The Backpage Defendants Never Stood a Chance
Moral panic plus government power is an inescapably potent combination.

Eighty-six counts of criminal activity—that's what veteran journalist and publisher Michael Lacey faced in the federal case against him, a saga kicked off by federal agents raiding his house and shutting down a website he co-founded in 2004, Backpage. A saga that has stretched on for more than five years, through multiple judges, one mistrial, and the death of Lacey's longtime business partner James Larkin. A case premised on a moral panic that previewed tactics threatening to all sorts of speech.
One count of international concealment money laundering—that's the only charge of which a jury found Lacey guilty. Lacey's offense? Moving money from a U.S. bank to a Hungarian bank in 2017.
Transferring money between bank accounts doesn't seem like it should be a crime. Then again, neither does most of the underlying activity in this case—consensual hookups between adults; providing a platform for sex-worker speech; letting people pay for services with bitcoin, and so on.
The Department of Justice claimed this was about "keeping women and children across America safe" from sex trafficking. But behind that bravado, the government's actual case was clearly something less noble. A performance of protection. A publicity stunt. A massive scapegoating set against the backdrop of a moral panic. And a politicized prosecution against people who engaged in and defended the most dangerous thing to any government: free speech.
Ultimately, the Backpage prosecution was a small-scale tragedy that upended individual lives as well as something much bigger. Its effects were wide-reaching and devastating for many sex workers. And yet—it wasn't ultimately about sexual commerce or sexual crimes, not at its core. This was a warning shot fired at entities that enable all sorts of digital communication and a test bed for further legal attacks on tech companies that won't suppress speech as politicians see fit.
That Lacey was convicted of "international concealment money laundering" is bizarre, since the money transfer was not concealed: His lawyer informed the IRS about it, as required by law. And it was not made for nefarious purposes, according to Scottsdale lawyer John Becker's trial testimony. Lacey had needed some place to park his savings after U.S. banks, scared by a years-long propaganda crusade against Backpage, had decided doing business with the company or its associates was a reputational risk. So Becker and another lawyer advised Lacey to deposit the money—$17 million, on which taxes had been paid—with a foreign bank.
It's hard to see how Lacey conducted a financial transaction "to conceal or disguise the nature, the location, the source, the ownership, or the control of the proceeds of specified unlawful activity," even if you accept the government's premise that this money was derived from unlawful activity. And, to be clear, I don't accept that premise, since Backpage's business should have been protected by the First Amendment (not to mention Section 230 of federal communications law).
But Backpage made money from adult ads, and the government alleges that some of those ads were illegal enticements to prostitution. Therefore, the case alleged, anything done with money made from Backpage was de facto illegal. That's how Lacey—and former Backpage executives Jed Brunst and Scott Spear—wound up facing money laundering charges for merely moving money around.
That jurors could only agree to convict Lacey on one out of 86 counts highlights the fundamental bankruptcy of the state's case.
And yet—Lacey, age 75, could still spend the rest of his life in prison on this one count, which carries a possible sentence of up to 20 years in prison.
Meanwhile, the verdict, handed down in mid-November, still leaves Lacey in limbo, too. While jurors found Lacey not guilty on one count of international promotion of money laundering, they were hung on the more than 80 other counts, leading Judge Diane Humetewa to declare a mistrial on those. That means federal prosecutors could still try again—a third time, that is.
The most recent trial was their second attempt. Back in 2021, Judge Susan Brnovich declared the first trial a mistrial because prosecutors and their witnesses wouldn't stop smearing the defendants as human traffickers and child predators, even though none of them faced charges involving children or trafficking.
Lacey, Larkin, Spear, Brunst, and the two other Backpage defendants on trial—operations manager Andrew Padilla and assistant operations manager Joye Vaught—were accused of a conspiracy to facilitate prostitution and various acts in furtherance of this alleged conspiracy.
Backpage officially banned ads for illegal activity, including ads promising sex in exchange for money. But the feds argued that some such ads got through anyway, and many others were simply coded offers for commercial sex. The Backpage defendants countered that many forms of sex work are legal (as are ads promising or seeking casual sex). Backpage simply provided a forum for advertising these legal activities, and doing so was protected by both the First Amendment and Section 230, which shields web platforms from liability for content created by their users and for content moderation. If people ultimately engaged in illegal activity after posting or responding to Backpage ads, that was on them.
The jury disagreed in part. Spear was found guilty of 17 counts of facilitating prostitution, and he and Brunst were both convicted of multiple counts of money laundering and conspiracy crimes.
However, the jury acquitted Padilla and Vaught of all charges.
"My client should have never been in this case," Vaught's attorney, Joy Bertrand, said. "She was charged and pressured to cooperate and assist the government, and she had the courage to say no."
Indeed, it seems likely the feds charged Vaught and Padilla in an attempt to get them to turn on Lacey and Larkin. It was Lacey and Larkin—along with CEO Carl Ferrer, who did turn state's evidence in exchange for a plea deal—who launched Backpage, profited most from it, and had the most control, at least in the beginning.
It was also Lacey and Larkin who spent decades as journalists and publishers exposing government corruption and opposing everything from the Vietnam War to abortion bans, tough immigration policies, and abuses of police power. And it was Lacey and Larkin who had been fighting government incursions on free speech in court case after court case.
Lacey and Larkin suggested all along that their prosecution was personal, accusing power players like the late Sen. John McCain and his wife Cindy of trying to get revenge for all the times their papers had exposed unflattering facts about them and their associates.
But the case has always been deeply political as well, designed to test the limits of Section 230 and free speech online generally.
Backpage was a test case, chosen because its affiliation with sex workers made it an easy target (a lot of folks are willing to ignore injustice if they think it only affects the wrong kind of people). If the government could get away with doing it to Backpage—that is, demanding control over what sorts of speech the platform allowed, punishing leaders and staff for failing to submit, and using the whole thing as a rallying cry to wrest more regulatory control of online content—they could move on to attacking bigger and more widely-used platforms. And that's exactly what they've done in recent years, going after Twitter, Facebook, and other big tech companies—not to mention "the internet's First Amendment," Section 230, more broadly—using the playbook they perfected with Backpage.
Moral panic about sex trafficking is the underlying current that made all of this possible.
The first two decades of this century have been awash in (unfounded) fear about an alleged epidemic of women and children being forced into sexual slavery—a narrative pushed by people wishing to conflate all sex work with sex trafficking. Activists looking to drum up support for this narrative often zeroed in on escort ads (once easily viewable by anyone who visited the likes of Craigslist, Backpage, or countless other platforms) as "proof" that 21st-century America was awash in what they termed modern slavery. For politicians looking to get some good publicity, attacking these platforms was an easy path.
Meanwhile, political actors of all sorts seized on sex trafficking to push pet schemes, including crackdowns on consensual sexual activity and increasing surveillance of immigrants, online speech, and more. Much like with the war on drugs—which was becoming less and less potent as a ploy for expansions of government power—they seized on this zeitgeist-y boogeyman and used it to expand policing funding, surveillance state powers, and other measures of control. And much of the media, along with others who often style themselves as defenders of free speech, bought—and spread—the government's propaganda, or at least declined to speak against it.
The government tried to confuse the public about the Backpage case from the beginning, shouting about sex trafficking whenever possible and crowing about how Backpage's shutdown was a boon for victims. But law enforcement has said otherwise, both in public and in private, and both before and after the site's seizure. Backpage helped police locate victims and prosecutors build cases against perpetrators, and Backpage executives and staff were cooperative in these efforts. Federal prosecutors themselves admitted it in private memos.
In fact, the FBI told auditors with the Government Accountability Office that since the site's shutdown, stopping sex trafficking has become more difficult.
Countless sex workers have talked about how their work has become less safe since Backpage and similar sites were taken down by the feds. And countless others—sex workers and not—have seen an erosion of their right to free speech online, and not just about commercial sexual activity.
That's the sad legacy of this prosecution: less accountability for sex traffickers, less safety for people in the sex trade, less free speech online for everybody—and a legal playbook for the government to follow for further invasions of Americans' speech and privacy rights.
And to achieve this outcome, law enforcement officials ran roughshod over myriad individual lives. The Backpage defendants had their assets seized, their reputations smeared, and years of their lives stolen, all so the government could further its sex trafficking charade.
Lacey, Brunst, and Spear may spend the rest of their lives in prison. Larkin took his own life last summer, just before the trial started. It's impossible to say why with certainty, but it was also clear to everyone who knew him that the prosecution had severely beaten him down.
"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 "given the system and the way it's set up" they have a good chance of succeeding, Larkin told me last spring. By this point, several of the defendants had to get public defenders as they could no longer afford to pay private lawyers. Much of Lacey's and Larkin's assets had been seized, including money they made long before Backpage, and years of fighting these charges without access to that money was taking a toll. "They're going to litigate us until we're dry as beef jerky," Lacey said then.
Backpage surely won't be the last website targeted for allowing speech that the government deems undesirable. And what its case shows is how powerful the law enforcement apparatus can be, and how little the protections supposedly afforded by the law and the constitution matter when agents of the state decide to make an example out of you.
The government will always have more resources—more money, more time, more allies, more influence, more power. Up against that sort of rights-trampling leviathan, what are little things like truth, rights, or justice?
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Kamala Harris is ashamed of herself, I'm sure.
This is why you can’t have chicks in charge.
I doubt the house subcommittee on the weaponization of the federal government will look into this one.
Ctrl+f ‘230’: 6 results
[Insert distracted boyfriend meme here]
LOL
Ok I larfed.
That was fucking hilarious.
Ackshuyally, John 5:56 does not exist, M'Lady.
*Tips camouflaged fedora.*
Just say that 5.56 is your minimum size and it's guaranteed to keep the gun control freaks away without firing a shot.
🙂
😉
Keep the ginned-up God Talk off of pro-firearm T-shirts. One of these alleged things is not like the real other.
The 2nd Amendment exists as a means to protect freedom of religion. You do not believe in the latter, nor do you understand the Scripture you cited. Your misunderstanding results in your declaration of God’s supposed nonexistence as totally unreliable. But you can repent.
Did you see this AI-enhanced one yet?
https://twitter.com/fofrAI/status/1728147962935599241
Funny. Well done. haha
Moral panic plus government power is an inescapably potent combination.
Useful idiots work hardest when emotionally engaged.
The J6 insurrection narrative being a prime example, no?
You talking about the Dem politicians demanding censorship and cunts like ENB defending such under the guise of "private companies" doing what they want, just ignore the duress?
one other factor that rarely gets mentioned.... back page was also committed to those freedom of speech and personal rights issues for private firearms sales too. so, even those who might have been inclined to be activists for the sex workers avoided it because of the guns. they were victims of thee all or nothing tribalism that dominates us today.
That's an interesting perspective, but I'm not sure it played a major part. Doing random searches for the backpage case show a LOT of outrage over the sex trafficking issue-- and a lot of the outrage comes from what I perceive to be the center-left. A lot of scholarly legal articles from such right-wingy sources as Boston University etc.
My point isn't to glibly 'blame democrats' for this (although it's tempting), my point is that the center left has been all consumed with 'sex trafficking' for a good long while now and they perceive Backpage to be a unique villain in this space.
The pro-sex-worker wing of the left that was full of #MeToo outrage while asking you to subscribe to their OnlyFans is, unfortunately probably too small a contingent to put up a public defense of Backpage, leaving them with no real allies.
“My point isn’t to glibly ‘blame democrats’ for this…”
Never fear. I’ll handle that for you.
It’s all the Democrats fault.
possibly. maybe a more simplified version of my point is in order. they dared to operate on real principles of free speech, and didn't openly pander enough to one particular tribe in doing so. they didn't play it like they were helping sex workers, they just said, "hey, they can say what they want and what happens when they meet up is their business." and then they said the same thing for private gun sellers......
as much as the right and left like to pretend they are operating on principle, they both only like those principles to be applied in a manner limited to what they want, and cannot abide those principles being extended to what they don't want.
But the case has always been deeply political as well, designed to test the limits of Section 230 and free speech online generally.
Again, saying nothing about the legal, Trump-like railroading of these clients (yeah I said it), Section 230 does not give you blanket immunity for 'stuff posted on your site'. For instance, section 230 doesn't give a site owner immunity for what the site owner does with that data.
The best analogy I can make is, someone posts something illegal on your site. Your site algorithm or owners then take that post and promote it as 'trending' on your home page, and use it to sell ads... you will no longer "enjoy" section 230 protections. It sounds to me that this is the essence of what the government was arguing, that Backpage profited in some way from the posts placed on their site.
For instance, section 230 doesn’t give a site owner immunity for what the site owner does with that data.
Section 230 bald faced and in plain English only protects hosts and service providers from their users. It does not protect hosts and service providers (or users) from the government. Full stop.
People distort the section from the title on down but even from a non-hostile, original intent, good faith* reading, S230 only protects you from civil litigation, not from criminal prosecution.
I’m not able to rightly comprehend how ‘libertarian’ jurinalists continue to fail to make the distinction that even if you murder someone performatively, your performance isn’t protected free speech. I assume they do it with paychecks and cocktails.
*I think Backpage, or the service it claims to provide, has every right to put up and operate a web-based business. Advertising sex work among consenting adults is, or should be, protected free speech.
Section 230 bald faced and in plain English only protects hosts and service providers from their users. It does not protect hosts and service providers (or users) from the government. Full stop.
100% correct, which is why Youtube had to tweak their 'children's' policy. Something Reason to the best of my knowledge never even covered. Youtube made MAJOR changes to their terms of service for creators posting content that was "of interest to children", changes so dramatic that long-running, popular youtube channels shut down. The reason they did this is because regulatory agencies were coming after them. Section 230 be damned.
Two points: there is no mention of an appeal to the Supreme Court in the article that I could see. And the issue of confiscating a suspect's money before they have been convicted of a crime (or even after unless the money is proven to have been acquired illegally): the government should be required to make funds available to the defendant for legal costs, and the defendant should not be prevented from continuing to earn a living until their occupational activities have been proven in court to be illegal and all appeals have been completed.
Backpage surely won't be the last website targeted for allowing speech that the government deems undesirable.
You oughta see the Twitter files, ENB. Surely that'll raise an eyebrow.
I mean Mackey wasn't even letting prostitutes advertise.
Is that available on Mastodon?
Was likely censored over there.
No word yet that Lacey will be appealing the one conviction? Because this seems like clear error to me.
FWIW as a general principle the prosecution’s smearing of the defendants in the first trial should result in a dismissal with prejudice, else the prosecutors have a free option – if the judge says “mistrial” they get to go again, and if he doesn’t, they’ve increase their chances of conviction without having to provide any supporting evidence.
Countless sex workers have talked about how their work has become less safe since Backpage and similar sites were taken down by the feds.
They could, y'know, do something else. Like, literally anything that's not that.
This always has the same mentality of like, needle exchanges or safe-injection sites or drug vending machines. Or seatbelt/helmet laws. If you want to do something stupid and dangerous like drugs or prostitution, be my guest - but don't cry foul because the non-stupid rest of the world isn't bending over to mitigate their risk of harm for you and doesn't care when you win your Darwin Award.
Leave them alone from your high horse...stupid and stop persecuting them
"Persecuting?"
I'm literally saying the exact opposite. If they can't be convinced against making their poor choices, then let them do their thing and incur all the inherent risk that comes with it. You want to die with a needle in your arm in a john's by-the-hour motel room, that's on you. If you're going to insist on playing with fire, then go ahead - but don't cry about fire being hot.
Don't whine because nobody's saving sex peddlers from the harm caused by their wanton stupidity. Nobody owes them that. And if they're stable mares being trafficked against their will, you're empowering that by defending the industry.
How's about you try getting ON a high horse when it comes to the issue. There are worse places to be on the subject.
No, that’s NOT what you’re saying! That’s what you would like us to think you’re saying, but you are tacitly approving the government banning a voluntary safety protection for them. There is no possible reason for the government to ban sex work or the advertising of consenting adults selling or buying sex. No one here is trying to protect sex workers; we're trying to get the government to stop persecuting them, which is exactly what they are doing. Whether sex work or drugs – or jumping out of airplanes with a parachute, for that matter – are dangerous is none of your business and none of the government’s business. Acting all smug and self-righteous over the danger to sex workers is nasty and you should be ashamed of yourself.
Why should people be fooled into believing that something inherently dangerous could ever BE safe?
Do you know why every skydiving company in America forces you to sign a waiver and requires either a tandem jump and/or huge amounts of training the first time? Because jumping out of an airplane, even with a parachute, is not safe and everyone knows it.
By creating a false sense of security – especially in the sex/drug trade – you’re actually making it MORE risky and dangerous. Heck, we saw that just with the advent of modern contraception. You’re lulled into believing it’s “safer,” so you become less diligent when it comes to engaging in risky behavior. When, instead, the risky behavior should be discouraged in the first place.
If you gave a damn about sex workers or drug addicts you’d take the same position I do: Convince them against making poor choices. Don’t facilitate/empower it.
And if they refuse to listen and they go play with fire – then let them get burned. They literally asked for it when they never had to.
In our democracy, government is not responsible or liable for their actions. American clerics is the appropriate adjective for our government.
And they put a gag order on Trump for appropriately demonizing the American system.
The USA is as corrupt as any. If you cannot break down the door and hang them you kill them with some evasion. The Al Capone prosecution. THAT is how you get 'em in a "free" "democracy." The dumb ass jury convicted! Even if you are innocent in this country you are better off taking a deal.
Now do J6 you dumb cvnt
The government wants sex workers to be less safe so they can use that to crack down on society as a whole.