document
Letter to Greenville County Sheriff
Document Date:
August 16, 2012
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Undercover Sting Operations Targeting Sexual Activity In Greenville County, Sc. Explore Press Release.Undercover Sting Operations Targeting Sexual Activity in Greenville County, SC
Today the ACLU and the ACLU of South Carolina sent a letter to the Greenville County Sheriff’s Office and the State Solicitor’s Office demanding that the local police department stop violating the constitutional rights of innocent people under the guise of enforcing public decency laws. The letter is aimed specifically at ending the practice of police officers in Greenville, South Carolina of arresting women they suspect of being prostitutes and men who have sex with men, even though they haven’t broken any laws. These arrests violate the Constitution and need to be stopped. -
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Aclu Demands South Carolina County Sheriff’s Office Stop Unlawful Sting Operations. Explore Press Release.ACLU Demands South Carolina County Sheriff’s Office Stop Unlawful Sting Operations
Undercover Officers Routinely Arrest Suspected Prostitutes and Men Who Have Sex With Men for Lawful Behavior FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org Undercover stings to crack down on prostitution and public sex are snaring individuals engaged in consensual, legal activities and should be stopped, the American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of South Carolina contend. In a letter sent to the Greenville County Sheriff's Office and the state solicitor's office, the ACLU outlines several incidents in which undercover officers approached people parked in their cars, sitting on their own porches or walking down the street and asked suspects to engage in illegal sexual activity, including prostitution and having sex in a public place. The individuals either declined or offered to engage in lawful private sexual contact, but were arrested anyway. “Consenting adults should not be arrested for acts that don’t break any laws,” said Victoria Middleton, executive director of the ACLU of South Carolina. “These sting operations enable officers to make as many arrests as possible, while they do nothing to stop actual criminal activity from occurring.” The illegal arrests involve sting operations against suspected prostitutes and men who have sex with men. Officers have repeatedly arrested individuals for being in places known to be frequented by prostitutes, for being “known prostitutes,” or merely saying they’d “think about it” when officers approached them to solicit illegal activity. Officers have also arrested men who have sex with men even when the suspects clearly sought to engage in private, consensual, non-commercial sex instead of sex in a public location. In one case, an undercover officer offered a woman a ride and tried to persuade her to accept money in exchange for sex. While she said she wouldn’t do “the prostitution thing,” they continued discussing a place where they could have sex, and the woman rubbed the inside of the officer’s thigh. She was arrested for sexual assault and battery and loitering to engage in prostitution. A similar incident occurred when a man was arrested for assault for touching a male officer who asked to engage in oral sex. Undercover sting operations have been criticized by the Department of Justice’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services as an ineffective way to deter street prostitution or public sex. Instead, the Department of Justice recommends other tools, such as the use of prominent warning signs or visible patrol units as more effective strategies that are less prone to abuse. “The people who have been arrested in these stings are being humiliated and harassed for no lawful reason. Innocent people should not be trapped for engaging in their legal right to ask to have sex in private with another adult,” said Ezekiel Edwards, director of the ACLU Criminal Law Reform Project. “These sorts of decoy operations are an expensive and wasteful use of taxpayer dollars, and they are far less effective than other law enforcement tools in stopping actual illegal activities from occurring.” The ACLU’s letter can be seen at: https://www.aclu.org/criminal-law-reform/letter-greenville-county-sheriff https://www.aclu.org/criminal-law-reform/letter-greenville-county-sheriff-appendicesAffiliate: South Carolina