Prostitution is down on Seattle’s Aurora Avenue. Will it stay that way?
Text of article in November 5, 2023 Seattle Times. Link to article including pictures.
When a veteran vice detective tried to book a room at the Emerald Motel on Seattle’s Aurora Avenue North last spring, he was told all 28 rooms in the 1940s-era travel lodge were already reserved for the entire summer.
It was the same story at the 42-room Seattle Inn next door.
“Those hotels were charging those girls $200 a night in cash,” he said. “They were making good money there,” tying their business to the pimps and sex traffickers from up and down the West Coast who flocked to a roughly 10-block stretch of Aurora.
The two motels on the west side of the urban highway, just south of North 125th Street, were the site of an open-air sex market that attracted droves of sex buyers and contributed to increased lawlessness — shootings, homicides, robberies, drug dealing and other crimes — in the surrounding neighborhood, according to police.
The victimization of prostituted women and girls, and the violence that came with it, got so bad that the Seattle Police Department and City Attorney’s Office had the two motels declared chronic nuisance properties, a rarely used mechanism in the municipal code that requires a property be shut down until police determine crime has been abated.
The motels were shuttered in August, immediately disrupting the local marketplace and greatly reducing the number of prostituted women seen walking the streets in sky-high heels and barely there clothing. While the chill and rain of fall has seemingly further reduced their ranks along Aurora, the true effect of the motels’ closures won’t be known until next spring or summer, when warmer weather typically sees a return of prostituted women to the area’s streets and parking lots.
That’s because Seattle — which repealed its drug traffic and prostitution loitering laws in 2020 and has seen hundreds of officers leave the Police Department — has gained a reputation as a city where demand remains high, there’s little risk of arrest for sex buyers, and pimps and traffickers can make lots of money from the lucrative sex trade.
Aurora has for decades been the city’s epicenter of prostitution, and it remains a destination for both local pimps and traffickers, as well as those who shuttle women and girls along the West Coast “circuit,” peddling sex here and in cities like Portland, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and Phoenix. At the same time, social-service providers who offer women and girls a path out of prostitution are stretched to capacity and say the men who pay for sex have become increasingly aggressive and violent.
After prostitution activity plummeted at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Seattle police and King County prosecutors say the Aurora “track” saw a resurgence in women walking the street, congregating in parking lots and flagging down motorists — while also waiting for men to respond to online ads, and meeting them back in their motel rooms. It was a hybrid system meant to maximize profits.
In the case of one out-of-state pimp arrested in Seattle late last year, federal prosecutors are seeking forfeiture of nearly $73,000 in cash, a diamond-encrusted Audemars Piguet watch, other diamond jewelry and two handguns allegedly purchased with prostitution proceeds, court records show.
The lead SPD vice detective in that case said pimps typically set daily quotas of $500 to $2,000 for each of the prostituted women working for them.
Meanwhile, Aurora has long been known as a “pimp-controlled track” where aggressive recruiting tactics make it extremely dangerous for women who work independently and retain the proceeds from their prostitution, according to the detective and her colleague, whom The Seattle Times agreed not to identify because they both work undercover.
“It’s always made me so angry that these guys are buying expensive cars and jewelry and things like that — and are playing video games all day — while screaming at you while you’re the one out on the street, in the cold,” the detective said. “He’s still the one in control, and it’s infuriating.”
Change in tactics targeting prostitution
The Seattle City Council unanimously voted in June 2020 to drop drug traffic and prostitution loitering laws from the books because of their disproportionate impacts on people of color.
While that decision was made to address longstanding inequities in who police stop, question and detain, SPD leaders say it has limited officers’ abilities to engage with women who are being prostituted, hampering their ability to get to the root of the problems plaguing Aurora.
Since the prostitution loitering law was repealed, “we don’t have any power to question them,” said Capt. Lori Aagard, commander of the SPD’s North Precinct, referring to women working the “track.”
“You’ve legalized it,” added Lt. Joe Osborne. “Prostitution loiter isn’t illegal, so they can walk up and down the street all day long.”
Though Seattle police can still contact women and girls they suspect are involved in prostitution, officers can’t ask for their identification or do anything that makes them feel that they can’t walk away, Aagard said.
And while SPD’s Vice & High Risk Victims Unit still conducts sting operations on Aurora, the unit has shrunk from eight detectives and two sergeants before the pandemic to two detectives and a sergeant who splits his time between vice and another unit, mirroring staffing cutbacks across the agency, according to the remaining detectives. They said 20% of the victims prostituted on Aurora and locally online are minors and that they recently encountered two Tacoma girls, ages 16 and 17, being trafficked on Aurora.
“We’re going to deal with the pimps, but tell me: How [do] you do that without engaging with the workers being prostituted?” one detective asked. “You’ve got to have a victim who says they’re being victimized to go after the pimp. You have to be able to build a case.”
(Pimps typically exploit women and promote prostitution, while traffickers do the same to minor victims or adults compelled to prostitute through force, fraud or coercion.)
Audrey Baedke, co-founder and director of programs at REST, a Seattle nonprofit that operates an emergency shelter and offers services and housing for people escaping the sex trade, said there are pros and cons to the City Council’s decision to repeal the prostitution loitering law.
She’s heard many survivors say that going to jail or seeing their trafficker locked up saved their lives by disrupting their prostitution, removing them from an unsafe environment and providing them time to want to make a change and seek help. But others have told Baedke they felt exploited by police and unsafe while interacting with officers on the street, she said.
It’s better to get women into shelter first, where their basic needs can be met, before asking them to cooperate in a police investigation, Baedke added.
“Women have such strong trauma bonds with their traffickers that their emotional well-being is dependent on their traffickers’ well-being,” she said. “If they’ve betrayed the person they love the most while that trauma bond is still strong, they internalize the guilt and that can destabilize them or traumatize them further.”