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Chicago Sun-Times Writer Says Sex Workers Cannot Be Raped

The Chicago Sun Times building is photographed Thursday, May 30, 2013, in Chicago. The Sun-Times Media announced today that they laid off their entire full time photography staff at the city's tabloid newspaper, and its suburban sister publications. The union representing laid-off photographers at the Chicago Sun-Times plans to file a bad-faith bargaining charge with the National Labor Relations Board. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In an editorial published in yesterday’s Chicago Sun-Times, writer Mary Mitchell essentially argued that sex workers cannot be raped. Mitchell is in disbelief that Chicago-area authorities have charged Roy Akins with aggrevated criminal sexual assault, rather than theft because he raped a sex worker.

According to a report from Mitchell’s own newspaper, Akins solicited a sex worker on Backpage.com, agreeing to pay $180 for her services:

“But the 29-year-old didn’t have the money to pay her. So when the woman came to his home in the Austin neighborhood on Aug. 9, Akins walked her upstairs, led her to a bedroom and then returned holding a gun and raped her, Assistant State’s Attorney Kim Przekota said at Akins’ bond hearing Thursday.”

In her op-ed, Mitchell argues that prosecuting Akins for rape, “mak[es] a mockery of rape victims.” She continues:

Unfortunately, the way this case is being handled makes it look like sex trafficking is a legitimate business.

I’m not one of those women who believe rape victims are at fault because they dressed too provocatively or misled some randy guy into thinking it was his lucky night.

But when you agree to meet a strange man in a strange place for the purpose of having strange sex for money, you are putting yourself at risk for harm.

It’s tough to see this unidentified prostitute as a victim. And because this incident is being charged as a criminal sexual assault — when it’s actually more like theft of services — it minimizes the act of rape.

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