State attorneys general from around the country are asking Craigslist to shut down its Adult Services listings, saying ads for prostitution are “rampant” on it.
The attorneys general involved in this effort represent Arkansas, Connecticut, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.
Collectively, they sent a letter to Craigslist [PDF] earlier this week, saying:
“In July 2010, two girls who said that they were trafficked for sex through craigslist wrote an ‘open letter’ to your company in which they pleaded with you to eliminate the Adult Services section. Their poignant account told a horrific story of brutalization and assault suffered not just
by them, but also by untold numbers of other children.
“Other reports about the Adult Services webpage support these claims. Indeed, in a recent report, CNN correspondent Amber Lyon posted a fictional prostitution advertisement on the Adult Services section, and received 15 telephone calls soliciting sex in just a three hour period.”
Last year, Craigslist dropped the Erotic Services section of the website. The Craigslist blog said last week that the site has done a lot to screen listings: