A short caveat: My analysis in this post is limited to Texas state law only. Laws vary from state-to-state. To understand what the law is in your local jurisdiction, please consult a competent attorney where you live.
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I'm frequently asked this question:
"Would a disclaimer in a provider's ad be effective to negate a charge of prostitution, or as a defense to a charge of prostitution?"
My short answer to this question is no, No, NO! This was my answer yesterday. This is my answer today. This will be my answer tomorrow.
Let's review. Under Texas law, a person can commit the offense of prostitution in any of four different ways:
(1) making an offer to engage in sexual conduct for a fee,
(2) accepting an offer to engage in sexual conduct for a fee,
(3) soliciting a person in a public place to engage in sexual conduct for a fee, or
(4) engaging in sexual conduct for a fee.
For a disclaimer in an ad to be effective to get a provider off the hook for prostitution, the disclaimer would have to negate the provider's actual conduct. (Of course, if the provider didn't make or accept an offer, solicit, or engage in paid sex, the disclaimer is irrelevant because the provider didn't commit the offense in the first place.) A disclaimer negating conduct would be like me yelling at you at the top of my lungs, 'I AM NOT YELLING AT YOU!" That's silly.
Think of it this way. What if I always wore a T-shirt that said, 'Any herbs I smoke are legal and intended solely to soothe the pain from my glaucoma.' To me, my shirt is like a magic cloak that makes me invisible to every man or woman with a badge.
I go down to the M Streets where everybody seems to ingest herbs and I'm arrested for buying a dime bag. But I tell Barney Fife, "But look at my shirt, officer! It states what I'm doing is legal."
WTF!, you say. That makes no sense. That's right. And a disclaimer in a provider's ad is the same kind of nonsense. Whether a provider is guilty of the offense of prostitution is NOT determined by what she states in an ad before the conduct related to the offense even begins.
Here's another example. Suppose I post a hand-lettered sign on a rough board outside my shack in Mansfield that states: 'Aint be no guttin hear.' You read the sign and, all fears allayed, you push the squeaky gate and enter my homestead. I suddenly run at you wearing a leather mask and wielding a chainsaw and gut you, lickety-split. Your estate sues me for wrongful death. May I defend by pointing to my sign? Of course not, because my conduct in fact belied my disclaimer.
One final point about disclaimers. I have at times written about the difference between a criminal and a dumbass criminal. Eccie is dang full of criminals. Sterrett is chock full of dumbass criminals. Why are we here enjoying our bit of wingy-wangy while the homeboahs in Sterrett take it up the butt? Because we make better choices.
I've tried approximately 15 prostitution cases to verdict over the years. All my clients were found 'not guilty.' However, I would only suggest that my client roll the dice and go to trial if there was some weakness in the State's case, such as ambiguity in the offer or acceptance, inappropriate touching by the UC cop, or the arresting officer stretched the truth or outright lied. Those are all good issues on which to base a defense. But a disclaimer? Nope.
I can only imagine arguing with a straight face:
"Ladies and gentlemen of the jury. Yes, the State has an audio tape of my client, Dee Tension, agreeing to accept $100 to perform a sex act with Officer Gotcha. Yes, the prosecutor has a one-hundred dollar bill with Miss Tension's fingerprints on it. But Miss Tension is clearly not guilty because her ad on Backpage stated that money was for her time only!"
This would be a dumbass criminal argument, in my judgment, in its basis and in its effect. It's a loser legally and persuasively, in my view. In fact, it's such a barker that I'd risk alienating the jury by making such an argument. The jury could assume I think they're idiots if I thought they might buy into such a load of balderdash.
So you can keep on using your disclaimer like a magic T-shirt, if you want. Just don't be surprised if the jury thinks the emperor has no clothes.