Organized crime law changes unveiled

susi

Sassy Strumpette
Supporting Member
Jun 27, 2008
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@the Meat Market!!!lol
http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/08/04/tories-organized-crime-nicholson.html

The federal government announced new regulations on Wednesday that target organized crime in Canada by designating several "signature activities" of criminal groups as serious offences.

The changes already passed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper's cabinet amend the Criminal Code's definition of serious offences to include 11 specific offences, including illegal gambling, as well as prostitution and drug-related crimes.

Justice Minister Rob Nicholson said the measures give police "every tool necessary" in their organized crime investigations and deprive criminal gangs of wealth.

"When there's money to be made from these acts, you can bet organized crime groups will be involved," Nicholson told reporters in Montreal.

The order-in-council changing the regulations was made on July 13, according to the Canada Gazette, the official publication of the government.

The move gives police more power to conduct wiretaps and other investigative measures, while also lengthening jail terms for acts linked to organized crime.

Currently, those convicted of serious offences can face sentences of five years or more in prison.

The crimes now designated as serious offences include:

•Keeping a common gaming or betting house.
•Betting, pool-selling and bookmaking.
•Committing offences in relation to lotteries and games of chance.
•Cheating while playing a game or in holding the stakes for a game or in betting.
•Keeping a common bawdy-house.
•Various offences in the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act relating to the trafficking, importing, exporting or production of certain drugs.
Liberal MP slams Tory 'diversion'
Speaking to reporters on Tuesday ahead of Nicholson's announcement, Liberal MP Mark Holland said the Conservative government is hiding the true costs of its "crime and punishment" agenda and called on the public safety committee to examine the policies.

Holland also urged the government to reverse cuts on crime prevention programs, saying they help keep kids away from the "dark path" of crime in the first place.

"All the things that we know work, we know save money, save lives … they ignore," Holland said in Ottawa.

He also accused the Tories of creating a "diversion" with the announcement to deflect attention from their widely condemned move to scrap the mandatory long-form census.

"This government, any time it gets into trouble … starts dumping on the table a rash of crime bills and more often than not, they're not thought through," Holland said.

"This is about changing the channel."

But Nicholson said Canada's laws need to be continuously updated because of the increasing sophistication of organized criminal groups seeking to exploit holes in the criminal code.

Organized crime groups, the minister said, often rely upon the proceeds of these crimes to equip themselves to commit violent acts and fund large-scale operations that threaten public safety.

"We've got to close these loopholes on organized crime," he said.

Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/08/04/tories-organized-crime-nicholson.html#ixzz0vg5JKSn3
 

susi

Sassy Strumpette
Supporting Member
Jun 27, 2008
1,496
388
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@the Meat Market!!!lol
http://www.xtra.ca/public/National/..._designation_for_bawdyhouse_keepers-9001.aspx

Sex work activists condemn organized crime designation for bawdy-house keepers

LAW & ORDER / Conservatives target 'the safest place to provide sex work'
Marcus McCann / National / Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Folks charged with keeping a common bawdy house are now likely to face an additional charge: being a member of a criminal gang.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s cabinet made the change — by regulation rather than by legislation. At a press conference on Aug 4, Minister of Justice Rob Nicholson announced the change, although it had been quietly enacted on July 13.

The definition of a “criminal organization” is three or more people engaged in committing “serious offences” for profit. Thanks to the cabinet fiat, “serious offences” now includes keeping a bawdy house.

Christine Bruckert, a professor of criminology at the University of Ottawa who has studied sex work, says the change in regulation could affect massage parlours, brothels, dungeons, bathhouses — even swingers' clubs.

“It could have a significant and wide-ranging impact,” she says.

Bruckert calls the changes “a slippage in the discourse around trafficking,” where anxiety about women being trapped by international pimps is now being applied to unrelated situations.

“If you understand bawdy houses as a place where people work, it has nothing to do with a serious crime,” says Bruckert. “That’s why it’s not defined as a serious offence in the criminal code.”

Valorie Scott of Sex Professionals of Canada (SPOC) agrees, comparing it to the days of Progressive Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.

"How they’re going to sell this to people is human trafficking," says Scott. "When Mulroney made [sex work] an enterprise crime, they made it about the war on drugs. They slid it in there with 26 other offences."

But at least when Mulroney notched up the prohibitions on sex work, he did it in the house of commons, says Scott, and not behind closed doors.

Bruckert points out that those who work in bawdy houses are usually better off than those who do sex work on the street or independently.


Activists rallied on Parliament Hill in 2008 and called on the federal government to decriminalize sex work. See a video here: http://bit.ly/bXR9vJ

“If you’re talking about a labour site, it’s the safest place to provide sex work,” says Bruckert. “You’re providing a disincentive to operate this kind of place.”

Tuulia Law of SPOC agrees.

“People seem to have this preconceived idea of brothels as dangerous or bad, but really it’s just a workplace,” says Law.

Police have repeatedly used Canada’s bawdy house law to raid bathhouses in Canada. A citywide crackdown of bathhouses in 1981 became a rallying point for gay activism in Toronto. More recent raids include Toronto’s Pussy Palace in 2000, Calgary’s Goliaths in 2002 and Hamilton’s Warehouse Spa in 2004.

Law also worries that the Conservatives’ move could affect SPOC’s charter challenge to the bawdy house law and other sex laws. A decision in that case is expected by Sept 30.
 

susi

Sassy Strumpette
Supporting Member
Jun 27, 2008
1,496
388
83
57
@the Meat Market!!!lol
all as a way to undermine so called "organized crime"...i would like to deprive minister nicholson of his "wealth"...fuckin' goof......

please people, call your mp and freak out about this blatant attempt to increase numbers of people in prison= money and jobs especially after the money spent on "the trial".....:moron:
 

icemanmp1

deswillfither
Mar 24, 2004
310
2
0
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vancouver
they should after worse things.. like drugs!!!!!! i have three grow ops where i live and there doing nothing.....................
 

Bad Santa

Seeking Sexy Helpers
Feb 26, 2010
1,111
28
48
South Pole
Common Bawdy House laws should be thrown out! Call them "brothels," bawdy houses," "massage parlours," or whatever you want, these places actually save women's lives by keeping them safe from monsters like Pickton.

Our laws are so f**ked up, I get so damned frustrated just thinking about it!

When will we ever get someone with "common sense" in charge in Ottawa? Probably not during my lifetime!:(
 

Darknight

New member
Aug 6, 2010
12
0
0
Calgary
The bawdy house changes r most likely to target the ones with multiple workers in the same place. Not to go after the independent providers.
But when u have 5 sp working out on one place you are going to attract attention, and should be shut down.
Keep things discrete and don't flaunt what it is u do and you should be safe.
 

Bad Santa

Seeking Sexy Helpers
Feb 26, 2010
1,111
28
48
South Pole
The bawdy house changes r most likely to target the ones with multiple workers in the same place. Not to go after the independent providers.
But when u have 5 sp working out on one place you are going to attract attention, and should be shut down.
Keep things discrete and don't flaunt what it is u do and you should be safe.
Hey, here in Edmonton the majority of girls work in MPs and they are the safest places for them to work. An "Indie" is still all by herself if something goes wrong. In an MP the girls can back each other up if a client gets out of hand.

Most guys that want to pull shit would never go to an MP!
 

Darknight

New member
Aug 6, 2010
12
0
0
Calgary
Hey, here in Edmonton the majority of girls work in MPs and they are the safest places for them to work. An "Indie" is still all by herself if something goes wrong. In an MP the girls can back each other up if a client gets out of hand.

Most guys that want to pull shit would never go to an MP!
I agree that's why sites like perb are such a benefit so the sp as well as the pooner can look at reviews left by others.
No matter where an sp works there is always risks but by asking for references, not accepting blocked calls, and proper screening, and common since they are able to limit them as much as possible.
While being in a mp u just run a higher risk for sweeps, loss of discretion, plus having to give away a portion of your income.
No way is ideal, have seen a lot of indy's who share a workplace with another girl as well.
 
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