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I have my friend weeding coming up soon and we want to contract a female escort so he can hang out ( I mean have sex) before the weeding but I want to make sure that is legal before I hire somebody for him...............

2007-04-20 02:12:55 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Family & Relationships Other - Family & Relationships

8 answers

A female escort is legal. You are actually paying her to escort your friend somewhere. If she decides to have sex, well that is on her terms. Keep in mind, you are not paying for sex, you are actually paying for her company somewhere. Now, the main question is, do you really want your friend to start off his marriage already cheating?

2007-04-20 02:16:57 · answer #1 · answered by cinnatigg 4 · 3 0

They ABSOLUTELY can still arrest you. This "disclaimer" is of ZERO legal affect and will provide NO defense to an escort charged with solicitation. There is a common misconception that police officers cannot lie to you. This is flat out wrong. Even if an undercover police officer is directly asked whether or not he/she is a cop, they can lie to you and say no with no legal consequences. An entrapment defense to criminal conduct is a VERY limited defense. The defense only exists where (1) the criminal design ORIGINATED with the government, and (2) the defendant is NOT PREDISPOSED to commit the crime charged. The burden is usually on the defendant to prove these two elements. It is not entrapment if the government merely offers a defendant the OPPORTUNITY to commit a crime that he or she would otherwise be predisposed to commit. For example, it is not entrapment for an undercover cop to approach a known drug dealer and pose as an addict in need of a fix. It would be irrelevant whether or not the drug dealer asked the "addict" if he was actually a cop. The addict/cop's response would also be immaterial. Again, in this context, the police CAN lie to you. Likewise, it is not entrapment for a police officer to pose as a "John" and contact a known escort for a "date." The escort can ask the John all she wants whether he is a cop and he can lie, lie, lie. Also, as I said before, any "disclaimer" she uses will be of no use. The main question is whether or not the woman approached was PREDISPOSED to "escorting," or (let's be real) prostitution. There is a general rule in Evidence Law that evidence of a defendant's character trait is inadmissible to prove conformity with that trait on a particular occasion. In other words, if a woman was charged with prostitution, the government would not be able to introduce evidence of prior occasions where that woman engaged in prostitution in order to prove that she did the same thing on THIS occasion. However, there is an exception to this "character evidence" rule that allows the government to use character evidence to rebut a defense of entrapment. Therefore, if a woman charged with prostitution did raise a defense of entrapment, the government would be permitted to introduce evidence which shows that the woman engaged in prostitution in the past and is thus PREDISPOSED to the crime. Again, this predisposition will negate an entrapment defense. In practice, the government would most likely simply introduce the plethora of "escort ads" that the woman probably has somewhere online and which were posted well before any government agent contacted her. The only way an entrapment defense would work in the context of prostitution/solicitation is where an undercover officer approaches a woman who has NEVER "provided" before (nor attempted to) and offers her money in exchange for sex. Perhaps the woman finds the amount of money the undercover cop offers irresistible and so she agrees. The woman will have an entrapment defense because the criminal design originated with the officer and the woman was not predisposed to commit the crime. It has nothing to do with whether or not the cop lied to her. So, long story short, no - this "disclaimer" is BS. They might as well not even say it.

2016-05-19 21:12:50 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

An escort is like a date. Not all agencies are covers for illegal prostitution, but most are.

Again, that's ILLEGAL to pay a woman for sex. Unless you're in Nevada. You're not doing anyone a favor and imagine when it gets around - what woman will trust or want you?

It's tempting to tell you it's legal so you'll all go through with it and the woman will find out exactly what she's marrying when he calls asking to be bailed out of jail.

2007-04-20 02:23:28 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Only in Vegas. Anywhere else getting someone for sex is illegal . If he was just getting her for a date and nothing else then that legal.

2007-04-20 02:18:18 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

i think u should learn to spell wedding first. then u should take the thought out of your mind he is getting married! if he is really going to have sex with someone before he gets married, he should call off the wedding as he cant love an respect his girlfriend

2007-04-20 02:21:27 · answer #5 · answered by lizjess2000 4 · 1 0

go ask ur local police officer and find out . strippers arent though

2007-04-20 02:18:25 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It's legal as long as you don't get caught.

Enjoy.

2007-04-20 02:20:45 · answer #7 · answered by WestCoastin4Life 7 · 0 1

Umm I don't think his fiancee would like that.

2007-04-20 02:16:22 · answer #8 · answered by John L 5 · 0 0

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