Backpage Founder, Alt-Weekly Entrepreneur, and Free Speech Warrior James Larkin Has Died
Larkin, 74, took his own life on Monday, just a little over a week before he was slated to stand trial for his role in running the web-classifieds platform Backpage.

Entrepreneur, journalist, and First Amendment warrior James Larkin has died, just a little over a week before he was slated to stand trial for his role in running the web-classifieds platform Backpage. Larkin, 74, took his own life on Monday.
A native of Maricopa County, Arizona, he leaves behind a wife and six children, as well as a string of newspapers and a legacy of fighting for free speech.
With journalist Michael Lacey, Larkin built the Phoenix New Times from an anti-war student newspaper into a broad—and still-thriving—record of Maricopa County culture and politics. New Times didn't shy away from honest reporting on local law enforcement and power figures—including Sen. John McCain and his wife Cindy—or on controversial issues like abortion, immigrant rights, or the 1976 murder of Arizona Republic reporter Don Bolles.
"I had just come back from school in Mexico City and had been exposed to the Mexican student movement in the late 60's and early 70's and they were really serious radicals, serious revolutionaries, and a lot of them were killed in the ensuing years, murdered by the Mexican government. I realized that politics were serious," Larkin told Reason in 2018. "I felt that the paper…really had an opportunity to be politically powerful."
San Francisco Bay Guardian publisher Bruce B. Brugmann described Larkin and Lacey's aesthetic as "desert libertarianism on the rocks." They expanded their alt-weekly empire nationwide, eventually running 17 free papers, including the Miami New Times, Westword, the Dallas Observer, and The Village Voice.
The company stood out for being both highly profitable and a hard-hitting journalistic enterprise—a perfect blend of Larkin's business acumen, Lacey's brash indie-press M.O, and the pair's shared commitment to exposing and standing up to government malfeasance. Collectively, the papers and their staffers were nominated for more than 1,400 national writing awards, won one Pulitzer, and were finalists for the Pulitzer six other times.
"We weren't trying to curry favor," Larkin told Reason in 2018. And they took a "stubborn approach to bureaucrats telling us 'you can't do that' or 'we're not going to allow you to do that.' We knew what our rights were."
"Law enforcement, politicians, bureaucrats, regulatory types. They don't really understand the First Amendment," he added.
Among the court battles they fought—and won—was one over infamous Sheriff Joe Arpaio demanding data on New Times readers; Arpaio was eventually forced to pay Larkin and Lacey a $3.75 million settlement, which they used to establish the immigrant rights organization Frontera Fund.
Another legal battle was waged over a 1971 New Times ad for a group that helped women in Arizona (where abortion was illegal) travel to California for the procedure. The case eventually helped invalidate Arizona's entire abortion ban.
In 2004, the pair launched Backpage.com as an online extension of the print classified ads that had supported their newspapers until Craigslist decimated print classified profits across the newspaper industry. Like Craigslist, Backpage became a popular digital platform for all sorts of user-generated ads, including a robust business in "adult" advertising.
By the time Larkin and Lacey bowed out of running Backpage in 2015, it had become a worldwide phenomenon. The business was highly profitable and also immensely popular among sex workers.
This earned Backpage—and its creators—the ire of activists, politicians, and prosecutors, who trafficked in myths and moral panic about sex work, sexual exploitation, and online platforms. Much as lawmakers and prosecutors have been doing with a wide swath of social media executives recently, they began demonizing Larkin, Lacey, and other Backpage executives as deliberate merchants of harmful content rather than people providing a platform for the speech of millions of individual users, most of whom were engaging in protected expression.
"We're the canary in the coal mine for the internet," Larkin told Reason in March.
Politicians and the press spread false narratives about Backpage—namely that it was an open forum for "child sex trafficking"—and about its founders' complicity in these alleged crimes. In reality, Backpage was utilized (and loved) by countless independent sex workers. The platform banned ads for anything illegal, including consensual adult prostitution; it also worked hard to keep ads posted by or featuring minors off the site and cooperated extensively with law enforcement when bad deeds were facilitated through Backpage ads.
"Even without a subpoena, in exigent circumstances such as a child rescue situation, Backpage will provide the maximum information and assistance permitted under the law," wrote federal prosecutors in a 2012 memo. This memo, and another from 2013, were the product of an extensive federal investigation into Backpage that included grand jury testimony, witness interviews, and reviewing more than 100,000 internal documents. "Backpage genuinely wanted to get child prostitution off of its site," the federal prosecutors concluded. "Witnesses have consistently testified that Backpage was making substantial efforts to prevent criminal conduct on its site, that it was coordinating efforts with law enforcement agencies and NCMEC [the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children], and that it was conducting its businesses in accordance with legal advice."
Nonetheless, in 2018, federal prosecutors seized Backpage. They began what has turned into a years-long federal prosecution of Larkin, Lacey, and other former executives, who stand accused of violating the Travel Act by facilitating prostitution.
The aforementioned memos, which were accidentally shared with the defendants as part of the discovery process, were ruled off-limits for defense use and placed under seal.
It was just one of many absurdities in an astoundingly unjust prosecution that has dragged on for over half a decade and now has a body count.
In April 2018, the government raided Larkin's and Lacey's homes and put Larkin and Lacey in jail. Upon their release, they were banned from leaving Maricopa County and forced to wear ankle monitors to ensure they wouldn't flee, even though both men had houses, families, and long-standing ties in the area.
Prosecutors seized all sorts of assets from Larkin and other defendants, including assets that had nothing to do with Backpage. For more than five years, they've been unable to get a hearing on whether this was justified. The civil asset forfeiture happened "without a hint of due process," Larkin told Reason in March."They don't want us to be able to have the tools to fight them."
The case finally went to trial in September 2021. But repeated references to sex trafficking—something the defendants are not charged with—by prosecutors and prosecution witnesses led to Judge Susan Brnovich declaring a mistrial.
A federal appeals court said the prosecution was open to trying again, however. For Larkin and the other defendants, this meant even more years of trying to scrape together money to pay defense lawyers (not to mention get by on) while being unable to access the life savings the government was holding. Some of the defendants eventually had to get public defenders.
Late last year, Larkin let his longtime lawyer go. The new judge on the case, Diane Humetewa, rejected requests to push back the trial while his new counsel caught up.
Meanwhile, prosecutors kept showing that they weren't willing to fight fair. Motions filed in June sought to stop the defendants "from referencing the First Amendment and 'free speech' at any time in the presence of the jury," from bringing up "the legality or illegality of any advertisement" that ran on Backpage.com, or from referencing Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, among other things.
In late July, Humetewa partially rejected the First Amendment motion but granted most of the government's other motions seeking to limit how Larkin and the others could defend themselves.
In conversations with Reason, Larkin and Lacey have always been adamant that they are innocent and that the First Amendment protected Backpage and the speech it platformed. "We've never, ever broken the law. Never have, never wanted to," Larkin said back in 2018. "This isn't really—I know this is probably heresy—this isn't about sex work to me. This is about speech." Though of course, "sex workers have an absolute First Amendment right to post ads."
He reiterated that sentiment last March. "To me, the issue is, and always has been, the speech. We platformed legal speech. The government didn't like the speech, but it was legal," he said. "I know that we're innocent and this has been a political prosecution from day one."
He was still pledging to fight, but he seemed less confident than he did five years ago that having the truth and having the law on their side meant they would prevail.
"If the government decides to point its finger at you, there's really no question that they're going to try to ruin you," he said. And "given the system and the way it's set up," principled resistance could only go so far.
It's unclear what Larkin's suicide will mean for the other defendants in the impending trial, which is still scheduled to get underway on August 8.
In an order today, Judge Hemetawa wrote, "the Court, having become aware of Defendant Larkin's passing, will nonetheless expect the parties to prepare for trial to commence on the current scheduled date."
What is clear—at least to me, and surely to the many others who knew him—is that we are worse off for a world without Jim Larkin in it.
"I lost one of my heroes," says Stephen Lemons, who worked for the Phoenix New Times from 2003 through 2017 and now edits Front Page Confidential, a site published by Larkin and Lacey.
Larkin was a true journalist and a pioneering businessman, but "above all of his works, however, he was a family man," wrote Lacey in a statement on the website today. "I never saw my friend do a dishonest or dishonorable thing in his entire life. I had a four-decade friendship with a wonderful man. Now I have only his memory."
In the time I spent talking to Larkin over the years, I encountered a soft-spoken, sharp-witted, and highly principled man with a deep love for his family and pride in the Phoenix-area community he called home. He rescued abandoned succulents, opposed Arpaio's anti-immigrant agenda, couldn't stand hypocrisy, and revered the United States Constitution. He had the discipline and drive of a highly successful businessman and the spirit of a renegade journalist. It seems he never stopped being that anti-war kid who helped build a newspaper with his friends.
He was also someone beset by unnecessary and relentless persecution by the federal government. And now he is no longer around to enjoy the freedoms he championed for others.
"We've had people try to push us—politicians specifically—try to push us around all our lives, all our publishing lives," Larkin told me in a 2018 conversation about why he and Lacey kept platforming adult ads on Backpage even after so much pressure from politicians to stop. "So when we come up to this battle it's informed by that history. That's not ivory tower; it's real. All we've ever done is fight."
Larkin's personal fight may be over now. But his legacy should live on and serve as an inspiration for anyone who cares about civil liberties, free speech, and the freedom of the press.
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Did he actually take his own life, or was he suicided?
A good question.
When he was doing this work:
New Times didn't shy away from honest reporting on local law enforcement and power figures—including Sen. John McCain and his wife Cindy—or on controversial issues like abortion, immigrant rights, or the 1976 murder of Arizona Republic reporter Don Bolles.</i.
That was edgy, alt-weekly, cool-kids, hip-swiveling journalism, but then he came up against Kamala Harris and the DNC machine, and shit got real.
I wonder if Kamala cackled when she heard that her and other's persecution caused a man to kill himself?
Too bad that Harris will never end up behind bars herself.
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There's hope that she'll follow the same path. Unlikely, I know but there's always hope.
Great, when can she do trump?
Wow. How does the article not mention Kamala?
The headline of Diane's link:
Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Announces New Criminal Charges Against Backpage.com Executives for Money Laundering and Pimping
For some reason, you're citing a California DOJ prosecution effort which went nowhere, rather than the Trump Administration DOJ prosecution which is still ongoing and apparently played a role in Larkin's suicide.
https://www.justice.gov/media/945546/dl?inline
Why you would do that?
They say you could hear cackling for miles around if that answers your question.
That's my first thought.
Ridiculous. Nobody would have any reason to kill him. He has no dirt on anyone. There's nothing to silence. They already destroyed him. The way I see it he just opted to go out on his own terms rather than let Kamala take a victory lap on top of him.
Backpage was utilized (and loved) by countless independent sex workers. The platform banned ads for anything illegal, including consensual adult prostitution
Huh? So, there WAS extensive advertising of prostitution, right? I know us libertarians think that shouldn't be illegal, but...it is.
it also worked hard to keep ads posted by or featuring minors off the site and cooperated extensively with law enforcement when bad deeds were facilitated through Backpage ads.
So, sex with minors WAS being advertised on Backpage.
Is this a hill we want to die on?
how does "banned ads for" = "there WAS extensive advertising of prostitution"?
And you pretty much can't keep anything off the internet, so I'm sure there were some ads that got through.
Yeh, I'm fine with dying on a hill fighting for people that have pissed off all the right people here in Phoenix, Maricopa, and Arizona by actually doing reporting. AZCentral/Arizona Republic is a joke.
So, no matter how much effort you expend to prevent your property from being used for crime, you are responsible for the attempts to commit a crime even if no crime occurs!
Saying that you want to have sex with minors is legal, if utter despicable. Touching a minor deserves a jail cell with the bars welded shut.
Saying that you want to have sex with minors is legal
Consult an attorney before testing that theory. And even if it were legal, it would still be retarded.
It's probably not illegal unlss money changes hands or some sort of agreement is reached, as in a solicitation case.
What if you last name is Biden?
Then you're above the law.
I'd be rich as fuck.
Sex with minors is advertised everywhere anything is allowed to be posted. At least unlike Instagram, Backpage was working with law enforcement to shut it down and rescue kids. Seems like a reasonable hill, actually.
Sex with minors is advertised everywhere
And yet, I haven't been seeing any of it. We must have very different online habits. I'm glad.
I accept your claim that you don't recognize what you're seeing.
Perhaps it is you that doesn't know what you're seeing, because you substitute your paranoid fantasies for what's in front of your eyes. Or have you followed up on even one of those ads you think are for sex with minors?
There are hundreds (or thousands?) of cops on the internet right now either looking for child sex trafficking or impersonating a child in an attempt to lure some pedophile into arranging a meeting for sex. They find hundreds of adult perverts, but have never found even two dozen children being trafficked in a year, so there can't be many ads that actually lead to trafficked children.
VD trolled you guys fairly effectively with this one, but his response to this comment is subpar work. He jumps the shark with it, too bad, cause I could see this going the distance and ruining the whole thread.
Enh. His insistence that his ignorance is a virtue isn't all that bold. It's not like there haven't been half a dozen threads here about Instagram, etc, and their CP problem.
Freedom of speech is always about unpopular speech, because that's what gets banned. Uncontroversial speech (for any given country) isn't banned anywhere.
The problem with the "is this a hill you want to die on" argument in general is that it allows your opponents to use Salami Tactics/Death by 1,000 cuts on you. Instead of going after everything at once, they divide all their objectives into a ton of tiny hills, each one of which is not worth dying on by itself, but when combined form a mountain range.
You keep saying this and it keeps demonstrating that you don't have the least clue as to what you're talking about in a distinctly "wet roads cause rain" fashion. Salami tactics aren't the response to feints, retreats, and/or reprioritization of resources, you wind up dumping your own resources into dividing up and inflicting 1,000 cuts on a vestigial organ or limb already intended for sacrifice. Deciding which hill you want to die on is the, generally or abstractly appropriate, response once the opposition has attempted/employed salami tactics against you.
You were in charge of the Ukrainian counter offensive weren't you?
The key term you're missing: up front moderation.
Absent that, this falls squarely in the Libertarian or ("libertarian") "Did you see what she was wearing?"/"Homeowner leaves house unlocked door open, calls cops after getting robbed."/"Section 230 is the 1A of the internet" Bermuda Triangle.
It's dead simple to keep CP off "the internet". Static and even dynamic "Web 1.0"/non-Social sites have done it for decades. Even if someone hacks your site, it fits in the libertarian property-rights conception of squatting or theft.
Everyone here seems to know, in advance, that if you run a social/web 2.0 website, there will be CP. So, presumably, the Backpage.com people knew that as well and went with a publish-first model anyway and just cooperated with police to clean up CP after the fact.
All of the above, together, isn't some principled libertarian arrangement. You, by everyone's seemingly self-evident and up-front knowledge, wind up with legitimate vice peddlers passively-but-knowingly supporting the exploitation of children and police officers deciding which exploitation is acceptable and which isn't based on... their feelings towards the specific vice, any given vice peddler... whatever.
And then, as Reason has apparently discovered, some of its most persistent users are so thick they still clicked on it...
I have no desire to even see anything with "teen" or "young" or "family" or anything like them as a porn tag. When I see videos with tags like those, I go the other way and don't bother playing them.
At the same time, it is the ultimate in injustice and corruption that Krunkt Kackling Kammie cracked down on an online service that cooperated with law enforcement in stopping child sexual predators, yet did nothing even close to the child sexual predators in The Roman Catholic Church, The Southern Baptist Convention, The Latter Day Saints, and others like them who prey on children and run interference for the predators inside their organizations.
In fact, Krunkt Kackling Kammie is complicit with the abuse of The Roman Catholic Church in particular:
AS SAN FRANCISCO DISTRICT ATTORNEY, KAMALA HARRIS’S OFFICE STOPPED COOPERATING WITH VICTIMS OF CATHOLIC CHURCH CHILD ABUSE
Thanks to Kamala Harris’s predecessor, the San Francisco DA’s office had files on clergy sex abusers. But Harris refused to share them with victims.
Lee Fang, Leighton Akio Woodhouse
June 9 2019, 9:00 a.m.
https://theintercept.com/2019/06/09/kamala-harris-san-francisco-catholic-church-child-abuse/
My own local area has had a recent shocking double bill of both Religion and State representatives and agents preying on children, with at least two of them now out in public on bond:
9 arrests made in Charlotte-area child sexual abuse cases since March
Since March, WCNC Charlotte has covered nine child sexual abuse cases in the greater Charlotte area, and at least six of the suspects held positions of power.
Author: Julia Kauffman
Published: 11:47 PM EDT August 4, 2023
Updated: 12:18 AM EDT August 5, 2023
https://www.wcnc.com/article/news/crime/charlotte-area-child-abuse-cases-arrests/275-0ad88433-da82-481d-bde8-b892702c972f
I'm just glad I never brought children into a Hellscape world such as this and I hope parents keep their children safe from a world where authority isn't questioned enough.
how does “banned ads for” = “there WAS extensive advertising of prostitution”?
"Backpage was utilized (and loved) by countless independent sex workers."
Were they only using it to sell used cars and find lost pets?
And you pretty much can’t keep anything off the internet, so I’m sure there were some ads that got through.
Then why don't other sites have a problem with child sex ads? I haven't been seeing kiddie sex ads on Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist.
It's not obvious to me why "actually doing reporting" and "piss(ing) off all the right people" required taking a big risk by hosting ads for illegal sex work. He recklessly poked that bear and suffered predictable consequences.
I have to admit to a certain grudging admiration for your dedication to retardation. First off, “sex work” includes plenty of things other than illegal prostitution. And even if they were offering sex for money, many probably didn’t exactly come right out and say that. Ever heard of suggestion and euphemisms?
Any illegal content they hosted was purely incidental, not any intentional part of their business model. They worked hard to take down illegal content. Law enforcement agencies actively praised them for their cooperation. Aside from failing to meet an impossible standard of perfection, they did nothing wrong.
They “poked the bear” by reporting things the powerful didn’t like, not by hosting personal ads. It’s pretty clear that this entire prosecution is nothing more than a pretext. TPTB couldn’t punish them for clearly protected reporting on government malfeasance. So they found a pretext to start throwing around charges of sex trafficking and child exploitation, knowing full well that most people would straight up lose their shit and turn off all logic and reason. Congrats to you for falling for it, hook, line and sinker.
Not so much who they poked, but Kamala Harris needed to win an election and Backpage was the most convenient target. They didn't have to do anything to earn her ire. I bet she doesn't even have anything against them personally. They were just convenient.
Kamala Harris worked in the Trump Administration?
https://www.justice.gov/media/945546/dl?inline
Wow, she sure got around...
Kamala Harris repeatedly attempted to prosecute Back Page when she was the California Attorney General. Do a little research before posting.
Meanwhile, prosecutors kept showing that they weren't willing to fight fair.
This whole episode perfectly encapsulates the corruption of all public officials who believe they have the moral authority to act in governance of another human being, and their profound cowardice in pursuing a fundamental injustice.
In an order today, Judge Hemetawa wrote, "the Court, having become aware of Defendant Larkin's passing, will nonetheless expect the parties to prepare for trial to commence on the current scheduled date."
And when Larkin doesn't show up, she'll issue a bench warrant for him.
I hope he shows up and eats her brains.
Then the poor guy would die of starvation.
Harassed to death by government.
Fuck Cindy McCain. And fuck all federal officials and agents.
Sqrlsy must be elated. Ever since the Backpage saga was used as an example of someone being imprisoned for the speech of others, he's hated Larkin.
I hope he shows up and eats her brains softwarly
So the DOJ is tied with the Capital Police in the number of innocent people killed.
Thank you Elizabeth for honoring Jim's life and legacy in remembering him as a free speech warrior. So many malicious prosecutions kill activists before they even get to trial, precisely this way. This is such a tragic turn of events. Condolences to Jim's loved ones.