've given up," said Mary, a former street prostitute who was referred to Williams. "It's also nice to be able to talk to another survivor of the industry, to know that she knows what it's like. It's not pity. She's not pretending to understand. She actually knows what it's like on the streets."

Pimps don't seem to appreciate Williams' work as much as the prostitutes do. They've slashed her car tires, ripped out her phone lines and called the power company and somehow had her power cut off, she said.

But that's not going to deter Williams. Eventually, she wants Trafficking and Prostitution Services to be a well-connected network group that helps hundreds of sex workers in Las Vegas, without placing conditions (asking for full names, forcing religion on them or applying pressure to testify against pimps) on them.

"Part of the reason I started TAPS was to get past all the bureaucratic red tape and just focus on helping the victims," said Williams. "That's all I want to do: help the victims."

Matt O'Brien is a CityLife staff writer. He can be reached at 871-6780 ext. 350 or mobrien@lvcitylife.com.

TRAFFICKING AND PROSTITUTION SERVICES

Mission: To provide resources to sex workers who want to get out of the business

Services: Referrals, resource list, recommended reading and viewing, and more

Founded: October 2007

More info: www.tapsdirectory.org
_____________

July 27-Aug 2 Las Vegas Weekly - 2007

The Politics of a Prostitution Sting

What's the point? Are the laws protecting and empowering women?

_____________________________
The Politics of a Prostitution Sting

By Joshua Longobardy 


Illustration by Hawk Krall
When it comes to the exact number of women in Las Vegas who sell sex, no two accounts agree. What's for sure, however, is that there are thousands—more than three, and perhaps up to 10—and that this is a town of spectral prostitutes: streetwalkers, transvestites, crack whores and outcall strippers. There are girls with websites who charge $750 an hour, minimum of two hours, and conduct reference checks before meetings, and girls who'll give subpar head to anyone with $10 in his pocket. Little kittens who prance along Downtown, paranoid about the police, and brazen tigresses who prowl the Strip, looking for wealthy vacationers from out of state. China girls who specialize in erotic massages and happy endings, black girls who inspire car crashes along Tropicana Avenue with their tiny skirts, white girls with mere stars preserving their modesty on leaflets, and Latin girls driving to impious hotel rooms many, many miles from their Catholic upbringing. And there are in all certainty mature women, older than their customer's mothers, and girls not yet even 14 years old, still a solid decade away from womanhood.

Jody Williams, a former sex worker who was making a quarter million a year in the early '80s, before she was arrested, and who then turned her talents toward helping to recover women, body and soul, from the quicksand business, brought her support group to Las Vegas because people said that her services here would be in high demand. "And it's true," she says. "I've been in a lot of cities around this country, and it's a whole other story here." The presence of prostitutes in the Las Vegas Valley is overwhelming, undeniable, in your face, and that's the reason, says Lt. Curtis Williams of Metro's vice section, the police have been so busy busting hookers as of late.

On the final weekend of June, Metro put into effect Operation P.I.M.P.—Prostitutes Incarcerated by Metropolitan Police—fishing for streetwalkers on Boulder Highway, Fremont Street, Tropicana Avenue, between the I-15 and Decatur Boulevard, and the Strip, and in the end they netted a total of 184 prostitutes, johns and pimps from every school of life.

During the first weeks of July, officers went deep-sea diving in hunt of the clandestine brothels submerged in both rich and poor neighborhoods, for prostitution is a classless reality, and they resurfaced with several girls in handcuffs, some much more surprising to their neighbors than others.

And then on Thursday, July 20, in a wealthy senior community, police took a late-night excursion to an illicit house where women serviced rich men they had lured with sex and cocaine from the nearby golf course. They arrested three: two prostitutes, with 20 years' difference in age, and the madam of the discreet brothel.

But even Lt. Williams knows that in Las Vegas prostitutes are as plentiful as the fish in the sea: No matter how many times the police cast their net, there will always be more—and chances are they'll learn to swim a little deeper, in depths untouched by light.

"We measure success by canvassing the community," says Lt. Williams. "We see if the number of calls to Metro are reduced; we ask citizens and business owners if they've noticed a reduction ...

"You're never going to eliminate prostitution—but you can reduce it, by the number of stings, the amount of attention you give it."

Metro makes over 4,000 arrests a year in cases related to prostitution. And while specific information regarding the manpower and resources utilized by the vice section, an undercover unit, is considered by officials to be confidential, up to 90 officers are employed for large stings such as P.I.M.P.

Which "is a lot of time and energy wasted on a victimless crime," says Lois Helmbold, chair of the women's studies department at UNLV, "especially when it could be used on serious crimes."

It is a notion harbored—and voiced—by many, including academics, prostitute advocates and civil rights activists.

"The only victims are the girls who are arrested," Helmbold says. She invokes Emma Goldman, a reputable feminist from the 20th century who left an enduring thought when she wrote that the only difference between a prostitute and a wife is the magnitude of payment and the duration of services. "It's true!" says Helmbold, with her typical exuberance. "Nothing's changed!"

And further: "It's all about image. Las Vegas is sold as a sexual license—and everyone knows the casinos are crawling with working girls—yet they want to keep the hookers off the streets. Oscar Goodman, who wants brothels Downtown, has the same take on them as he does the homeless: Sweep them all under the rug!

"If you don't know by now, this is a very contradictory town."

Of course, it's not Metro's choice to criminalize prostitutes; rather, it is their duty. As police officers they are obligated by occupation and oath to enforce the law, and according to the Clark County Code, as it stands, engaging in or even soliciting sexual conduct for a fee is a crime.

"The morality of the law is not our field," Lt. Williams says. "That's up to the lawmakers."

Richard Ziser, chairman of Nevada Concerned Citizens, a group that hands out endorsements with great diligence every election season, says that the community is better off when the police put pressure on the prostitution business.

"From our perspective—a moral perspective—prostitution is definitely wrong," says Ziser. "It's a misuse of women, and it should not be condoned."

Nonetheless, he's not sure criminalizing the girls is the answer.

"Maybe it's not a matter of arresting them; but rather, we should be getting them help."

Rehabilitation programs are tough to establish, according to Jody Williams, who has set up alternative-sentencing programs back East, and in Canada. For prostitutes are best served by ex-prostitutes, just as alcoholics listen most to those who can relate, and "the government is not very big on giving whores money."

She says, "It's funny: The government has no problems giving money to drunks, but they won't give anything to whores. They had to come up with a whole new term—human trafficking—just so they could give help under its name."

That's the reason, Williams continues, sex workers are such solitary women, even in the midst of people: it's the societal stigma attached to the business.

It's the reason, she says, she's lost either her home or her job every time she's appeared on television to spread the gospel of her recovery program, Sex Workers Anonymous (formerly Prostitutes Anonymous).

"I appeared on Geraldo one time, and when I got back home [in California] I found an eviction notice on my door," she says. "I asked the landlord what the problem was and she said, ‘I won't have any whores living here!' And that was being five years out the business."

And it's the reason the laws remain the same, says Helmbold, reverberating a thought common among the working girls themselves. The religious mores of the past continue to persist into this trimillenium.

"We're supposed to have a separation between church and state," states Helmbold. "And we definitely do not!"

And let's not forget, she says: Hypocrisy keeps prostitution illegal.

It's common knowledge that there have been several judges and prosecutors who've at times solicited the loveless love of illicit women, not only because it is published on the front pages of newspapers around the country when they are caught with their pants down but also because they too are susceptible to the urges of the body. Williams says just about every prostitute has a story of pleasing a public servant, or of sedating a law enforcement agent with her devices, and that if she had to give an estimate from her prodigious experience in the business, half of the justice system has experienced the businesslike love of sex workers.

"After I got busted and started working with county officials in Southern California to set up rehabilitation programs for prostitutes," says Jody Williams, "I came across a probation officer who had been one of my clients. To say the least, he was very uncomfortable.

"I really think that the system is scared to give prostitutes a voice in anything because they're scared of what we might say."

In any event, prostitution continues to be criminal, much to the consternation of UNLV professor Barbara Brents, one of the foremost researchers on the sex industry, who after her many studies concluded that the best thing to do now is to end the criminal policies surrounding prostitution.

Her thesis is that the many ills associated with sex workers—drugs and weapons and formidable pimps; the reasons everyday citizens abhor the presence of prostitution in their communities—would dissipate with legalization.

Earlier this month Brents met with prostitutes, business owners and social workers at the Palace Station for an unprecedented convention on prostitution advocacy. Afterward, several of them demonstrated in front of the Regional Justice Center in Downtown Las Vegas, calling for the legalization of the world's oldest profession.

Professor Kate Hausbeck, Brents' colleague at UNLV and a fellow researcher in the largely unexplored oceans of the sex business, hit the crux of the issue when she proposed a series of questions:

"Are criminalization policies doing anything to stop prostitution? Are they protecting and empowering women? Are they making our communities safer?"

Lt. Williams of Metro's vice squad says that if the people feel the laws should be changed, then his unit would have no problems acting accordingly. But until then, their job is to continue to enforce the law.

No one, however, is foolish enough to believe the laws would be easy to change. They sit atop centuries of governing puritanical values.

Helmbold puts it this way: "Who in this country has more power: the politicians or the prostitutes?"

In the end, legal and illegal—just like right and wrong—are easily transferable terms for Jody Williams, and the only thing that matters in her mind are the actual individual women: their lives, their bodies, and their spiritual and mental health.

"When alcohol was made legal again, did that solve the internal problems drinkers faced? It's no different with the prostitution."
______________________

Daily News of Los Angeles (CA)

October 24, 1991
Edition: Valley
Section: L.A. LIFE
Page: L14

HELPING THEM RESIST SIREN SONG OF THE STREETS
PROSTITUTESANONYMOUS OFFERS MEMBERS A RECOVERY PROGRAM
Author: Renee Tawa Daily News Staff Writer

Article Text:

At age 6, Michael Jones was sexually molested by a police officer near his upper New York state foster home. By age 10, he was working the streets of New York City as a child prostitute. By age 13, he was pulling in $100 a trick, three to four tricks an hour, as a transvestite prostitute.

It was a job that was hard to walk away from.

"You've bought into something like the money or the glamour, or, in my case, the sex," said Jones, 33, a Fullerton resident and counselor. "For me, it was the only time when people would touch me and be nice."

Even now, while jogging or sleeping, he has flashbacks from his days on the streets. So far, his longest relationship has been with his 12-year-old dog, Muttley.

Jones is a member of ProstitutesAnonymous, a North Hollywood-based group founded in 1987 by former prostitute Jody Williams.

The group runs meetings for recovering prostitutes and keeps a reference list of more than 5,000 former sex-industry workers who are available for telephone counseling.

"How do you turn your back on $2,000 a day?" said Williams, 31. "You have no job references, you have no employment skills, you lived your life without watches and alarm clocks. How do you do all this?"

The California Prostitutes Education Project helps prostitutes in the San Francisco area get other jobs, but there are no similar services for prostitutes in other areas, said Gloria Cox, the project's vocational education program director. The project, which receives money from federal, state, county and private grants, cannot afford to extend its services to other areas.

Most recovering prostitutes don't get much of a chance, Cox said.

"It's pretty difficult," she said. "Mostly, it's all psychological. They're used to making a sum of money that's free and clear."

On a recent morning, over a diet Coke and scrambled egg dish, Williams told the story of her recovery while juggling her 6-month-old baby, Gabriella. She wore no makeup and loose cotton pants and blouse. Williams has gained 100 pounds since her prostitution days.

She said she never meant to be a prostitute. In 1978, she worked as a cocktail waitress and office worker for a jazz club, which turned out to be a front for five escort services.

"It was like a money addiction there," Williams said. "I could feel a euphoric rush from it. There's a sense of power connected with it."

A year later, she left the club to run her own business. Eventually, her mother joined her.

"She enjoyed it," Williams said. "She was very happy with it. It made her feel needed. It made me feel more normal about it. The prostitute's denial is it's just a business."

Williams hit rock bottom in 1985, when she and her mother were picked up on prostitution-related charges. The pair had run a Van Nuys bordello, which grossed $30,000 a month, and a phone sex business.

That's when she tried to get out. She moved in with her grandmother, went to a trade school and found work as a legal secretary. She said she talked to counselors and chaplains, but they were of little help.

Now, she is married. She also has written a handbook, "Sold Out: Recovery Text for ProstitutesAnonymous," for prostitutes who want to leave the business. Williams said the book is scheduled to be published Oct. 31. She declined to disclose the publisher's name.

Not all prostitutes want to walk away.

"I am very proud to be in the sex industry," said Norma Jean Almodovar, 40, president of the Los Angeles chapter of COYOTE. COYOTE, a group that works for the legalization of prostitution, stands for Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics.

"I think it's the best job I ever had," Almodovar said. "I happen to find the work very nurturing. It's not like having anonymous sex. It's a lot like being a therapist or a nurturer or a companion."

Lawrence, 33, a counselor and former child prostitute, said he read stacks of books on pop psychology and self-help and started therapy, but couldn't find what he was looking for.

Lawrence, who asked that his last name not be used because neither his parents nor his employer knows of his past, said he found peace by following ProstitutesAnonymous' 12-step recovery program, which is based on the Alcoholics Anonymous model.

"Most of the things you see in the media, especially in the visual media, which is television, you see a lot of movies that glorify or condemn prostitution. There's nothing that's really pointing the way to get out," he said.

Caption:

photo: Jody Williams

Myung J. Chun/Daily News
photo

Copyright (c) 1991 Daily News of Los Angeles
Record Number: 9102180772
____________________________________________

San Jose Mercury News (CA)

December 27, 1991
Edition: Morning Final
Section: California News
Page: 7B

Topics:
Index Terms:
SAN-DIEGO PROSTITUTE PROGRAM

ABANDONING 'THE LIFE' EX-PROSTITUTES USE WITHDRAWAL TACTICS OF AA
Author: Associated Press

Dateline: San Diego

Article Text:

Former prostitutes gather each week in downtown San Diego to lend support to one another as they struggle to lead conventional lifestyles.

ProstitutesAnonymous is part of a nationwide, non-profit organization dedicated to the recovery of men and women addicted to the sex industry. It seeks to be a refuge for former male and female prostitutes, pimps, madams, pornography actors and others who have sex for money.

Based on the 12 steps for recovery formulated by Alcoholics Anonymous, the former prostitutes are digging up and putting to rest the past that haunts them.

''We started PA because there just wasn't any help available," said PA founder Jodi Williams.

Williams gained nationwide notoriety as the "High-Tech Madam" in 1985, when the elaborate computerized organization she ran with her mother was uncovered just three blocks from a Van Nuys police station.

Williams, known then as Rene LeBlanc, was grossing $30,000 a month from the operation, which was equipped with closed- circuit television to screen arriving customers and a videocassette recorder to play pornographic movies.

Williams spent three months in jail, and her mother received a one-month sentence.

Now, she and about five other women attend weekly PA meetings in a tiny room at the downtown YWCA, which is rented with donations collected at each week's meeting.

A weekly meeting is also held at the Las Colinas Jail for women in Santee. Plans are under way to organize a men's meeting.

The lack of support for the organization is a result of misconceptions about prostitution, Williams said.

''There was some misunderstanding that it had to do with sex addiction, but it doesn't," she said. "Some of our members don't even have sex with their clients. Some people think they have problems with drugs. Over one-third of our members never touched drugs.

''We felt it was an addiction to the sex industry," she said.

Like Alcoholics Anonymous, each woman states her first name and admits her addiction.

The women talk about feelings of shame and anger, relationships, misconceptions about prostitution, achievements, and offer advice to other group members.

''There is so much shame around prostitution," said former prostitute Cathy. "A lot of people want to get out, but have no way to do it. They are sucked in and feel it is their only means of support. This gives you a way to talk about it."

Cathy said she became a prostitute to pay for her college education.

Getting out of "the life" is often not as easy as some think, Williams said. Former prostitutes must deal with the emotional aftermath, sexual dysfunction and a more mundane life.

Copyright (c) 1991 San Jose Mercury News
Record Number: 9104040076
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Daily Breeze (Torrance, CA)

January 30, 1993
Section: NEWS
Page: A1

Topics:
Index Terms:
NEWS
FOOTBALL. SUPER BOWL

Not everything comes up roses
Drunkenness, violence, prostitution
Author: Aurelio Rojas

Article Text:

During her eight years as a prostitute, hustling johns and running escort services, Jodi Williams saw her share of tough crowds.

"Sports crowds are the worst," said Williams, founder of ProstitutesAnonymous, dedicated to getting hookers off the streets. "They're loud. They're drunk. They're the types who get kicks hanging women out of hotel windows."

But where there is money, there is vice. Which is why Sunday's Super Bowl in Pasadena -- a high-roller ticket -- put local vice police on heightened alert.

"The street walkers are going to clean up," Williams said.

Los Angeles police Detective Bill Roberts said the department stepped up its crackdown on prostitutes to ensure that hotel patrons were not bothered.

Despite a festive atmosphere promoted by the National Football League's publicity machine, there is a dark side to the Super Bowl.

Experts say domestic violence and gambling reach annual highs. Liquor consumption approaches holiday proportions, leading to more drunken drivers on the streets and highways. Ticket scalpers make a killing.

Even indigestion goes up. TV Guide reports 6,000 tons of guacamole will be consumed Sunday, when the NFL estimates more than 1 billion people in the United States and 86 other countries will plop down to watch the Buffalo Bills and Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl XXVII.

Inside the Pasadena Rose Bowl, the 103,000 people fortunate enough to get a ticket will consume 13,750 pounds of hot dogs, 55,000 soft drinks and more than 100,000 cups of beer, according to stadium officials.

Off-field violence

But it is the off-field violence that has received the most attention. In news reports from coast to coast, domestic violence experts cited how women's shelters report up to a 40 percent increase in calls for help on Super Bowl Sunday and the following Monday.

The game has generated an annual spate of stories recounting how it triggers a rise in domestic violence. The Los Angeles Police Department reported the daily average of domestic violence arrests during the past two Super Bowls climbed from 20 to 34 in 1991 and 27 in 1992.

Other police departments -- among them Pasadena and Buffalo, the hometown of the AFC champion Bills -- said they do not keep such statistics.

Estela Ortiz, a spokeswoman for the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, said, "We have no hard or soft statistics to support the correlation."

"Domestic violence occurs every 15 seconds, of every hour of every day," Ortiz said. "I always wonder what would have if we took away the Super Bowl. Would it cure the problem? I don't think so.

"I think this is just a case of Super Bowl hype. Not every man who watches football beats his wife. Not every man who drinks alcohol beats his wife. This is about power and control -- one individual wanting to have power and control over another."

Sore winners -- or mates

One study even debunked the myth that men beat their mates because they were angry their favorite team lost. Sheila Kuel, a former actress and managing lawyer of the California Women's Law Center, said the study by sociologists at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., found that men are more likely to batter their partners after their team wins.

The study found that police reports of beatings and hospital admissions in northern Virginia rose 40 percent after games won by the Washington Redskins during the 1988-89 season.

"They see violence rewarded on television, and some of them react as though that's an appropriate way to behave," she said.

There is consensus that Super Bowl Sunday is the biggest gambling day of the year. Studies estimate $40 billion is bet on sports each year in the United States, and the Super Bowl is the top draw.

"Individual bets of $30,000 are not unusual," said Detective Jerry Hutchinson, a Los Angeles Police Department gambling expert.

Hutchinson said in the past, the department geared up for the Super Bowl by preparing warrants to raid bookmaking operations. He said bookmakers eventually caught on. Now, the department treats the game like any other weekend.

"The frenzy of having this event in your city causes more betting among some people," Hutchinson said. "But hardened gamblers don't care where the game is played."

Bonanza for scalpers

The Super Bowl is also a bonanza for scalpers. Pasadena Police Lt. Rick Law warned scalpers the city would enforce its anti-scalping ordinance outside the Rose Bowl. But scalping has been done out in the open in the previous four Super Bowls played in the stadium.

"The Super Bowl is not an event for a regular working stiff, unless he has a connection and can buy his ticket closer to their ($175) face value," said Robert Shelter, an agent with Applause Ticket Service in Los Angeles.

This year's ticket was an especially hot commodity, because of the Cowboys' first Super Bowl appearance in 14 years. Even though prices generally drop as the event gets closer, legal ticket outlets were still asking $1,250 a pop on Friday for a 20-yard line ticket.

Most of the better tickets had already been scooped up -- some for as much as $1,500 each.

Since the Rose Bowl game, played each New Year's Day, traditionally attracts a sellout crowd to the stadium, authorities have plenty of practice in managing traffic -- which is still miserable. California Highway Patrol Officer William Preciado said drunken drivers are another concern.

"`It's like a holiday," he said. "People drink, and people drive. And drunk driving arrests go up."

Caption:
Steve Rush of Madison, Wis., seeks Super Bowl tickets at the Rose Bowl on Friday. He bought two for $750.

Copyright (c) 1993, Daily Breeze, All Rights Reserved
Record Number: 0000438704

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San Diego Union-Tribune, The (CA)

March 22, 1993
Edition: 1,2,3,4
Section: LOCAL
Page: B-2

ProstitutesAnonymous steers the hooked straight
Author: JACK WILLIAMS; Staff Writer

Article Text:

From the time she was 13, seduced by the promise of glamour and fortune, Sharon Darsey knew exactly what she wanted to be when she grew up.

What she didn't know was that her profession of choice would walk her down a one-way street to addiction. A street where turning a trick was always easier than turning back.

Welcome to the world of the hooked hooker, replete with relapses, rationalizations and self-destruction.

To Darsey and as many as a thousand others in eight states and Canada who belong to a support group called ProstitutesAnonymous (PA), selling sex is an addiction every bit as insidious as drugs or alcohol.

Not because of an obsession with the act itself. But because, they say, of their own powerlessness to go "straight."

It was this frustration that led Jody Williams of Van Nuys, a self-described madam in recovery, to launch PA 7 1/2 years ago as a 12-step fellowship loosely based on the principles of Alcoholics Anonymous.

"It's for anyone who has a desire to leave the sex industry," said Darsey. "Hookers, madams, pimps, transsexuals, transvestites -- all kinds of people who want a way out."

Darsey, a 32-year-old Lemon Grove resident, says she has been in recovery for two years -- ever since she started a San Diego Chapter of PA, hosting weekly meetings attended by as many as eight people.

"For me," said Darsey, "it was a desperate attempt to get out of the business. I had quit for three years, then relapsed. It was like, 'I'm gonna be OK once I do this. I'm just gonna do it one more time.'

"There's the illusion that you'll do one more trick for rent money, a fix, or to buy this ring. But deep down it equates to how you feel about yourself.

"Money has nothing to do with it. (The disease) is the craving to go out and prostitute."

Darsey and others in PA admit they may not speak for the majority of the estimated 13 million male and female prostitutes in the United States. They also acknowledge that they have a long way to go in convincing therapists and medical professionals that there may be a genetic or deep-seated psychological component to their problem.

"People don't believe us," Darsey said. "The response is, 'Look, you're just a whore.' Or, 'Yeah, everything is a disease.' "

In a rare "Community Presentation Day" earlier this week at the Downtown YWCA, Darsey and Williams tried to define the demons they struggled with as sex professionals. Compounding their anguish is a society and rehabilitation system that they say is oblivious to their dilemma.

Darsey, who is pursuing a degree in criminal justice at Cuyamaca College, said she grew up "obsessing about being a prostitute.

"I read books about it. I knew what I was going to do. I don't belive you think those things unless you have a disease.

"We're not bad girls getting good. We're sick people getting well." If it all sounds like the stuff of Geraldo and Oprah, stay tuned. Darsey already has been a guest on the Donahue and Hard Copy TV shows, appearances that she said resulted in thousands of calls to PA's North Hollywood phone number: (818) 905-2188.

Williams said that, according to her research, "two-thirds of PA members never drank or used drugs." Both she and Darsey, however, went through drug rehabilitation programs. Both also served time behind bars.

The recovering prostitutes they are trying to reach include "anybody who is selling their sexuality," said Darsey.

And the PA members, they say, tend to bring a wide range of emotional baggage.

[] Some are victims of the "Stockholm syndrome": beaten and forced into prostitution as children, but impelled to return to prostitution when set free.

[] There also are many PA members suffering from Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD), and other problems including suicidal tendencies, sexual dysfunction, depression, food allergies and eating disorders.

"These people can stay isolated for their whole life," said Williams. "But now we have a database of recovering prostitutes who are willing to talk to anybody.

Copyright 1993, 2007 Union-Tribune Publishing Co.
Record Number: UTS1052045
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Daily Breeze (Torrance, CA)

August 22, 1988
Section: LOCAL
Page: B2

Topics:
Index Terms:
NEWS
PROSTITUTION

Group helps prostitutes beat addiction
Author: Will Thorne

Article Text:

When Stevie Harris went to work seven years ago as a $2,000 call girl her first customer was a crown prince.

"I was given a private suite of rooms and a mountain of cocaine to snort," she recalls. "He$was very attractive, intelligent, all that stuff. I had a marvelous time."

The good times didn't last.

"I knew after I had been in the business six months that I wanted to stop," said Harris, who was also an alcoholic during the five years she worked as a prostitute. "But I realized that working was just as addicting as the drugs and the drinks. I was triply addicted."

Harris and others like her have been seeking help at a Santa Monica organization called ProstitutesAnonymous. Founded by Rene LeBlanc, a one-time call girl and madam, ProstitutesAnonymous operates on the belief that prostitution can be addictive.

Working with a 12-step system similar to Alcoholics Anonymous, LeBlanc says the program has helped get some prostitutes off the streets and into regular jobs.

"I've known women who are lawyers and making good money who will leave the law office and go out to turn tricks," LeBlanc said. "To get prostitutes off the street and teach them to type is not the answer. We're dealing with the addictive personality."

LeBlanc, not her real name, gave up prostitution three years ago. She formed ProstitutesAnonymous last year. She now works as a legal secretary and is in the process of helping other support groups get started throughout the country.

Her organization, commonly called PA, started in the San Fernando Valley last August, but switched to Santa Monica in February when LeBlanc found most of those attending came from the Westside.

The group, made up of both men and women, homosexuals and heterosexuals, meets every Saturday. Only prostitutes are allowed at meetings. Times and locations are kept secret to allow members a safe place to come. Some sessions have drawn as many as 20 people.

"Out of every five people who come, one stays," LeBlanc said. "Out of the first five who came, we have four working successfully at jobs."

But she also admits that the program is not for everybody.

"It works for those who are addictive personalities and many prostitutes are addictive personalities," she said. "It's like alcohol. Some people can drink and not become addicted.

Dr. James Crossen, a psychotherapist at Medical Center of North Hollywood, also uses a 12-step method in counseling prostitutes. "A large percentage of prostitutes suffer from sexual addiction," he said. "They show a range of signs and symptoms that accompany addiction, such as denial, repressed feelings, compulsive behavior.

Lois Lee, director of Children of the Night, a West Hollywood-based group formed to help take young prostitutes off the street, believes economic security also plays a big role in prostitution.

"There's a dependency economically on a certain kind of life-style and by maintaining that life-style they also get some positive social strokes when men want them enough to buy them," she said.

"As for addiction, I don't know that I would go that far and I don't really know what the clinical definition of addiction is."

Copyright (c) 1988, Daily Breeze, All Rights Reserved
Record Number: 0000192716