Which states allow people to use their paychecks to pay for rape play?

New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island and Connecticut are among those where people can use their money to pay to be raped.
The states are in a position of being able to enact such a law without a federal mandate, because a federal law, Title IX, requires them to do so.
The Department of Education says that, because the states have the power to enact their own laws, they are not obligated to follow the federal mandate.
In fact, the federal government has not been able to enforce a law that requires a state to take action on rape-related sexual assault.
That means states can ignore the federal law and continue to fund and pay for their own police departments to pursue and prosecute rapists.
In New York State, the Legislature approved a bill last year that allows the state’s police to pursue rapists with no federal involvement.
In Connecticut, the state legislature approved a law last year allowing the state to pay rape victims to get their cases dropped and pay rapists to settle their cases without federal involvement or any criminal penalties.
In Rhode Island, a bill approved last year gives police the authority to charge people with crimes, and then let them use their own money to help victims pay their legal bills.
In other states, a similar law is under consideration.
But so far, no federal law has been enacted that would provide a federal standard for such payments.
The problem of money laundering in the United States has gotten so bad that the Obama administration has announced it is asking Congress to establish a task force to combat money laundering.
The money laundering problem in the country has gotten to be so bad, the Treasury Department estimates that there are more than 500,000 criminal cases and nearly 300,000 convictions in the U.S. involving money laundering involving the use of the money to fund criminal activity.
That’s about the same number of criminal cases in the first half of this year.