The Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation (CAASE) is a non-profit working to establish a community free from the commercial sex trade. As the CAASE Policy Director, Lynne Johnson has sought to shift the attention placed on prostituted women toward the individuals who profit from all forms of sexual exploitation. Now, Lynne is working to change legislation in Illinois, advocating for the rights of prostituted people through her statewide campaign, End Demand Illinois (EDI). In 2013, the state ruled to de-felonize prostitution after years of harsh penalties for the accused, putting CAASE and EDI at the forefront of a change they largely created. Catch the Sex Slaves: Chicago marathon on Sunday, November 9th, 7-10 p.m. ET.
Q: What is the mission behind CAASE?
A: CAASE was founded in 2006, and was one of the first non-profits that we’re aware of in the country that addresses the culture and institutions of individuals that are profiting from sexual exploitation. So, really we’re going after the exploiters that we consider to be pimps, traffickers and people who buy sex.
Q: Could you speak a bit about the type of outreach and legal services that CAASE provides?
A: CAASE works toward our mission through four primary ways. We have a prevention program, which is an educational curricula that educates high school age boys to work against sexual exploitation. We educate them about the truth of prostitution and encourage them to see themselves as allies. We also do community engagement, which is our work to increase public understanding about the harms of the sex trade. A third strategy is policy work. That’s my role. So, cases advocating for legislative and policy reform to transform our communities’ response to prostitution and sex trafficking, such as End Demand Illinois. The fourth program at CAASE is our legal services program, where we represent survivors of sexual harm and exploitation in both the civil and criminal side of our court system, with the goal of trying to hold perpetrators accountable and advocating for effective criminal prosecution
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Q: As of last year, Illinois voted to end the felony sentence for prostitution. That was an End Demand Illinois initiative. What was the motivation for this bill?
A: We’ve passed five laws in five years. That was our fourth law. The reason we ran the bill was that felony prostitution was a failed 13-year experiment in Illinois. It was an ineffective use of very limited law enforcement resources. It was not addressing the real reasons behind why people were in prostitution, and it was encouraging law enforcement to arrest and re-arrest prostituted people, instead of seeing prostituted people as worthy of supportive specialized services.
Q: How did Illinois compare with other states in that regard?
A: Illinois was far behind. We had one of the harshest laws in the country at that time. The Illinois law allowed police — prosecutors — to charge someone with felony prostitution after only one prior conviction in their background. That was very harsh in comparison to laws around the country.
Q: What did having a prostitution felony on their record mean for those women?
A: The law was sending thousands of women to the Illinois Department of Corrections, and that meant they all had felony records, which made access to employment and job training and other services even more difficult. At the same time, Illinois has a felony statute for people who actually buy sex. It’s called, “Patronizing a Prostitute.” There had been less than 10 convictions for that in six years. Compare that to hundreds of women during that time period going to the Illinois Department of Corrections. We saw a significant gender imbalance in how laws were being enforced. It was imperative for us to pass that law.
Q: I’ve found that while society largely distinguishes between prostitutes and victims of sex trafficking, the same cannot be said for the organizations representing these victims. How should one distinguish between the two, or rather, should a distinction even exist?
A: This is a very complicated question. Pimps, johns and traffickers need prostitution to profit and become successful, and it is a system where our community has normalized the buying and selling of human beings. So CAASE believes that prostitution is a violation of human dignity, and that, in and of itself, is worthy of attention and focus on the people who profit and exploit others by buying and selling them. I don’t agree there should be some kind of sliding scale where some people are more exploited than others. It all involves the buying and selling of human beings.
Q: What might something like this say about our larger societal makeup?









