"Amid early twentieth century media hysteria and a moral panic about white farm girls being lured into cities and forced into prostitution, progressive Illinois Congressman James Robert Mann sponsored the White-Slave Traffic Act. Against the wishes of states' rights advocates, the legislation federalized vice crimes that had previously been the purview of local law enforcement.
"Though primarily intended to fight prostitution, the Act substantially expanded the scope of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and soon became the starting point for a wide-range of cases, including many against consenting but unmarried couples. The first person prosecuted under the law was legendary boxer Jack Johnson."
In the wake of Eliot Spitzer's downfall, Omar Wasow at The Root takes a look at the Mann Act of 1910.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
You Get in Trouble with the Mann
Labels:
1910s,
crime,
J. Edgar Hoover,
legal history,
political history,
politics,
race and ethnicity,
sexuality,
sports
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