Mayor Eric Adams has blamed the rise in prostitution in Corona, Queens on an influx of female Venezuelan migrants who are struggling to find other work.
The Democrat said Tuesday that “illegal” activity is taking place in the area and said it is just “one example” of how the nation’s migrant crisis is affecting the city.
It is unclear whether these Venezuelan migrants are being sex trafficked to perform these acts or if they are soliciting sex on their own free will.
But, speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Adams said: “This is what happens when you create an atmosphere that people can’t provide for themselves — you can’t work, you can’t provide for your job and have to turn to illegal activities to do so.”
“When I talk about the spiraling impact of how this is going to affect our city, this is what I’m talking about,” he said. “We are going to create generational problems based on the failure of the national government, and this is one example of that.”
Adams added that another of these red-light districts has emerged in East New York, Brooklyn, where he said prostitution is “overt during the day.”
He then went on to slam city officials who “believe it is a victimless crime” and are trying to get prostitution legalized.
“This is where idealism collides with realism,” he said.
“I’ve had elected officials tell me that the women are just trying to work [and ask], ‘Why are you trying to harm them?’”
But, the mayor said, “There are real issues around illegal sex work, not only from STDs to sex trafficking to young girls getting involved in it, to violence.
“So people who don’t understand how serious this is, they are impeding our progress,” Adams said of the city lawmakers pushing for prostitution legalization.
He added: “We need a real partnership to prosecute the johns, we want to focus on the johns, and we want to focus on giving assistance to those sex workers to make sure that they’re not being forced into this activity, but also abide by the law.”
Under New York law, prostitution is considered a Class B misdemeanor and is punishable by up to three months in jail and/or up to a $500 fine.
He added: “We need a real partnership to prosecute the johns, we want to focus on the johns, and we want to focus on giving assistance to those sex workers to make sure that they’re not being forced into this activity, but also abide by the law.”
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Patronizing a prostitute, meanwhile, is a Class A misdemeanor and is punishable by up to one year in prison and/or a $1,000 fine.
But the law has not yet stopped these Venezuelan migrants from soliciting men on Roosevelt Avenue in Corona, which The Post exclusively revealed in July had become an open-air market for sex dubbed the “Market of Sweethearts.”
The women could be seen loitering in front of pool halls, dentist shops, and massage parlors day and night, and even recruit neighborhood children to hand out their X-rated business cards, concerned moms told The Post.