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Sex and Relationships

The Mann Act: From Jack Johnson to Eliot Spitzer

By Omar Wasow , The Root. Posted March 20, 2008.


The troubling history of the White-Slave Traffic Act.
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When a self-righteous crusader like Eliot Spitzer is caught with his pants down, a lot of onlookers might feel a tinge of glee to see such hypocrisy revealed. But the law under which he may be prosecuted, the Mann Act, is a relic that should give pause to anyone looking to hold Spitzer accountable in court on counts of prostitution.

Spitzer, the former TIME magazine "Crusader of the Year," who has previously directed his righteous fury at "high-end prostitution rings" and "sex tourism" now looks to be another law-breaking John stung by wiretaps, bank disclosures and his own hubris and stupidity. Two big questions loom: will he resign and will he serve time?

On the latter question, The New York Times reported that Spitzer might be charged, like the four "ringleaders" of Emperors Club VIP, under the Mann Act. The nearly century-old law prohibits transporting across state lines "a woman or girl for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral purpose."

The history of the Mann Act raises serious questions about the use of federal law enforcement to investigate the private lives of consenting adults. Amid early twentieth century media hysteria and a moral panic about white farm girls being lured into cities and forced into prostitution, progressive Illinois Congressman James Robert Mann sponsored the White-Slave Traffic Act. Against the wishes of states' rights advocates, the legislation federalized vice crimes that had previously been the purview of local law enforcement.

Though primarily intended to fight prostitution, the Act substantially expanded the scope of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and soon became the starting point for a wide-range of cases, including many against consenting but unmarried couples. The first person prosecuted under the law was legendary boxer Jack Johnson.

Long before special prosecutors like Ken Starr came along, the Mann Act made fishing expeditions into private sex lives a common and controversial part of federal law enforcement.

According to the Ken Burns documentary Unforgivable Blackness, "The U.S. Department of Justice began investigating Jack Johnson for possible violations of the Mann Act almost from the moment the law went into effect in 1910, but prosecutors did not find an incident on which to build a case for over two years."

His crime had little to do with prostitution and everything to do with success in the ring and a succession of white girlfriends out of the ring. As the first black heavyweight champion, Johnson was the focus of enormous racist hostility. The Department of Justice, after failing to get Johnson's white fiance to testify against him, found a former lover and prostitute who persuaded a jury to convict. He was sentenced to the maximum penalty of one year and one day. Though Johnson and his fiance fled to Europe and, later, Latin America, he eventually served his sentence at Leavenworth.

As with the selective prosecution of Johnson, the Mann Act proved to be a powerful tool for federal authorities to harass and incarcerate other prominent but disfavored figures.

Charlie Chaplin, a longtime target of J. Edgar Hoover because of his left-wing political views, was prosecuted in 1944 under the Mann Act, though was later acquitted. Likewise, architect Frank Lloyd Wright, writer Elizabeth Smart, and University of Chicago sociologist William I. Thomas were charged, respectively, though each ultimately was acquitted or saw the charges dropped.

Though Wright, Smart and Thomas were each in consensual relationships, like Johnson and Chaplin, they had angered powerful people through their views or actions and the Mann Act proved a useful means of retaliation.

Unlike Johnson or Chaplin, however, Spitzer has actively worked to incarcerate people for their roles in the very crime he is now alleged to have committed. Such sanctimonious duplicity would seem especially worthy of sanction even if such prosecutions at the federal level are now rare. Sending Spitzer to jail for his "sex trafficking" would certainly teach him, and others, a lesson. Unfortunately, part of the lesson would be that the private acts of consenting adults should continue to occupy the energies of federal law enforcement. A better outcome would draw attention to the immorality of the Mann Act itself.

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See more stories tagged with: sex trafficking, fbi, eliot spitzer, mann act, jack johnson

Omar Wasow is pursuing a Ph.D. in African and African American Studies, and an M.A. in Government at Harvard University. He was the co-founder of BlackPlanet.com.

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Primal Forces of Nature
Posted by: JSquercia on Mar 20, 2008 8:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With an Homage to that great film NETWORK Eloit's REAL crime was that he messed with the Primal Forces of Nature. He dared to show those who would listen that Wall Street was a rigged game and the little guy was merely a sheep to be sheared by the powerful . It was little better than that famous New York Sidewalk game of 3 Card Monte and for THIS he had to be PUNISHED .
Please note that Senator Vitter engaged in the same behavior though with less EXPENSIVE WHORES and still walks the Halls of Power

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Bad Law is Malice Aforethought....
Posted by: Jayzer on Mar 21, 2008 4:18 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bad law is malice aforethought, to borrow a legalism that is usually inserted into various forms of criminal prosecutions. Not only is this an expression of official racism and paternalism, but it is also the expression of officiousness itself, since it lends a salacious intent to voluntary travel. Such mindreaders these legislators claimed to be!

There is nothing wrong with prosecuting people for human trafficking in the sense of transporting people for involuntary servitude, whether the people being trafficked are destined for prison-like brothels or sweatshops and I believe that there are plenty of laws adequate to cover those circumstances. But it floors me to realize that this archaic piece of legislation can still be used to punish voluntary travel by one adult to meet with another adult paying for the trip into another state, for reasons that could be reasonably be described as a private and personal matter.

To such intrusiveness, the only possible response to the authoritarians who would avail themselves of this law is this: Who the fuck do you think you are? God?

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Rick
Posted by: docrick on Mar 21, 2008 6:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Spitzer broke the 11th Commandment..."Thou shalt not get caught!"

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prurience and moralism
Posted by: davidg on Mar 21, 2008 6:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Prurience and archaic moralism can be cover for alot of things in a culture of arrested development. The French reacted against Sarkoszy's private life...because they got bored with hearing about it. When will America grow up?

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Enough with the excuses
Posted by: redfrog on Mar 21, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't want people governing me who think and act like they are above the law. This seems almost like a political reality but it doesn't mean I have to like it or acceed to this misuse of my trust or give a wink and a nod to this kind of self-serving self-righteousness. His behavior is antithetical to his political stances and his political office took his actions out of the realm of private. He acted in ways that are immoral and corrupt. I deserve better from my leaders. You deserve better. We would not be where we are today, politically, if we believed that.

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common thread
Posted by: andreas on Mar 21, 2008 7:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
However, this article is interesting because there is a common thread there. Check out Greg Palast: Eliot’s Mess. The $200 billion bail-out for predator banks and Spitzer charges are intimately linked. http://www.gregpalast.com/elliot-spitzer-gets-nailed/
And also right now on his home page: http://www.gregpalast.com/

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» RE: common thread Posted by: Lector
VICE & the Xian WOMBmann Act: "women are property"
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Mar 21, 2008 11:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no WE in CORRUPTION
.
.
.
Think about it...

The Thieves of Virtue: legislating morality ABORTS Representative Government & Populist Reform

really, VICE is contextual:
* Gender
* Ethnicity
* Age
* Race...

all pay a part in morals. but VICE, should never be *criminalized*, especially in a nation where PRIVACY has been abolished.

Who is PERFECT ENOUGH to represent THE PEOPLE or a populist reform when there is neither privacy nor the Will to preserve privacy in society?
Who stands *for the People* when Money & Power exert corrosive controls to extend their oppression & corruption?

You've been *had*

Nobody is immune to *vice* as VICE is about how ONE PERSON privately & personally determines *how to enjoy their own body*... Naked Truth: Civil Rights & CNN coverage of "F.B.I. biometric database - 'Server in the Sky'"
...& THAT is how THE MORAL MAJORITY ensured Money & Power will kill representative government for The Peoples who seek JUSTICE, Freedom & Human Rights.

"corruption is why we win":
"Yell Fire!": Bush to freeze peace activist assets? - Executive Order to "Blocking Property of Certain Persons Who Threaten Stabilization Efforts in Iraq"

NSA's Domestic Spying Grows As Agency Sweeps Up Data

Diamond Age? - Kids, RFID Chips... & Minority Reporting?!: thoughts on the new US Project Hostile Intent (PHI)

Watching the "Ownership Society": follow-ups on Shareholder Surveillance...


~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"

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