They do not have police officers protecting them from the violence they face because they are committing a crime and police often look at it as what the females should expect. Investigations against violence in circumstances where officials know that prostitution was prevalent sometimes chose to not go through with the investigation. The online article Why It's Time to Legalize Prostitution said that prostitutes face “75 percent chance of experiencing workplace violence at some point…and a 55 percent likelihood that they were victimized the past year”(Reisenwitz 8/15/14). Legalizing prostitution would bring the activity off the streets and into buildings where safety precautions can be sought like hiring bodyguards and verifying identifications. Prostitutes not only face violence but they face the extreme probability of obtaining sexual transmitted diseases. The violence that prostitution brings makes it hard for the females to negotiate in the use of condoms. A big problem that the females face is that as often times “health services are not welcoming to sex workers and not designed to address their health needs time after time,” which was stated in the article Health Benefits Of Legal Services For Criminalized Populations (Csete 6). With the legalization of prostitution it would be mandatory for the females to undergo STI testing on a weekly basis and for the payee to be tested before exchanging money. With prostitution still being illegal it puts communities at risk for STI’s to be spread fast as well as high risk STI’s like HIV and AIDS; both of which can be maintained and controlled with weekly testing. Prostitution and Sex Trafficking: Opposing Viewpoints showed that recent studies say that 80 percent of sex workers are infected with HIV or have other sexual transmitted diseases (Gerdes 51). With legal prostitution the sexual acts can take place in a safe and healthy