Thank you for replying.
Will their actions, or lack thereof, rise to the legal standard that they knew? I don’t know.
. . . the hotels and truck stops. If the victim can prove that employees at this places knew she was being trafficked, then what do you think should be done?
In a nutshell, if you see something, say something or else you may get drawn into court.
Originally Posted by LimitlessJD
The Backpage question:
Don't they have plausible deniability? One would think the website wouldn't be informed exactly what is going on.
The hotels and truck stops:
Unless the hotel staff and management are in on it, they could only assume what was happening. Same with the truck stops.
This wreaks of a witch hunt. As awful as this sounds, do these entities have an obligation to ask what is happening on their property? And therefore have the right to refuse their services on a mere suspension?
When do ethics outweigh the law?
For the record, I am not trying to justify anything of the sort. I love listening to great conversations and getting into the semantics of language and words. As a humorist. Playing with words is fun. Wether in politics, the law, medicine or the psyche.