A key witness in the government’s second trial targeting Backpage.com didn’t hold back when telling jurors that the owner and operators of the now-defunct site knew they were promoting the sex trade.

“They were prostitution ads,” former CEO Carl Ferrer said during the first day of testimony Tuesday, according to Courthouse News.

When asked who the ads were targeting, Ferrer, who already pleaded guilty to conspiracy, also said: “Johns.”

After a high-profile mistrial in 2021, co-founder of the notorious classified website Michael Lacey and four former employees find themselves in federal prosecutors’ crosshairs once again this month. The group faces almost 100 felony charges, including facilitating prostitution, money laundering and conspiracy.

Lacey and James Larkin, who died by suicide in July, founded Backpage.com in 2004 as a competitor to Craigslist. The government says the site “earned more than $500 million in prostitution-related revenue ” before being seized by federal authorities in 2018, weeks before passage of the FOSTA-SESTA bill, which modified the country’s sex trafficking law to include penalties for facilitation.

Exactly two years ago Thursday, a judge decided prosecutors had improperly referred to child sex trafficking too often when none of the defendants faced related charges, although the government did accuse the site of advertising the rape of children.

Now, for the second time, Lacey, Executive VP Scott Spear, CFO John “Jed” Brunst, operations manager Andrew Padilla and assistant operations manager Joye Vaught could all end up in prison. (Larkin had been a co-defendant before he died of suicide on July 31.)

“Based on the facts we know, it appears the government has them dead to rights.”

Said Derek Bambauer, professor of internet law at the University of Florida

If prosecutors can show that the defendants knew the nature of the material going on their site or worse, had a role in designing ads for customers, the government could ultimately win out, said Derek Bambauer, who teaches internet law at the University of Florida.

“The fact they appear to have been really closely involved in the tailoring of the ads and the knew they were appealing to to this particular sector, then they’re going to have a difficult time,” said Bambauer, who formerly taught in Arizona, where Backpage was based. “Based on the facts we know, it appears the government has them dead to rights.”

Given the high-profile nature of the case as well, defense attorneys have an uphill battle.

“I think it’s going to be very difficult,” Bambauer added. “It’s really going to be hard to mount a successful defense.”

But law professor Gregg Leslie, executive director of Arizona State University’s First Amendment Clinic, still believes defense attorneys could show their clients didn’t willfully promote the sex trade.

“Their point would be, we’re not running ads saying, ‘Hey I’m a prostitute let’s meet up,'” Leslie said. “They’re just running ads for personals, connections and escort services. And if they don’t look into it and they’re not promoting an illegal business, then why should that be illegal?”

Lacey and his former employees have said they never knowingly posted ads for sex work and even worked with police to help break up operations.

Earlier this week, defense lawyers told jurors they can show their clients made sincere efforts to keep ads for sexual services off the site.

“Backpage was viewed in law enforcement as the most cooperative site,” said defense lawyer Bruce Feder, who represents Spear. “They thought they were doing good. They wanted to get abusers off their site.”

Defense lawyer Joy Bertrand, representing Vaught, said her client “battled bad apples” and kept “trashy” ads for sex work off Backpage.

Ferrer’s testimony Tuesday, however, appears to refute that.

Lacey and Larkin were among the founders of the alternative weekly Phoenix New Times in 1970. The two went on to own other alternative weeklies, most notably the The Village Voice in New York City, before ultimately selling their newspaper interests in 2013.

But the pair kept Backpage and repeatedly defended themselves from critics who said the site turned the other cheek to sex trafficking and child abuse.

“Backpage is part of the solution,” Lacey wrote in an internal document, according to the indictment. “For the very first time, the oldest profession in the world has transparency, record-keeping, and safeguards.”

After the site’s shutdown, sex workers did speak out about how their safety and livelihood were negatively impacted.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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