Recently, the public heard intimate details of powerful men in the U.S. buying sex, e.g., the case of New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft charged with soliciting prostitution, possibly from sex trafficking victims. These sex scandals sometimes raise questions about whether the sex worker is acting voluntarily, under pimp-control, or due to force, fraud or coercion. These scandals also generate conversations about how such cases are handled and how similar situations can be prevented. There are generally a few interrelated questions 1) is it voluntary? 2) how can supply and demand be reduced? 3) can policies or laws accomplish this by inciting buyers, sellers and sex market facilitators to quit? 4) what other factors will prompt these social actors to exit the market? All of the questions are important; however, the answers are generally interdependent. Sex scandals, such as the one discussed, raise some awareness about social actors within the sex trade, but the public is not very informed about their perspectives. There are many policies and laws that try to encourage, incite or force sex workers or pimps to quit the sex trade. These policies and laws are rarely evidence-based. The perspectives of different social actors in the sex trade, particularly their reasons for slowing down or quitting, should be given more weight in the crafting of prostitution policy and legislation. The anti-trafficking movement has gained momentum with some academics hoping to abolish prostitution because they view it as inherently coercive and inextricably linked to sex trafficking (see Farley, 2004; Hughes and de Compostela, 2004) to those with harm reduction perspectives to those who are critical of the reductive and harmful impact of the antitrafficking movement (see Bernstein, 2012; Blanchette & Da Silva, 2012; Weitzer, 2007). Many prostitution policies are created to disrupt business to decrease its prevalence. Sweden crafted the Nordic Model in 1999, which is a legal policy where buying sex is criminalized, and sex work is decriminalized (Leander, 2005). This model does not account for sex workers' voices (Jordan, 2012) and it pushes typical buyers out (Dodillet & Östergren, 2011). In Sweden, there are indications that sex workers face more danger because on the street their exchanges are rushed and the remaining street buyers are "crazy." Alternatively, some rely on sex market facilitators in indoor brothels (Dodillet & Östergren, 2011) According to Skilbrie (2019), the Nordic Model is also geared towards changing the publics' attitudes about masculinity and sexuality. In Sweden's plight to change public opinion, sex workers are in harm's way. Recently, the Nordic Model is spreading as it has been adopted by many other European countries, as well as Canada and Israel.