Coalition Updates

Immunity NY Advocacy Day & Training

February 7, 2024

Please RSVP here. email Becca [at] dswork.org

RSVP here: https://forms.gle/8jF1biuS6dyCLJfY9

A Decade Wasted: How Immunity Could Have Solved the Gilgo Beach Murders

September 14, 2023

Why Sex Workers and Survivors of Trafficking Need Protection in Reporting Crimes Committed Against Them Thursday, September 14th 1.00 PM - 2.00 PM

Immunity Webinar today at 1:00pm EDT:
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/86390760190? pwd=M0NrdkdYQkRELzdSdkN2e mxYR1NpZz09
Meeting ID: 863 9076 0190 Passcode: 145168
event flyer  

Legislators, Affected Individuals, and Advocates Call for Bold Action To Combat Gender-Based Violence | BIPOC Women Critically Need NYS Legislature’s Support

April 25, 2023
Contact: Rebecca Cleary rcleary@soarinstitute.org (646) 397-8772‬
NEWS RELEASE | FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Contact:
Melissa Broudo
914-450-7137‬
Legislators, Affected Individuals, and Advocates Call for Bold Action To Combat Gender-Based Violence BIPOC Women Critically Need NYS Legislature’s Support Albany, NY (April 25, 2023) — Today, elected officials, advocates, and survivors of trafficking gathered to urge the New York State Legislature to pass S1966 (Sepulveda), an act to amend the penal law in relation to individuals engaged in prostitution who are victims of or witnesses to a crime, and S4266A (Webb)/A5288A (Reyes), an act to establish a task force on missing women and girls who are black, indigenous and people of color. Both bills seek to address how the policing of marginalized women and girls often reinforces structural inequities and stereotypes that contribute to their particular vulnerability to violence.
S1966 is common sense legislation that would encourage sex workers and trafficking survivors who are crime victims and witnesses to report their experience to law enforcement, receive medical care, and seek help. People involved in commercial sexual activity, whether by choice or because they are being trafficked, are often targeted by predators who know they are unlikely to report victimization or seek medical attention for fear of their own arrest. When abusers are not reported to law enforcement, they are able to continue their acts of violence and exploitation with impunity.
S4266A/A5288A highlights how women and girls of color who are victims of crime have been failed by institutions that reinforce structural violence. Their stories and names are obscured by race, socioeconomic class, lack of urgency, gendered racism, and invisibility. The task force will develop policy changes to address the lack of care and concern for missing and murdered BIPOC women and girls; educate and train communities on the prevention, protection and protocols relating to missing women and girls; develop research strategies; recommend preventive programming; identify major traffic places that have high abduction rates; and create an awareness campaign.
“As a proud co-sponsor of both bills, I believe that we must act in unison to enact both into law this year. In doing so, we will empower and elevate survivors, raise awareness, and finally focus our time and resources on those who need and deserve it the most.” - Senator Cordell Cleare (D-Harlem)
"Sex workers and trafficking survivors who are crime victims and witnesses often remain silent for fear of retribution. With S1966, we are seeking to provide them with the necessary protection to report their experiences, receive medical care, and seek help. S4266A/A5288A, on the other hand, highlights the institutional failures that lead to the invisibility and vulnerability of missing and murdered women and girls of color. Passing both bills is essential in our efforts to address structural inequities and ensure justice for marginalized communities." - Senator Luis Sepúlveda (D-Bronx)
“We have an epidemic of missing BIPOC Women and Girls in the U.S. and in New York State, the numbers keep rising,” said Senator Lea Webb (D-Binghamton). “Missing Women and Girls of Color do not receive the same care and concern when they go missing as their white counterparts. Their cases are covered by fewer news stories, and they are too often mischaracterized as runaways, leaving families to resort to hiring bounty hunters to find their daughters. My legislation will establish a task force to address this gap in care and concern for BIPOC victims of abduction and human trafficking, educate communities to prevent disappearances, and identify the major hubs in New York where abductions occur.”
“Women and girls of color are discarded by systemic racism in the reporting and search for missing persons,” said Assembly Member Karines Reyes, R.N. (D-Bronx). “I am the proud sponsor of A5088-A with Senator Webb to tackle that inequity by establishing a task force of government agencies to analyze, reform, and prevent the conditions that allow both the media and law enforcement to treat these cases differently. This vital legislation will chart the path forward to making New York State a safer and affirming state for women and girls of color and their families, especially in missing persons cases.”
“Immunity legislation is gaining popularity across the country with bipartisan support and collaborative efforts between activists, survivors, legislators, and law enforcement, who are all in agreement that these policies are crucial in advancing public health and safety. Ensuring that perpetrators of violence cannot repeatedly exploit their victims’ vulnerability and allowing survivors of violence to seek help is common sense public policy, which is why immunity laws are increasingly common in other states,” said Policy Fellow at the Sharmus Outlaw Advocacy and Rights (SOAR) Institute, Rebecca Cleary.
“For too long, missing women and girls of color have largely been ignored,” said Dawn Rowe, Executive Director of Girl Vow.  “By creating a task force to focus attention on this issue, New York can follow the lead of other states who have made women and girls of color a priority.”
“Immunity laws directly protect victims and witnesses of violence, and they ultimately benefit all communities by allowing law enforcement to better detect criminal activity. I have had to accompany many clients who were raped or assaulted to the police to ensure they themselves would not be seen as the criminals, which just should not be the case” said Melissa Broudo, co-director of the SOAR Institute and longtime advocate and attorney for sex workers and trafficking survivors.
“I was scared to report being raped in fear of being arrested for the sex work,” said Laura Mullen, Survivor Advisory Board President, ECLI-Vibes
### Immunity NY is a coalition of organizations dedicated to reducing harm and increasing safety by passing S1966 (Sepulveda), an act to amend the penal law, in relation to individuals engaged in prostitution who are victims of or witnesses to a crime. Allowing adult consensual sex workers and survivors of human trafficking who are victims or witnesses of crime to report their experience to law enforcement and healthcare providers without fear of prosecution for prostitution is good public health and criminal justice policy. Immunity laws benefit all communities by allowing law enforcement to better detect criminal activity.

Elected Officials, Affected Individuals, and Advocates Urged NY Legislature to Protect Sex Workers and Survivors of Trafficking

May 10, 2022
Contact: Rebecca Cleary rcleary@soarinstitute.org (646) 397-8772‬ **MEDIA ADVISORY**  Elected Officials, Affected Individuals, and Advocates Urged NY Legislature to Protect Sex Workers and Survivors of Trafficking Albany, NY (May 10, 2022) —Today, elected officials, advocates, survivors of trafficking, and consensual adult sex workers gathered to urge the New York State Legislature to pass S.2233-A (Sepulveda)/A.255-A (Gottfried), an act to amend the penal law, in relation to individuals engaged in prostitution who are victims of or witnesses to a crime. This common sense legislation would encourage sex workers and trafficking survivors who are crime victims and witnesses to report their experience to law enforcement, receive medical care, and seek help. People involved in commercial sexual activity, whether by choice or because they are being trafficked, are often targeted by predators who know they are unlikely to report victimization or seek medical attention for fear of their own arrest. When abusers are not reported to law enforcement, they are able to continue their acts of violence and exploitation with impunity. “Because of the legal jeopardy they would be placed in, sex workers often do not report crimes when they are targeted for violence. This bill protects a victim or witness to a crime from prosecution for prostitution when seeking help, health care, or assisting in any investigation regardless if it results in a conviction. Similar to the ‘Good Samaritan’ laws of 2011, this bill protects people seeking assistance or seeking to simply do what’s right,” said Senate bill sponsor, Senator Luis Sepúlveda (D-Bronx). States across the country are increasingly adopting laws that grant some form of criminal legal immunity from prosecution for prostitution to people who report crimes - including California, Oregon, Utah, Washington, New Hampshire, Vermont, Montana, and Colorado, where an immunity bill was signed into law by the governor just last week. “Immunity legislation is gaining popularity across the country with bipartisan support and collaborative efforts between activists, survivors, legislators, and law enforcement, who are all in agreement that these policies are crucial in advancing public health and safety. Ensuring that perpetrators of violence cannot repeatedly exploit their victims’ vulnerability and allowing survivors of violence to seek help is common sense public policy, which is why immunity laws are increasingly common in other states,” said Rebecca Cleary, Policy Fellow at the Sharmus Outlaw Advocacy and Rights (SOAR) Institute. “The immunity bill is necessary to implement a framework of protection for sex workers who are victims of horrific crimes. Passing the immunity bill means freeing sex workers from institutional harm and the negative consequences created to enslave sex workers by traffickers who have become masterminds of the criminal justice system. Only a failed system won't allow victims to tell their stories,” said Dawn Rowe, President and CEO of Girl Vow. “Immunity laws directly protect victims and witnesses of violence and they ultimately benefit all communities by allowing law enforcement to better detect criminal activity. I have had to accompany many clients who were raped or assaulted to the police to ensure they themselves would not be seen as the criminals, which just should not be the case” said Melissa Broudo, Co-Director of the SOAR Institute and longtime advocate and attorney for sex workers and trafficking survivors. This law is similar to New York’s existing ‘Good Samaritan’ law in that it allows New Yorkers to feel confident in seeking necessary medical care without fearing criminal consequences. "Too often sex workers are afraid to report violent crimes committed against themselves or others, or even to seek health care for their injuries, because contact with police means likelihood of arrest," said Assembly bill sponsor Richard Gottfried, (D-Manhattan). "Our laws create an inherently criminalized environment in which sex workers are targeted for violence. This would be an important step toward changing the dynamic between police and sex workers. It is similar to the 'Good Samaritan' law which protects people who seek help when someone suffers a drug overdose. All New Yorkers deserve safety from violence, and I hope we can advance this important bill." Laura Mullen, who is a survivor and the Co-Founder of the Survivor Advisory Board and an Anti-Trafficking Service Advocate at ECLI-VIBES, shared, “where I come from, criminals are criminals if you commit a crime, no matter the circumstances behind it. If only one person would have understood that I knew this and was scared of being arrested on my own or even alongside the person trafficking me, I would have used my voice to report him and other crimes that actual criminals committed. You see, they had a choice and I didn’t.” ### Immunity NY is a coalition of organizations dedicated to reducing harm and increasing safety by passing S.2233-A (Sepulveda)/A.255-A (Gottfried),an act to amend the penal law, in relation to individuals engaged in prostitution who are victims of or witnesses to a crime. Allowing adult consensual sex workers and survivors of human trafficking who are victims or witnesses of crime to report their experience to law enforcement and healthcare providers without fear of prosecution for prostitution is good public health and criminal justice policy. Immunity laws benefit all communities by allowing law enforcement to better detect criminal activity.

Elected Officials, Affected Individuals, and Advocates Urge Enactment of Law to Protect Sex Workers and Survivors of Trafficking

May 5, 2022
Contact: Rebecca Cleary rcleary@soarinstitute.org (646) 397-8772‬ **MEDIA ADVISORY**  Elected Officials, Affected Individuals, and Advocates Urge Enactment of Law  to Protect Sex Workers and Survivors of Trafficking Posted on May 5, 2022 WHO:  Assembly Member Richard Gottfried, D-Manhattan Senator Luis Sepulveda, D-Bronx Laura Mullen, Anti-Trafficking Service Advocate, ECLI-VIBES Dawn Rowe, Director, Girl Vow WHAT:  Press conference urging the NY Legislature to pass S.2233-A (Sepulveda)/A.255-A (Gottfried), an act to amend the penal law, in relation to individuals engaged in prostitution who are victims of or witnesses to a crime WHEN:  Tuesday, May 10, 2022 11:30am to 12:00pm WHERE:  Million Dollar Staircase, 3rd Floor, State Capitol Building, Albany NOTE:  Speakers will be available for interviews immediately following the press conference. Media planning to attend should RSVP and direct questions to info@nyimmunity.org. Additional information: https://nyimmunity.org/ ### Immunity NY is a coalition of organizations dedicated to reducing harm and increasing safety by passing S.2233-A (Sepulveda)/A.255-A (Gottfried),an act to amend the penal law, in relation to individuals engaged in prostitution who are victims of or witnesses to a crime. Allowing adult consensual sex workers and survivors of human trafficking who are victims or witnesses of crime to report their experience to law enforcement and healthcare providers without fear of prosecution for prostitution is good public health and criminal justice policy. Immunity laws benefit all communities by allowing law enforcement to better detect criminal activity.

Law Enforcement Support for Immunity Bills Across the Country

April 19, 2022
Law enforcement leaders across the country have expressed public support for immunity bills similar to A.255 (Gottfried)/S.2233 (Sepulveda). To follow are excerpts from their statements.

San Francisco, CA, 2018

The San Francisco Police Department and the San Francisco District Attorney enacted a city wide immunity policy in 2018 known as the Prioritizing Safety for Sex Worker Policy. They went on to support the passage of the statewide California bill that passed in 2019.  San Francisco DA George Gascón (D) said: “If we fail to prioritize this population’s health and safety they will not come forward and work with law enforcement as witnesses and victims of violence. Ultimately, unreported crimes and criminals pose a threat to everyone’s public safety.”  San Francisco Police Chief William Scott said: “This policy underscores our commitment to providing services to all victims. We understand that many times sex workers are themselves victims of predators and human traffickers. Our policy is written in the spirit of encouraging sex workers to feel safe coming forward to law enforcement, with the knowledge that they will be treated with respect and their concerns will be taken seriously and investigated.”

Oregon, 2019 

Aaron Knott, on behalf of Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum (D), stated: “…this speaks to a truth that, if you find yourself the victim of sex trafficking, that fact instantly forces you to have committed a crime and that becomes one of the biggest barriers to escaping your victimization. Any time you call the police, theoretically in the process of reporting what happened to you, you’re also confessing to the crime of prostitution. Where this bill takes another step however is it recognizes that in some cases those able to best recognize victimization in that community will be involved in that community and we want them to have the ability to take care of each other without facing the fear of consequences. And this is not all just about trafficking. Individuals that engage in sex work are an inherently vulnerable population that has trouble accessing justice for exactly that reason. You make a phone call talking about how badly you were beaten, how badly you were robbed, if you are also inherently confessing to a crime, it takes away that incentive to make the call. So this is another step in a victim-focused approach to this area of crime. The person who’s being trafficked may not have much of an awareness of the formal legal dynamics of, ‘if I make this call and I say that I was trafficked and that’s then found credible by the law enforcement officer, or if it isn’t, that there’s a prosecution that I’ll be able to demonstrate that I was coerced sufficient to stop the state which would require them to believe me and not to believe somebody else,’ they’re up against a trafficker or pimp telling them over and over again, ‘if you make this call you will go to jail. I won’t go to jail.’” “When I first started working on this issue about a decade ago, a trafficking victim that reached out to share her story with me was a woman who had been trafficked down on 82nd as a teenage girl and she was violently assaulted by a john and she reported that to a police officer, and his response was, ‘you’re a prostitute, what am I supposed to do? What do you expect?’”

Vermont, 2021

David Scherr, testifying on April 21, 2021, on behalf of Vermont Attorney General T.J. Donovan (D), stated: “When we talk about public safety, ultimately we’re talking about keeping people safe. We believe this is an important change and innovation to make sure that people who need public safety services are able to access them. So we support this, we think this is an important move forward. We agree with the way in which it’s been designed in terms of borrowing from the good Samaritan law that was passed with respect to people involved in drug usage…we are believers in this method of dealing with public safety. We think it’s an important innovation and we support it.”

Montana, 2021

Brian Thompson of the Montana County Attorneys Association testifying in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee on April 13, 2021, stated: “This is something that prosecutors do not want to prosecute. They don’t often feel that it’s in the greatest public interest to be prosecuting persons who are maybe engaging in prostitution but being victims of sexual assault. We want those crimes of sexual assault reported in these situations. We think this safe harbor provision is an important and good change in the Montana criminal code.”

Nebraska, 2021

Tracy Scherer, lieutenant in the Omaha Police Department’s Child Victims and Missing Persons Unit, testifying in front of the Judiciary Committee on February 5, 2021: “I have experience investigating sexual assault, sex trafficking, and other crimes of violence. Victims of such crimes experience a high level of trauma, have historically been disbelieved and often have difficulty trusting any officials, supportive services, or others whose intentions are to help. The suspects of such crimes often instill fear, make threats, or have control over their victims. These victims are often the scapegoats for the actual suspect. Victims are made to carry contraband, open bank accounts or participate in illegal activities at the manipulation and control of the suspect. Because of the multitude of factors, victims of violent crimes are reluctant to report, assist, or participate in investigation and prosecution of their perpetrators. The immunity from arrest provided in this bill already exists in practice in other situations. For example, suspects who are found to be in possession of controlled substances and don't have other charges tied to a victim are often offered the ability to provide information relating to their suppliers, other distributors and members of drug organizations in exchange for relief of arrest, prosecution for possession of controlled substance. Such practices allow police to find bigger drug operations' distributors instead of simply arresting the user with a small amount of controlled substance. This practice is typically reserved for drug offenses, only limiting the ability of police officers to gain trust and rapport with reluctant victims. This bill is in line with such practices and affords officers the ability to use techniques in similar situations when gaining the trust of a victim is difficult. We believe having it in statute will go further toward victims being willing to use this as an option because of the complex trauma of trafficking victims, as well as distrust for systems and outside agencies. I often feel an experience better illustrates the narrative. During November of 2020, two parties were stopped in Omaha along Interstate 80. The adult male driver and a 17-year-old female passenger were both interviewed. The female was well known to officers and has been the victim of sex trafficking for the last three years. Previous disclosures of sex trafficking have always ended with her refusal to cooperate with prosecution or further investigation. On this day, the female had a significant amount of methamphetamine located in her underwear. The 17-year-old reluctantly told officers the methamphetamine belonged to the driver, her boyfriend, who had been trafficking her and another girl out of a motel room in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Upon further investigation, this victim further disclosed that her boyfriend had just strangled her and she was afraid of him. Officers decided not to arrest the 17-year-old for the possession of narcotics and have instead worked to build rapport with her. After several interviews and efforts to build rapport, officers have been able to identify not only two of her traffickers, but several of the parties responsible for paying to have sex with her and continue to work towards arresting and prosecuting these offenders. Thank you for allowing me to speak to this. I believe that this bill is not out of line with what is already in practice and will assist us with gaining the trust of survivors to actually come forward when they're victims of such crimes.”

Colorado, 2022

Jessica Dotter, Sexual Assault Resource Prosecutor, on behalf of the Colorado District Attorneys’ Council in written testimony to the Colorado House Judiciary Committee: “When it comes to those serious crime victims who are also engaged in prostitution, often through human trafficking rings, the lack of reporting means a lack of access to victim services and resources that would assist the person to get to a better life. It is difficult to estimate the number of victims of human trafficking due to the hidden nature of the crime, the difficulty in identifying individual victims and the power that human traffickers hold over the victim to prevent reporting to the police. In addition, the nature of human trafficking creates barriers to reporting serious crimes that are committed on the victims in addition to the trafficking. When living in vulnerable, impoverished, emotionally and physically controlled environments, the additional barrier of fear of prosecution for now-petty offense prostitution crimes is one more reason for reluctance to report even sexual assault or first-degree assault to the police. And a lack of reporting to 911 means a lack of access to immediate health care, public safety response, victim compensation, restitution and long-term survivor resources to help these victims get out of the environment that others most often put them in in order to exploit them.