I think we need to differentiate clients who are giving money and are actually an important support system for sex workers from the perpetrators. They pretend to be clients to harm the community.
Because sex work is criminalized, we see lots of law enforcement, including police bylaw enforcement officers, will put themselves in the position of a client to take advantage of the sex worker by not paying or threatening to arrest them if they don't co-operate. I don't know the studies, but it's very clear that this is the experience. Clients can be anyone, but if we see all the clients as bad clients, we cannot differentiate the clients.
That's why, in the sex worker law reform, we also recommend decriminalizing sex work, so we can differentiate who the sex workers are, give income and support to the sex workers, but also see how those people are harming our sex workers. Then law enforcement actually—