Friday, March 21, 2014

Lawyer convicted of prostitution is suspended; ethics officials say she didn’t disclose job

Editor's note: This Shark believes that the IARDC prostituted itself when it sanctioned two lawyers for protesting the mistreatment helpless wards and allowed "elder cleansing".  Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com

 

Lawyer convicted of prostitution is suspended; ethics officials say she didn’t disclose job

Posted Mar 19, 2014 5:45 AM CDT
By Debra Cassens Weiss
The Illinois Supreme Court has agreed to a three-year suspension for a solo lawyer who pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of prostitution and failed to disclose her illegal work history on her bar application.
Reema Nicki Bajaj, 28, of Sycamore, Ill., was suspended by consent in an order issued Friday. The petition alleges the prostitution occurred between 2005 and January 2011; Bajaj received her law license in November 2010 after graduating from Northern Illinois University College of Law.
According to a petition filed by the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission, Bajaj identified herself as “Nikita” in ads posted on AdultFriendFinder.com. She performed sex acts with two men who answered the ads, the IARDC alleges, one of which resulted in a June 2012 guilty plea. But Bajaj denied ever exchanging sex for money in sworn testimony in the ethics case in September 2012.
The IARDC says that testimony was false. The commission also alleges that Bajaj failed to disclose information on her bar application, including:
• She didn’t disclose her “Nikita” alias in response to a question asking if she had ever been known by other names.
• She didn’t disclose her employment as a prostitute in response to a question about jobs she held in the last 10 years.
• She answered no when asked about possible misconduct.


Comments

1. B. McLeod
Mar 19, 2014 6:55 AM CDT
How long are they going to keep passing her out whippings for this?  Can it possibly have been material to her qualifications to practice that she used the trade name “Nikita”?  As for the question about “employment,” how clearly was it phrased?  It isn’t like she was on payroll, getting W-2s for these two instances they have brought up.  It isn’t even clear from the account above whether they paid her.  With everything else that is going on in our society, this sort of thing can scarcely even be of note, and they shouldn’t be inquiring about it for bar admission anyway.
2. George
Mar 19, 2014 8:03 AM CDT
I agree, B. McLeod.  Three year suspension?  Sounds like Illinois is stuck in the 50s.  At most, a reprimand.  Bet lawyers who have hurt their clients have gotten far less.
3. Marc
Mar 19, 2014 9:03 AM CDT
McLeod, a lawyer that lies on her application and commits crimes while holding her license deserves to have her license suspended; a lawyer’s veracity is on par with a doctor using sterile instruments, remove either and you have potential disaster.  How was “employment” phrased?  Are you kidding me?  So if I’m not on someone’s payroll or receiving a W-2 I’m not employed?  By your il-logic I guess it then follows that people that fit that description don’t owe income tax either?  That said, I’m fully in support of legalized prostitution, I believe its illegality is ridiculous.  But, until such time that it is decriminalized it remains a crime.  Commit crimes while you’re a lawyer and fail to disclose those facts to the body that governs the profession and it absolutely warrants disciplinary action.
4. tim17
Mar 19, 2014 9:13 AM CDT
Time to legalize prostitution in the US.  No reason it should be illegal. 
What two consenting adults do in the bedroom is no concern of ours.
5. Yankee
Mar 19, 2014 9:23 AM CDT
The penalty stuck me as Draconian.
I wonder how much of this penalty is the result of a failure to disclose, and how much of this penalty is the result of a sense of embarrassment that a former prostitute will become a member of the bar?
When somebody makes an effort to turn their life around, we need to make an effort to be as supportive as we can reasonably be.
6. IanC
Mar 19, 2014 9:53 AM CDT
From a client’s point of view, the difference between hiring a lawyer and an escort is the certainty that the latter will get you off.
7. BMF
Mar 19, 2014 10:30 AM CDT
If your employment is considered a crime or an act of moral turpitude, is it REALLY employment? This doesn’t even make sense. Ordinarily, I’d hope she’d appeal; but I have a feeling the level of prudery only increases as one climbs the food chain of the Illinois judiciary.
8. CGR
Mar 19, 2014 11:23 AM CDT
Marc, you shouldn’t conflate income and employment as if they are the same thing. If you’re not on someone’s payroll and not receiving a W-2 from them, it is possible (perhaps even likely) that you are not their employee. You can receive income from many sources other than employment.
Anyone who’s spent any time in private practice understands that an aspiring attorney who can demonstrate a willingness and ability to engage in a bit of self-prostitution should receive extra credit, not discipline.
9. guest
Mar 19, 2014 11:38 AM CDT
Being a prositute,being a lawyer - there’s a difference?
10. defensivelawyer
Mar 19, 2014 11:47 AM CDT
mental and emotional prostitution- lawyers.
somewhat different from regular prostitution.
3 years seems high.  that said, I don’t see myself as particularly prudish, and i think prostitution should be legal, yet I will admit this doesn’t look good.  i think.
on the other hand, maybe it would make a great combo busines-  you know those combo coffee shop/law practices, or the guy who has a hot dog/law practice stand in CA/
a brothel/law firm….  would be unbelievable publciity.
forget the sex.  maybe just a nude law practice?  would that be unethical?
11. illawyer
Mar 19, 2014 12:14 PM CDT
So is every Illinois lawyer who used a screen name on a website and failed to disclose it on their bar application subject to disbarrment?  What if they have done so since admission, do they need to disclose that to the ARDC?  Is “Abelinc65” on match.com subject to losing their license if they don’t tell the bar about that?  What about “lawstudent14” posting on the ABA site?  Unfit to practice if they don’t disclose?
Let’s say abelinc scalped tickets to a sporting event twice while in law school and/or college, and made a profit.  Should he lose his license if he doesn’t disclose that on bar application?  Does that count as employment?
12. Tyrone
Mar 19, 2014 12:31 PM CDT
She should have claimed it was a hobby, not a job.
I still have trouble with the concept of the word “ethics” appearing in the same sentence as “Illinois”.
13. James
Mar 19, 2014 12:35 PM CDT
You are all missing the point.  This is not about the prostitution.  The main thing she is probably being punished for is she lied to the Displinary Commission in testimony after they started the investigation.  That, you can’t do.
14. George
Mar 19, 2014 12:47 PM CDT
@13, is the “lying” really the “main thing”?  She denied she participated in an illegal activity—perhaps she should have taken the Fifth.  Kinda like ole Bill Clinton “I never had sex with that woman” lie. 
I seriously doubt that she got a 3 year suspension for lying that she had not engaged in criminal activity.
I am sick to death of being told that the purpose of the ethics discipline is not to punish the lawyer, but to “protect the public.”  Really?  How is the public of Illinois protected by a three year (which, is, in essence, a total destruction of her legal career) suspension? 
I think many of the above writers have made excellent points.
15. Madeline
Mar 19, 2014 12:53 PM CDT
Lying on a bar application will subject the applicant to discipline.  She forgot that practicing law is a privilege, it is not a right.  Bottom line, selling sex is illegal conduct and she lied to the bar about it.  If it were consensual sex without a money exchange, it would not be a misdemeanor.
16. Marc
Mar 19, 2014 12:58 PM CDT
CGR, re-read my comment and that of James above.  You’ve clearly missed the point.  But I’ll join you once again in the ‘employment’ rabbit hole & suggest to you that I’ve conflated nothing.  As the ‘world’s oldest profession’, prostitution is in every sense of the word the oldest means of ‘employing’ someone for money in exchange for the given end.  You can split hairs all you want in defense of her actions but it doesn’t change the facts.  As I said above, I’m on board with most on this topic in my belief that prostitution remaining illegal is flat out ridiculous & is probably on par with the absurdity of marijuana being illegal in the same country where alcohol is justified and legal.  But such beliefs are irrelevant until the given legislature holds the same.  I’ve likewise spent more than enough time in private practice to understand your point, but again, it doesn’t change the facts.
17. StephenG
Mar 19, 2014 1:06 PM CDT
Marc,
She did not “lie” on her Bar application; at most she omitted reference to illegal activity.
How many lawyers have failed to disclose past misdemeanors (which prostitution is) or even felonies (marijuana use in some states) on their bar applications?
And is the new standard that an admitted can be suspended for not referencing all past on-line avatars and screen names on websites that they have frequented as “a/k/a’s”.
Two words come to mind: hypocrisy and bullshit.
18. Manuelq1957
Mar 19, 2014 1:40 PM CDT
I think there may be grounds to discipline for not disclosing her business but i wonder, had she disclosed she was a prostitute, would they have denied her admission for that reason? So, it is damned if you do and damned if you don’t???
By the way, she charged money for sex? Have we really received sex without paying for it, even from our spouses??? Nothing is free in life, at least not anymore!!!
19. jeffislouie
Mar 19, 2014 1:45 PM CDT
Please.  Some of you make me laugh, questioning the action, questioning the C&F language, etc.  Google, friends.  Google is your friend.
Question 2A:  “Have you ever been know by any other first, middle, or last name?”  Nikita is a first name.
Question 25:  “List every job (other than those listed in response to preceding questions 23A and 24), including without limitation all temporary, part-time, full-time, and self employment, paid or unpaid, you have held for the ten year period immediately prior to the date of the filing of this application.”  Being a prostitute is most certainly a job that should have been disclosed.
Question 53: “Is there any additional information with respect to possible misconduct or lack of moral qualification or general fitness on your part that is not otherwise disclosed by your answers to questions in this application?”  Yes, she was a prostitute.  That is misconduct, as prostitution is illegal.
Here’s the thing most of you whining about this seem to have forgotten:  Character and fitness is not a joke.  The Bar doesn’t want to admit criminals, those who have committed criminal activity, and/or those who have bad morals and ethics.  Why?  Because someone who is willing to break the law in their own private lives are likely willing to violate the ethical rules we are all held to.
We are supposed to be held to a higher standard.  The idea that some here would forgive that higher standard are examples of why our profession is held in such low esteem.
Let’s be clear - she got lucky to only be suspended and not disbarred.  She exchanged money for sex while in law school and is accused of trading sex for office supplies after becoming an attorney.  This is not an innocent girl who got hosed by the system.  This is a girl who was a hooker, and likely used some of that money to pay for school, books, and client costs.
She deserved worse for the damage she’s done to the perception of the legal community.
20. Name removed by moderator.
Mar 19, 2014 1:56 PM CDT
there is nothing immoral about being a hooker.  she traders her service for money just like a lawyer does.  only difference is society has not socially accepted her services.
21. jeffislouie
Mar 19, 2014 2:15 PM CDT
“there is nothing immoral about being a hooker.  she traders her service for money just like a lawyer does.  only difference is society has not socially accepted her services”
The definition of “immoral” is:  “violating moral principles; not conforming to the patterns of conduct usually accepted or established as consistent with principles of personal and social ethics.”
Lying on the C&F section is immoral.  Committing a vice crime like prostitution does not conform to usually accepted principles of social ethics.
Society has not socially accepted sex for money yet?  Mmmm hmmm.  So you are close friends with hookers and would let one watch your kids, right?
Lawyers are supposed to be ethical.  Ethics require a sense of morality.  Lying on your bar application and subsequent C&F questionnaire is neither ethical nor an example of morality.  Keep fighting the good fight - nothing is better for the perception of the practice of law than excusing hookers that lie on their application for their license.
I don’t care if she’s a prostitute.  I care that she was a lawyer leading a double life and breaking the law as a prostitute.  I care that she lied on her application.  I care that because of her, the public has another reason to think the profession I love and care deeply about attracts scumbags and prostitutes.
Why don’t you nominate her for judge?  Maybe she should be President of the ABA?  Supreme Court Justice?  Oooh!  Let her teach classes in law school about Professional Responsibility!
22. jeffislouie
Mar 19, 2014 2:16 PM CDT
One more difference between a prostitute and a lawyer?  Prostitutes don’t need to graduate from an accredited school and pass an exhaustive exam, nor are they held to a higher ethical standard.
23. defensivelawyer
Mar 19, 2014 2:58 PM CDT
porn actor.  sex for money.  not illegal.
prostiute; sex for money.  illegal.
moral of the story.  just keep a camera rolling, and disclose “actress” on your bar app.
24. George J
Mar 19, 2014 3:26 PM CDT
Three years is a travesty.  The disciplined meted out appear to be wildly inconsistent.The reason in this case is because of the sex job, not lying.  I believe that lying about sexual activities such as this should be acceptable.  It should be okay to lie about having worked at a strip club, or massaging while nude with or without the happy ending. I know law students who have helped finance their education with those jobs.  I might feel differently if telling the truth was not used against the applicant.  The moral judgements are so significant that lying is the only alternative.  If applicants were asked if they have committed any crimes, would they have to confess to every gay sexual act, to every act of intercourse or genital rubbing on a date or with your fiancé or with any person who is married to someone else.  Became fornication is a crime in Illinois.  Adultery is still a crime in Illinois. But it is no longer condemned by most and never prosecuted by State’s attorneys. Even so it should be okay to commit those crimes in secret, without having to disclose them and lying when asked.  Prosecuting escorts is preying on poor women who are doing their best at making money to pay their bills and support their families. The ARDC should not ban her from practicing law.  Three years and until readmitted is often a lifetime ban.  She cannot get a job in the field she studied or in the world’s oldest profession. All because she did not confess to being an escort.  Reprimands and censures, not three years suspension, are often given to lawyers who have done really bad things, with victims. She, on the other hand, was providing a valuable service (and if news stories were correct, she was so desperate that she was charging the market rate for poor men).
25. MrBill
Mar 19, 2014 3:59 PM CDT
@24 - agreed.  If she’d lied about being a clerk at a 7-11, she’d have received a slap on the wrist, at most.
26. BMF
Mar 19, 2014 4:50 PM CDT
@ 18: RE: “By the way, she charged money for sex? Have we really received sex without paying for it, even from our spouses??? Nothing is free in life, at least not anymore!!! “
Dude, it could be worse. Just be thankful we don’t expect you to slay a mastodon for us, at least once a week!
27. Rochester J. Mama
Mar 19, 2014 6:27 PM CDT
The only thing disturbing about this article is that it’s old news.  This was published many months ago and it’s now just rehashing the same.  As for Ms. Bajaj, she knew what she was doing was against the ethics code and the law.  She chose to break the law all the while representing that she would uphold the laws of the United States and the State.  Furthermore, she lied to the character and fitness board.  Lie and lose your ability to be in the profession?  Sure, it happens all the time.  Police officers are fired for lying; firemen and others too.  Sorry, but that’s the risk you take when you step over the line.  I’m disgusted at how many people want to justify her actions based on the low amounts charged or that it’s an action between two consenting adults (by the way, she testified to the ARDC that sometimes it was for money, sometimes, for DVDs, sometimes for office supplies.  Seriously?  I think a psych. eval. is needed here.)  If the legislature makes it legal, then fine.  I truthfully think it’s ridiculous too.  But until that time, she stands in line with everyone else in being required to obey the law.  We can’t pick and choose, folks.
28. Kristin
Mar 19, 2014 6:52 PM CDT
I don’t agree with other comments that cite this as an example of why prostitution should be legal because of the broad social implications of allowing for people to be bought and sold, but that’s not really central to this article.
I can’t help but wonder if the 3 year suspension had less to do with the lack of disclosure on the lawyer’s part and more to do with the disciplinary committee’s feelings about women and sexuality.  I have seen lawyers do much worse with less severe consequences. 
www.lwablog.com
29. George
Mar 19, 2014 7:00 PM CDT
By way of comparison, look at latter ABA postings.  Lawyer who posted video on YouTube which injured client and undermined a criminal prosecution received 5 month suspension.  Lawyers who faked illness and did not show up for oral arguments gets 60 days.  Client was unrepresented at last minute and lost.
Now compare those actual client injuries with this lawyer who did not injure any client.
Anyone still want to argue the length of this suspension makes any kind of logical sense?
30. OBQuiet
Mar 19, 2014 9:43 PM CDT
JeffIsLouie,
I know nothing about the process of applying to the Bar. My only interaction with a bar is to ask what is on tap.
But the conviction seems to have come 2 years after the application so not saying she was guilty at the time seems reasonable since it is not at all clear when money changed hands.
Do you think that anyone shown to have used illegal drugs prior to applying should also be suspended unless they confessed at the time? And should that confession itself bar them from the Bar?
31. BMF
Mar 19, 2014 9:54 PM CDT
@ 19: RE “Here’s the thing most of you whining about this seem to have forgotten:  Character and fitness is not a joke.  The Bar doesn’t want to admit criminals, those who have committed criminal activity, and/or those who have bad morals and ethics.”
The State Bars in many jurisdictions have admitted people with a past criminal history. And the profession is chock full of attorneys with questionable morals and ethics—which is one of the reasons we have disciplinary committees.
As several posters have pointed out, numerous other attorneys have received lighter sentences despite ethical breaches that exposed their clients to severe detriment. That doesn’t seem to be an issue here.
As for the prostitution, someone who allows herself to be pawed by men for a couple of cartridges of HP toner and boxes of copy paper has suffered enough punishment, IMO.
32. George J
Mar 19, 2014 10:05 PM CDT
Every female lawyer who flashes anybody with the intent to excite is also committing a crime.  720 ILCS 4/11-30.  How long should they be suspended?
33. Lawrence v. Texas
Mar 20, 2014 2:13 AM CDT
Comment removed by moderator.
34. Lawrence v. Texas
Mar 20, 2014 2:26 AM CDT
Ms. Bajaj should be commended for finding a way to earn money in a loving activity that brought happiness and joy to another person. Ms. Bajaj may be too honest for a career in law. She should have argued Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003). The Court held that intimate consensual sexual conduct was part of the liberty protected by substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_v._Texas
Reema Bajaj is a beautiful young woman who simply exercised a liberty interest. She did not engage in prostitution, because this set of facts makes that impossible. Any money exchanged was for Ms. Bajaj’s time and companionship. What happens between consenting adults in private is a personal choice between those consenting adults. Ms. Bajaj successfully graduated law school, and thus established that she has superior intelligence. I have seen photographs of Ms. Bajaj that show she is a beautiful woman, with big expressive eyes, and a perfect smile and face. Anyone of her intelligence and beauty would be sought-after in the employment marketplace.
If you read this Ms. Bajaj, don’t let the legal system grind you down. Any shame and wrongdoing is on behalf of the discipline authorities. Be proud of your photos, and of your beautiful female form. Think twice before you throw your life away on the practice of law. You are a special and gifted person with far more to offer this world.
Comment above was intended but not posted for the story below about Reema Nicki Bajaj because the moderator turned-off comments
http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/suspended_lawyer_drops_suit_over_her_nude_photos/
35. Kristin
Mar 20, 2014 5:58 AM CDT
George (comment 29) I also reviewed other cases involving attorney suspensions and found a disparity between the length of suspensions for ie stealing clients’ money, failing to show up for court hearings, throwing client files that contained confidential information in the trash, and the suspension ordered in this matter.
36. NoleLaw
Mar 20, 2014 8:48 AM CDT
Apparently this penalty was imposed by consent. Was she facing even graver sanctions?
I agree with the commenters here who think the suspension is excessive, though some sort of suspension was probably warranted. Lying under oath about criminal conduct, especially after pleading guilty to it, is never a good strategy for a licensed attorney who wants to keep her license. It is precisely the kind of easy-to-prove violation that a Bar is most likely to bring the hammer down on. Little effort required.
37. Luis
Mar 20, 2014 1:41 PM CDT
sure…and while we are at it, lets open up the field to liars, cheaters, thieves, tax evaders, swindlers, pimps, etc; wait a minute…it’s already…
38. Luis
Mar 20, 2014 1:50 PM CDT
By the way as a medical practitioner, I agree with Marc’s comparison to sterile procedure practice, although comparisons do break down, the comparison drives the point.
39. Luis
Mar 20, 2014 2:04 PM CDT
Hey-I have a better idea! Let’s legalize lying, cheating, theft, tax evasion, swindling, pimping…wait a minute…they’re already…
40. Luis
Mar 20, 2014 2:10 PM CDT
That way, cases should be fairly easy to adjudicate! Isn’t that what other countries have done? I think they called it “SOCIALISM! (or is it ANARCHY?...I just cannot decide…)
41. Luis
Mar 20, 2014 2:25 PM CDT
By the way, history has shown that legalizing an act does not, and never will, remove the criminal element inherent in such an act, nor does it resolve the moral dilemma attached to it. That is why we have rules and regulations, whose sole purpose is to establish some standard of ethical, moral, and yes, clinical homeostasis, that benefits us, within it’s limits boundaries, and capacity to engage, whiich is not possible without them.
42. Luis
Mar 20, 2014 2:36 PM CDT
Here is quote from Wikipedia concerning the “Red Light District” of Holland, a primary center for legalized prostitution: “The Netherlands is listed by the UNODC as a top destination for victims of HUMAN TRAFFICKING.” Legalizing prostitution only shifted the crime element’s focus to other endeavors within prostitution.
43. NoleLaw
Mar 20, 2014 2:37 PM CDT
Someone should enact a rule against posting 5 consecutive times on this site.
44. murff
Mar 20, 2014 4:09 PM CDT
I think many of you are missing the point.  She used a screen name on an adult website and met people for sex.  Having a screen name is not going by another name.  She denies exchanging money for sex.  The committee, in its’ infinite wisdom, decided her testimony was false (no explanation given in the article as to what evidence was presented to establish her perjury).  If she is telling the truth (and I believe SHE believes her testimony), she did not commit an illegal act or fail to report income as she denies being a prostitute.  She admits to being involved on an adult website and having sex with strangers.  That’s not illegal or an immoral act.  People do it all the time.  And she’s single so it’s not even adultery.  She may have screwed some strangers but the Illinois Supreme Court REALLY screwed her.
45. B. McLeod
Mar 20, 2014 6:44 PM CDT
Luis, some people use “human trafficking” to describe completely voluntary service in the sex trades, and without knowing the definition they attach, it is hard to know if there is any real issue in the Netherlands.
46. BMF
Mar 20, 2014 9:13 PM CDT
murff @ 44 brings up some interesting points. How much of a distinction is there really between a woman who will have sex in exchange for office supplies, and a date who will only “put out” if the guy springs for lobster or filet mignon at that first dinner out?
Besides, sex is therapeutic, as it alleviates stress—which incidentally is what leads approximately 52% of all attorneys to abuse drugs or alcohol, and may bear a significant relationship to attorney trust fund issues in many jurisdictions.
47. Luis
Mar 20, 2014 11:52 PM CDT
Thanks B. Mcleod! As a rebuttal (and to the chagrin of Nolelaw) please permit me to introduce the following additional quote from Wikipedia:“Many people who support legal prostitution argue that prostitution is a consensual sex act between adults and a victimless crime, thus the government should not prohibit this practice.
Many anti-prostitution advocates hold all prostitutes are themselves victims, arguing that prostitution is a practice which can lead to serious psychological and often physical long term effects for the prostitutes.[8][9][10] They may also argue that the act of prostitution is not by definition a fully consensual act, as they say that all prostitutes are “forced” to sell sex, either by somebody else or by the unfortunate circumstances of their lives (such as poverty, lack of opportunity, drug addiction, a history of childhood abuse or neglect, etc.).[citation needed]
In 1999, Sweden became the first country to make it illegal to pay for sex, but not to be a prostitute (the client commits a crime, but not the prostitute). A similar law was passed in Norway and in Iceland (in 2009). As of 2012, the Republic of Ireland is considering a similar model to that of the Nordic countries (Denmark excluded).[11]
Economic and health issues[edit]
It is argued[citation needed] that street prostitution is not victimless as it may damage the reputation and quality of life in the neighbourhood and diminish the value of property. Peter De Marneffe notes that many prostitutes have not finished school, affecting their ability to be able to have a career that they might have preferred. Therefore, prostitution also affects the application of their talent in other areas of the economy in which they can succeed. Maxwell (2000) and other researcher have found substantial evidence that there is strong co-occurrence between prostitution, drug use, drug selling, and involvement in non-drug crimes, particularly property crime. Because the activity is considered criminal in many jurisdictions, its substantial revenues are not contributing to the tax revenues of the state, and its workers are not routinely screened for sexually transmitted diseases which is dangerous in cultures favouring unprotected sex and leads to significant expenditure in the health services. According to the Estimates of the costs of crime in Australia,[12] there is an “estimated $96 million loss of taxation revenue from undeclared earnings of prostitution”. On top of these physical issues, it is also argued that the there are psychological issues that prostitutes face from certain experiences and through the duration and/or repetition. Some go through experiences that may result “in lasting feelings of worthlessness, shame, and self‐hatred”.[13] De Marneffe further argues that this may affect the prostitute’s ability to perform sexual acts for the purpose of building a trusting intimate relationship, which may be important for their partner. Because of the lack of a healthy relationship, it can lead to higher divorce rates and it can influence unhealthy relationship to their children, influencing their future relationships. Although this is more difficult to control by law, it should be considered when creating policies in protecting prostitutes’ psychological health.”
48. Mike
Mar 21, 2014 2:29 AM CDT
I am with McLeod and those who feel the penalty is much too severe.  She wasn’t convicted of any crime, so she shouldn’t have been forced to incriminate herself or punished for exercising her Fifth Amendment rights.  Perhaps she should run for governor now.
49. Ron
Mar 21, 2014 5:18 AM CDT
This lady committed the crime of getting caught, that is all, and as such had a traceable police record. 
I am surprised they did not use the IRS failure to report income paid in cash.
Gee, wasn’t she punished enough? 
What in the world are the police doing cursing web sites looking to see if there is any exchange of money for sex? 
But think of all the lawyers who could be disbarred for running a lemonade stand and not reporting the income?
Can somebody PLEASE get us out of the bedrooms?
50. Tom in Columbus
Mar 21, 2014 6:32 AM CDT
Prostitution is a “crime” not a “job.” If non-disclosure is the issue, it should have been diclosed in the application’s “Criminal History” section, not employment. Have you ever seen anyone list robbery, fraud, or tax evasion as prior employment? And I too am sick of the reporting of this story. This woman’s personal tragety has become the sport of too many authors.

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