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LEGAL ASPECTS cont. Amendments to the legislation in 1891 made it a crime
to "procure or attempt to procure, any girl or woman under twenty-one
years of age, not being a common prostitute or of known immoral character,
to have unlawful carnal connection, [...] or to leave her usual place
of abode in Canada, such place not being a brothel, with intent that she
may become an inmate of a brothel." It is interesting to note that, in contrast to the two
year imprisonment carried by most charges associated with female prostitution,
Section 5 of the Criminal Code stated that: "Every male person who [...] procures or attempts
to procure the commission by any male person of, any act of gross indecency
with another male person, is guilty of a misdemeanor and liable to five
years' imprisonment, and to be whipped." Nonetheless, police records from the 1890s suggest that police continued to lay charges mainly against the "frequenters," "habitual frequenters," or "keepers" of brothels, rather than pursuing the prostitutes. Perhaps, the Victoria police's infrequent prosecution
of the prostitutes themselves is a reflection of the sympathetic view
that the women had entered the occupation "not because they were
helpless victims of sinister procurers, nor because they were merely passive
individuals, but because they perceived prostitution as a means of fulfilling
particular economic, social or psychological needs." On the other hand, as was suggested by one early reformer,
perhaps it was because the laws that provided for the two-month imprisonment
of a prostitute were simply ineffective: "This period seems to be well chosen as regards the
interests of prostitution, just long enough to restore them so far as
to enable them to return to their sad career without incurring upon them
any necessary delay." Regardless of the reason, it seems that the police, if not society, held a a somewhat sympathetic view of prostitutes. Click HERE to proceed to Prostitution
in London.
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