...in the R'Boyz forum Supreme Court.
Attorney X: "I assert to the court that Miss England is known to activley conduct business in the world's oldest profession. Indeed her customers know where to find her and are familiar with the terms by which she conducts her illegal trade. The court then should hold that the fact that she encounters a ruthless Don who tries to access her services on new and violently achieved terms, gives her no standing to complain about being brutalized."
The Court: "QC X, even a prostitute should not be brutalized. Going further, can a prostitute not learn the error of her ways and express remorse at some time? Is a prostitute not also a human being who has the right to equal protection under the law? Big powerful criminal enterprises should not prey on prostitutes and feel that the law will be blind to this action just because of the illegal trade that prostitutes like Miss England engage in. Indeed, desperate would be prostitutes sometimes enter the trade and into sexual slavery because of the lure of payoffs by Dons/Johns and then often wind up being brutalized and enslaved by these big Dons. Surely prostitution is a problem. But the raping and plundering of prostitutes by big powerful men is a terrible crime. Even prostitutes can expect this court to bring these powerful men to justice. Outside of the actions toward bringing these men to justice, separate action can also be taken by the crown against the prostitute. Courts may find the prostitute guilty and may even supsend the sentence based on the brutality which was meted out to the prostitute by a ruthless Don."
Attorney X: "I assert to the court that Miss England is known to activley conduct business in the world's oldest profession. Indeed her customers know where to find her and are familiar with the terms by which she conducts her illegal trade. The court then should hold that the fact that she encounters a ruthless Don who tries to access her services on new and violently achieved terms, gives her no standing to complain about being brutalized."
The Court: "QC X, even a prostitute should not be brutalized. Going further, can a prostitute not learn the error of her ways and express remorse at some time? Is a prostitute not also a human being who has the right to equal protection under the law? Big powerful criminal enterprises should not prey on prostitutes and feel that the law will be blind to this action just because of the illegal trade that prostitutes like Miss England engage in. Indeed, desperate would be prostitutes sometimes enter the trade and into sexual slavery because of the lure of payoffs by Dons/Johns and then often wind up being brutalized and enslaved by these big Dons. Surely prostitution is a problem. But the raping and plundering of prostitutes by big powerful men is a terrible crime. Even prostitutes can expect this court to bring these powerful men to justice. Outside of the actions toward bringing these men to justice, separate action can also be taken by the crown against the prostitute. Courts may find the prostitute guilty and may even supsend the sentence based on the brutality which was meted out to the prostitute by a ruthless Don."
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