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The last stop of the night is the mobile courtroom. If the women have no felony warrants and seem sincere, the judge gives them the opportunity to avoid jail and enter rehab. After 45 days of inpatient counseling, they receive help with education, child care and housing. About half of the 375 prostitutes brought to the staging area in the past two years have chosen rehab. Just 21 have turned their lives around. That's modest success at best, Felini acknowledged, but he said there's also long-term value in cultivating prostitutes as sources. Police have developed leads on a couple of unsolved homicides, and the women are learning to trust officers. "Maybe a year from now, I might hear from one who says, 'You might want to take a look at this person,'" Felini said. Many of the prostitutes detained last month didn't seem to know what was going on. A teenager in a pink jumpsuit and pink rubber clogs sat on the ground, her back against a truck, staring blankly. She turned her head and vomited. Another woman in 4-inch heels and a strapless dress that didn't quite cover her rear tottered through the staging area. Later, she told the judge she was not a prostitute, her cringe-inducing outfit notwithstanding. "That's just how I dress," she said. The prostitutes range in age from their teens to their 60s. More than half have children. Nearly all abuse drugs. "The truck stop prostitute is at the bottom rung of prostitution," Felini said. "They are trading sex for survival needs: food, a place to sleep." Karen Green, 47, works as an advocate for the prostitutes. She was one of them until a prison counseling program helped her clean up 13 years ago. "People think they are criminals, but they are victims," Green said. "They've never had a break. They don't know what living right is."
[Associated
Press;
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