Mixed feelings among Canadian cops about Backpage.com adult section
Some law enforcement officials say the advertising website Backpage.com should shut down its “adult” sections in Canada, following allegations in the U.S. that the company systematically edited adult ads to remove words that indicate sex trafficking.
But others argue the site is a useful tool that helps Canadian authorities track potential victims, search for missing women and monitor prostitution services.
Backpage, which hosts everything from child care to real estate ads, shuttered all adult sections in the U.S. on Monday, hours before a U.S. Senate committee released a report alleging the site has created a lucrative marketplace that makes child sex trafficking easier. The report cited internal documents showing that up to 80 per cent of the site’s ads are edited to conceal the true nature of the underlying transaction.
The company has denied the report’s allegations and accused the U.S. government of “unconstitutional” censorship. Four top executives told the Senate subcommittee they were invoking their Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination.