5 Years After the Backpage Shutdown, Sex Workers—and Free Speech—Are Still Suffering
As former Backpage execs await their August trial, the shutdown is still worsening the lives it was supposed to improve.

On April 6, 2018, the federal government seized and shut down the classified advertising platform Backpage, alleging that a group of current and former executives had used the website to facilitate prostitution. Five years later, two of these executives and a number of former users of Backpage reflect on what the prosecution and the platform's closure have meant.
The seizure of Backpage helped "activate" Kaytlin Bailey toward sex worker advocacy. "To know so many people who used this service to keep themselves safe, to schedule and screen their clients, and to have the government narrative be that these, like, evil sex traffickers are kidnapping and shipping children…has been absolutely bananas," says Bailey, a comedian, former sex worker, and the founder and executive director of the nonprofit Old Pros. "The fact that we have really really smart people who have fallen for this idea that we can end child sexual exploitation by removing websites on the internet—it continues to blow my mind."
Thinking about Backpage's shutdown fills sex worker advocate Phoenix Calida with "anger and sadness." It was "not only a place to advertise. It was a place to find community, learn, and find safety," says Calida. "If I didn't have Backpage to advertise or screen, I probably would be dead by now."
"While the effects of the demolition of Backpage were awful for sex workers, I think the most devastating effects are those which will proceed from the terrible precedents the persecution set," says sex worker and author Maggie McNeill. "By wantonly destroying an internet business which had not only broken no laws, but which had also prevailed time and again against predatory lawsuits based in a rather bizarre legal theory of vicarious liability, the government has demonstrated that it cannot and will not be constrained by Section 230, the First Amendment, or even the venerable principle of presumption of innocence."
Backpage co-founder James Larkin says the past five years have taught him that "if the government decides to point its finger at you, there's really no question that they're going to try to ruin you"—and that "given the system and the way it's set up," chances are high that it'll succeed.
How Backpage Was Seized
Shuttering Backpage was the main reason advocates and lawmakers cited for passing the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act, or FOSTA. That law was signed into law by former President Donald Trump on April 11, 2018. That's just after the Backpage seizure and the arrest of some of its current and former staff—laying waste to claims that without a new law, the platform was untouchable.
Federal agencies went after Backpage using a much older law: the Travel Act. This 1961 law criminalizes traveling or using "the mail or any facility in interstate or foreign commerce" with the intent to "further any unlawful activity."
Prosecutors have been keen to give the impression that the "unlawful activity" in this case is child sex trafficking—so keen, in fact, that they triggered a mistrial with references to it when the case first went to trial in 2021. But the Backpage staff on trial are not accused of facilitating sex trafficking (that is, commercial sexual activity involving force, fraud, coercion, or minors). Rather, they are charged with violating state laws prohibiting plain old prostitution—the consensual exchange of sexual activity for money between adults.
Prostitution isn't a federal crime, but the Travel Act lets the Department of Justice (DOJ) intervene in cases involving alleged violations of some state-level crimes, including prostitution.
Backpage banned explicit ads for prostitution or any other illegal activity. But as a massive user-generated classifieds platform—where an enormous number of ads were posted daily for everything from used cars to nude modeling gigs—it was impossible to guarantee that ads for illegal services never got through (an issue far from unique to Backpage).

Backpage did allow ads for escorts, dominatrixes, strippers, and other forms of legal erotic services and adult entertainment. In practice, this allowed full-service sex workers —that is, folks engaging in prostitution—to advertise so long as they weren't totally open about their offerings (also a situation common across many online platforms).
These legal sex-work ads are, unambiguously, speech protected by the First Amendment—as former Backpage executives and newspaper publishers Larkin and Michael Lacey have argued all along.
"To me the issue is and always has been the speech," Lacey told Reason in March. "We platformed legal speech. The government didn't like the speech, but it was legal."
At the 2021 trial, the prosecution's lead law enforcement witness admitted that he couldn't say for certain whether any of the ads he claimed facilitated prostitution had actually led to the exchange of sex for money. If ultimately they did, it was beyond the knowledge or control of anyone at Backpage.
But that hasn't stopped the feds from an intense, protracted prosecution of Backpage executives—one in which numerous moves suggest they're not willing to fight fair.
For instance, prosecutors successfully fought to exclude exculpatory evidence that was sent to the defendants' lawyers by accident (and later published by Reason). They seized defendants' properties and their bank accounts, including assets unconnected to Backpage and funds arguably derived from protected speech.
The asset forfeiture happened "without a hint of due process," Larkin says. "Now for five years we have been unable to get a hearing on the monies they have frozen. That includes properties and assets that were purchased before backpage.com was even launched in 2004. That includes monies we paid lawyers and set aside for our defense."
"They're going to litigate us until we're dry as beef jerky," says Lacey, noting that a couple of the defendants "have now had to get federal public defenders because they have run out of money."
A new trial has been set for August 8, 2023—about five years and four months after Backpage was seized.
From Newspaper Moguls to Grocery-Store Pariahs
Lacey and Larkin started as publishers of alternative newspapers, beginning with the Phoenix New Times in 1970 and eventually encompassing papers in 18 cities, including the iconic Village Voice. In a pre-internet era, these publications were funded largely by print advertising, including a robust classified-ad business. Then came Craigslist, with a free-ad platform that upended their (and many other newspapers') funding models. To compete, they launched Backpage in 2004.
Originally, it focused on cities where Lacey and Larkin owned papers. It would eventually spread to areas around the U.S. and then around the world.
And, along the way, it would pick up a lot of powerful enemies.
After activists, attorneys general, and lawmakers pressured Craigslist to remove its "erotic services" section they turned their attention to Backpage, pressuring it, too, to stop allowing "adult" ads. But Lacey and Larkin resolutely refused. No strangers to fighting First Amendment battles against the government, they viewed adult ads not just as a moneymaker but as a matter of principle, too.
This commitment to free speech earned the pair and their colleagues an onslaught of legal troubles, including a failed 2016 attempt by then–Attorney General of California Kamala Harris to convict them of pimping.
Meanwhile, federal prosecutors tried—and failed—for years to find evidence that Backpage leaders were knowingly permitting sex trafficking. Instead, they found them cooperative with law enforcement and agencies like the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. A massive investigation in the early 2010s failed "to uncover compelling evidence of criminal intent or a pattern or reckless conduct regarding minors." Prosecutors concluded that "Backpage genuinely wanted to get child prostitution off of its site."
The prosecutors likewise found little to support a theory that Backpage executives knowingly allowed adult prostitution ads, admitting that even sexually suggestive posts could be for legal services. "While someone who has little experience with the adult services market may readily conclude that Backpage's escort advertisements offer prostitution services, such a conclusion is not so plain after one recognizes how much sexually explicit commercial conduct is lawful," they wrote in an internal memo.
If a prosecution must be brought, the best method would be to focus on Backpage not "as a co-venturer with pimps, but as a launderer of funds derived from adult prostitution," the prosecutors added back then.
This is the tack the DOJ eventually embraced. It charged Lacey, Larkin, and several others with multiple counts of violating the Travel Act, citing as evidence 50 ads published to Backpage between 2013 and 2018. In addition, some of the defendants faced money laundering charges and/or a conspiracy charge, for activities related to the publishing of or profiting off of ads that allegedly facilitated prostitution.
On the morning of April 6, 2018, the feds raided Lacey's home at gunpoint, storming his elderly mother in the shower, ransacking the house, and confiscating everything from computers to artwork to his wife's jewelry. Lacey and Larkin were arrested, jailed, and later released on bail set at $1 million each.
For the past five years, they have been required to wear location-tracking ankle monitors and unable to leave Maricopa County, Arizona, without permission.
The past five years have been brutal in many ways, Lacey and Larkin tell Reason.
Lacey likens living it to living with a perpetual rain cloud over his head. He notes that they've been dealing with prosecution in one way or another for more than five years, if you count the Harris charges in California. "It's seven years of having a really ugly finger pointed at you.…You can't work out enough to clear your head of the goblins that have taken up residence."
All of this has taken a toll on family members too, says Lacey. For instance, "I have a boy going off to graduate school and he's got a big scholarship but not a total scholarship, and I can't help him."
And then there are the day-to-day indignities of life with a court-ordered ankle monitor. Lacey says he was at a Safeway grocery store recently when it started beeping loudly at him that it needed to be charged. "Mothers and children are looking around as they're pushing their carts," he says. "It's insulting."
"I'm backed into a corner, and pretty much impoverished," adds Larkin. "But what else can I do? I'm going to continue fighting, because I know that we're innocent and this has been a political prosecution from day one."
'Everything Became So Much More Dangerous'
The impact of Backpage's shutdown extends way beyond Lacey, Larkin, and their co-defendants. For the untold number of workers who relied on Backpage to find customers, it's left a void that's been difficult to fill, especially in a post-FOSTA world.
Backpage "was always the best reliable way to connect with the most potential clients," says Ava Sinclaire, who describes herself as a porn star and a professional legal courtesan at Sheri's Ranch. Sinclaire credits Backpage with helping her leave behind a tough past and says for that she'll always be grateful. Despite "health issues that make it nearly impossible to hold down a 9/5, I've never been on disability or gotten money from the government," she says. "Backpage allowed me to be self-sufficient."
The loss of Backpage was especially hard for rural or remote sex workers, says filmmaker and dominatrix Bella Vendetta. Backpage "was one of the few places you could advertise for smaller, rural communities." Without it, sex workers in rural communities have nowhere to reach customers and nowhere "to connect with other workers or vet clients. Everything became so much more dangerous."
That the government's actions have made things more dangerous is a complaint heard again and again from sex workers. Neither FOSTA nor the takedown of Backpage and other platforms (the feds went after a number of them, starting with MyRedBook in 2014) has stopped people from engaging in sex work so much as made their lives and work less safe.
Backpage's shutdown "completely destroyed my chances of working safely in every way possible, and my money flow," says Delta Asher Hill, author of Sexual Liberty: Memoirs of a Sex Worker's Fight for Freedom. "It's harder to vet clients, many of my friends resorted to working on the street again, and cops still think consenting workers are victims."
Online platforms allowed sex workers to recruit business independently—without the need for potentially exploitative or violent third parties. In their absence, some workers were forced to go back to relying on these middlemen. Some turned to nondigital ways of recruiting customers, which leaves less room for screening.
In summer 2022, Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics (COYOTE) Rhode Island conducted a survey of sex workers and sex trafficking survivors about how the passage of FOSTA and the disappearance of Backpage had affected them. "I had to start stripping and saw customers from the strip club instead," said one respondent. "But, since it was in person I wasn't able to screen them as well so it was a lot more dangerous."
Once Backpage went down, "there was panic from everyone I knew," says Calida. "Within the first months, people still had to work but couldn't advertise or screen. They went missing. Sometimes, bodies were eventually found. Sometimes, there weren't bodies at all, and those people are still considered missing. People got abused because they couldn't screen. Got ripped off by clients."
What makes Calida especially angry is that this was so "unnecessary." Sex workers, people who have been trafficked, and activists warned about what would happen.
"Even now, despite the evidence, even with police admitting it was a catastrophe, there's still no apology. No changes. No hope."
Left with less ability to support themselves, some were forced into precarious situations, like staying with an abusive partner in order to have housing. Some had to put important goals they had been working toward on hold.
Lola Minaj, a trans sex worker, credits sex work with providing her the income "needed to afford medical/cosmetic treatments" and to become "the woman I am growing to be." But after Craigslist ditched adult ads and Backpage was seized, "the next five years were very rocky." She says she "went back to living as a boy" in order to get a job. Now, "I live as Lola again. Thank God. I have also came back to sex work," says Minaj. But "the escorting hustle sure has changed. The boards are limited. The ad spots are either phishing scams, scrapper sites, or actively working with the FBI."
'We're the Canary in the Coal Mine for the Internet'
The dearth of new possibilities for adult advertising surely stems in part from the Backpage prosecution, which showcases how far the government will go against platforms that don't shy away from such content. But it's also a function of FOSTA, which among other things makes hosting content with the intent to "promote or facilitate the prostitution of another person" a federal crime. The twin effect has been to make web platforms wary of allowing any content related to sex and sexuality at all.
"Backpage and FOSTA are inextricably linked," says Ricci Joy Levy, president and CEO of the Woodhull Freedom Foundation. "FOSTA was born of the challenge in shutting down Backpage." And why did people want to shut down Backpage? "To censor sex and sexuality," says Levy.
Over the past five years, FOSTA has succeeded in chilling online speech about sex without the necessity of anyone bringing charges or lawsuits.
"The fear of the consequences of FOSTA [has] resulted in strict censorship of images and content by social media platforms," says Levy. "In addition to what you would anticipate might be censored…any content related to sexuality is restricted on so many of the mainstream platforms. On Facebook or Instagram, you can't reference sexual pleasure…you can't sell a sex toy or sexual product…sex therapists and counselors aren't able to place ads."
Even "email services are starting to reject an email that has the word sex or sexuality in it," adds Levy, noting that her organization has had firsthand experience with this. "Words for body parts that are nonanatomically correct—like ass, boobs—they're being censored. We saw Tumblr remove all sexually oriented content, and that censored a lot of LGBTQ content."
And things are likely to get worse, as the takedown of Backpage and the passage of FOSTA prove a useful playbook for future censors.
Now, whenever people want to censor or censure something, "it's 'child endangerment,' or 'sex trafficking,'" says Larkin.
Indeed, social media giants including Twitter and Reddit have recently faced lawsuits accusing them of facilitating sex trafficking. Activists and some politicians have also been calling for the shutdown of porn websites on these grounds. And there's been ample legal controversy over what it means to "facilitate" or "promote" a crime—including, now, abortion in many states—and how this impinges on protected speech.
Levy says what we've seen with Backpage and FOSTA is "the tip of the iceberg." While they're part of a long-running "war on sex and sexuality," they can be built on "to force online platforms to censor other categories of speech," says Levy. "It could be about drugs, it already is about abortion. There are questions around terrorism. Guns."
Woodhull is one of a few groups challenging FOSTA in federal court. Levy says the challenge "is critically important, not just for sex workers or sexual expression but to hopefully preserve online freedom" in many realms.
"We're the canary in the coal mine for the internet," suggests Larkin. "It's being proven now."
As he, Lacey, and their co-defendants await an August trial, sex workers, too, are still suffering from the seizure of Backpage and from FOSTA.
"Sex workers are expected to die silently with grace every time a bad policy [gets] enacted. But I'm not graceful. And I'm not giving up," says Calida. "People should not be forced into dangerous conditions over politics and misplaced moral crusades."
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Yeah but through suffering comes great art. Does that mean we're gonna get great sex?
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The fact that we have really really smart people who have fallen for this idea
That's the kind of thing you say when people you agree with are the source of your annoyance. Might be time to rethink the people you "agree" with.
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Like all those "really really smart people" who think big guv and central planning is the bomb.
Backpage CEO, Carl Ferrer, 57, entered guilty pleas to conspiracy and money laundering charges in both Sacramento County Superior Court and U.S. District Court in Arizona under agreements with state and federal prosecutors that call for him to serve five years in prison. (2018)..... The website Backpage.com has settled a sex trafficking lawsuit brought by three girls who alleged they were sold for sex in the “escort” section of the website. Filed in 2012, the plaintiffs alleged they were between 13 and 15 years old when they were advertised for sex on Backpage.com.
The real problem here is a Judge who doesn't think trafficking 15 year olds is a form of 'prostitution' and is censoring the trial. Once you believe that fairy tale, then 'logically', Backpage is being 'railroaded' - the truth is, those 15 year olds are being 'railroaded' by this Judge who is refusing to let the Jury hear all the relevant facts and decide.
In "Vices are Not Crimes" Lysander Spooner acidly observed that Boston's Puritanical town fathers had set the age of consent and prostitution at ten, this at the height of Comstockism.
SQRLSY_One has declared several times here that Lacey and Larkin deserved imprisonment for allowing ads from prostitutes on Backpage.
It was part of his "Twitter censorship is the Alphabet agencies free speech" argument.
Why are the BlueAnon loons here always so overtly fascist?
The seizure of Backpage helped "activate" Kaytlin Bailey
You know, I know a little something about Ms. Bailey, and while I have no beef with her overall position on this topic, she's no friend to free markets. She is, as best as I can tell a socialist-utopianist who uses a lot of Marxist language when she talks on this subject.
On a podcast, she was asked about decriminalization vs legalization of sex work, and here's what she had to say on it:
"legalization is a dystopian nightmare that only benefits brothel owners"
I'll let the rest of you decide her overall views on free markets and/or capitalism.
Above quote came in at: ~33:00
Saved By the Bella w/ Kaytlin Bailey
We are joined by comic and activist Kaytlin Bailey, who hosts The Oldest Profession podcast, to discuss a thing that all leftists agree on, the politics of SEX WORK.
The first part of the podcast is the participants talking about the utopian vision with the destruction of late stage capitalism and the ushering in of the workers "utopia".
So yeah, I'll let y'all decide.
I haven't listened to the whole podcast, but there's a sense of tension in the discussion around the shared belief that Workers Are Exploited In Capitalist Societies and Sex Work Is Work.
Don’t you understand? These people were facilitating the selling of sex for money. And what makes it particularly offensive is that most of the sex being sold for money was/is heterosexual couplings. No government action to prevent such calumny is “too much”. Soon, however, very soon we will have laws that, while they may not stop all commercial sexual interactions, they can certain add impediments the commercializing or bartering of sexual interactions. All we need to do is to make the penalty for purchased or bartered sex interactions to be the surgical removal of the offending sex organ, whether penis or vagina (can’t discriminate of the basis of sex or gender, ya’ know).
Ah, but as with all laws, the writing of the law would have to be vewy, vewy cahful. It would almost certainly have to specify the use of “legal tender” (giving of legal tender, accepting of legal tender, or both??) in exchange for sex as the illegal act. One could not be so lackadaisical in the choice of wording as to prohibit the exchange of “something of value” (not that similarly worded prohibitions prevent the use of jailhouse snitch testimony to get convictions for “the good of society” without being considered to be bribing a witness). Can you imagine, if the law, carelessly worded, results in confusion as to whether buying your date a fancy dinner in anticipation of getting a little ejaculatory bliss later in the evening becomes illegal (should it perhaps be)? Would she also be complicit in a criminal act if she ate the expensive dinner then put out when she was taken home? Should her flirty pre-dinner statements and lascivious winks be examined for evidence of enticement, or if she doen't come across, is she protected from a charge of fraud because contracts for illegal acts are not enforceable? How about criminalizing the exchange of a dozen roses for an episode of fellatio? Could such prohibitions not reasonably be extended to prevent one student (either “gender”) from helping another with homework or a class project in return for a little “handy relief”, frottage, or maybe even some penetration? Should advertising one’s services as being “proficient in physics or trigonometry” to mentally challenged classmates in return for “consideration to be discussed” also be made illegal, or should barter be allowed, but X helping Y and getting dollars, then X paying Y those same dollars for a little roll in the hay become illegal only because the dollars crept into the equation? (We would need to collect income taxes “from both parties” in the case of such an cash or barter exchange.)
On the other hand, I’ll bet there’s a contingent of readers out who’d like to make all of those voluntary exchanges illegal!
Sho ’nuff, there oughta be a law – ain’t no limit to the good our government can do to us.
results in confusion as to whether buying your date a fancy dinner in anticipation of getting a little ejaculatory bliss later in the evening becomes illegal (should it perhaps be)? How about criminalizing the exchange of a dozen roses for an episode of fellatio?
#MeToo did more to make the above... um, Problematic than any government agency could ever hope to.
As a loudmouthed libertarian impersonator is fond of stammering, this would certainly have to be done "the rite way, and not the rawng way."
The founder of backpage also contributed to kamalas political opponent. This is why they were targeted
That wouldn’t surprise me, but it’s not like Harris understands the 1st amendment or the rest of the constitution.
the government has demonstrated that it cannot and will not be constrained by Section 230, the First Amendment, or even the venerable principle of presumption of innocence
Why start now?
I like how the First Amendment and presumption of innocence got 2nd and 3rd billing behind Section 230. One gets the impression that without section 230, there wouldn't be an America.
Although to be fair, she did say "venerable". Maybe "venerable" is presumed for The Communications Decency Act.
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Legitimacy of Backpage aside, the claim that it’s removal left any type of void in the market is nonsense. It was immediately replaced with other options with modern interfaces and more features tailored to that industry.
Golly. How do faceless sockpuppets discover all this factual wisdom?
The shutdown of Backpage was supposed to make sex work harder, and it looks like it succeeded.
I’m neither approving nor disapproving of it, I’m simply saying that if the article starts with the wrong premises, it can’t really reach a meaningful conclusion.
As long as fat, ugly, sexless wives exist, sex work will be illegal.
That is harsh, immature, politically incorrect, uncaring, sexist, patriarchical, and true. Strangely though, after considerable thought and acknowledgement of the lack of basic humanity of the author, I am unable to find a white supremacist angle to his comment. I am forwarding it to the Southern Poverty Law Center and requesting an analysis and report from them as to whether a component of white supremacist thinking and/or hate can be found among Liberty's words. [/s]
LOL, at least you get it. You should have looked at the misogynist angle, you could of came up with something on that, right?
Ok, let's be logical. IO just did a search for brothels in Nevada. They exist and they advertise not only nationally, but internationally. Therefore the entire case falls apart as far is interstate advertising in and of itself.
SO the question becomes, can an "escort" advertisement in NYC?, In Tampa? how about in Dallas, or maybe Jonesville?
Yes they can and do and they do so in interstate commerce daily. So...it seems that the Feds need to arrest thousands of website operators and shut them down (including Craigslist), or they need to move on, or leave the site alone and go after ONLY those that have a direct tie with INTENT to solicit minors.
Enough of this BS.
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Somehow I think they're still finding work. Something about unlimited demand...
Relevant to ENB's timely observations is the success enjoyed by God's Own Prohibitionists in Buckingham, Virginia. Incessant shrieking and ordure-flinging by local Klanspersons to the effect that "we wuz robbed" (meaning women retain individual rights here and there) caused election registrars to quit. Similar tantrums with live ammo in Louisiana in 1873-4 got the DOJ to send a Klan judge to free mass-murderers and nullify the Reconstruction Amendments. Girl-bulliers, like Jew-bulliers and slave-rapers before them, are convinced that persistence pays.
The side panel is just now shrieking that Former Trumpanzee-in-Chief Donald is counting on the Rooshians and Chicoms to nukebomb 'Murrikkka if voters reject his Orangeness' new bid for power. Who'd a thunk communists on the other side of the planet would be so eager to support a resurgence of Christian National Socialism?
Hey, I'm not gonna judge too harshly. It may be a *checks Marxist agrippa* Libertarian Marxist vibe-- ie, destroy patriarchal capitalism, ushering the Worker's Paradise, thus liberating workers from the exploitation of wage labor etc. etc.
Kind of a Marxist hand job.