Women working in Vancouver sex trade were seen as “disposable,” inquiry hears
RICHMOND, B.C. — A Vancouver sex-trade activist recounted the justice system’s failure to protect women who were killed or have disappeared as posters of missing persons were shown on screens Wednesday at a national inquiry.
Jamie Lee Hamilton said sex workers from Vancouver’s “Downtown Eastside killing fields” deserved better.
“I feel that the women were deemed as disposable,” Hamilton told the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.
Hamilton said she grew up in Vancouver and began sex work in the early 1970s after dropping out of school. She started losing faith in the justice system when, as a teenager, a police officer picked her up, drove her into Stanley Park and demanded oral sex, Hamilton said.


