One day after attending a protest against the laws enacted under Project ROSE, which allowed police to arrest anyone suspected of "manifesting the intent to prostitute," Jones was arrested under this law by the Phoenix police while walking to a gay bar. Jones was found guilty by the court. The
American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona filed an
amicus curiae for Jones, arguing that the law is "unconstitutionally vague and overbroad". Cox stated, "All over the country, trans women are targeted simply for being who they are. Laws like this manifestation law really support systematically the idea that girls like me, girls like me and Monica, are less than [others] in this country." Jones and her lawyer, Jean-Jacques Cabou, appealed the case and it was dropped in January 2015. The court found that she had had an unfair trial, given that the lower court had allowed evidence of past prostitution convictions in order to discredit her. The law remained on the books after Jones' case was dropped. In 2016, Jones founded The Outlaw Project, named after
Sharmus Outlaw, who she got to know while fighting against the charges brought against her. According to Jones, The Outlaw Project is "based on the principles of intersectionality to prioritize the leadership of people of color, transgender women, nonbinary people, and migrants for sex worker rights." Jones was taken to court and made a bid to stay, and lost. She agreed to voluntarily leave the country, but planned to challenge Australia's Immigration Department over allegations of procedural unfairness in court. Jones commented that producers for the Australian TV show
Border Security "knew details of what Immigration was going to do to me" and that "It was about 30 seconds before the cameras showed up... and tried to get me on their TV show." Jones was asked by an immigration officer, "Are you OK if they continue to film?" when she had already demanded that the TV cameras leave. ==See also==