Cambridgeshire police smashed a “vice ring” in its university city which raked in £5 million a year. They successfully prosecuted 11 men and women who managed, or assisted, in the management of prostitution.

Only it seems nobody worked there against their will, what took place behind those closed doors was between consenting adults who agreed their own terms and conditions.

Yet trained officers from the police’s serious and organised crime squad would have spent hundreds of hours on this case, valuable time that would have been better spent on tracking down paedophiles or sex traffickers, making sure their sex register was up to date and liaising with other forces on this.

Police even admit that they turn a blind eye to small brothels run by one person operating on their own, this is plainly not being consistent. But when it’s big business, they feel forced to act.

It seems the Government has plans to legalise brothels, there are plenty of cases for them to check out, including Nevada. It is a business that needs regulating to offer protection all round, as well as a cut for the Inland Revenue.

And prostitutes are naturally keen for this too, their motto is: “No Bad Women, Just Bad Laws”. About 80,000 women in Britain work as prostitutes, and half of those are under 25.

As I said, my main concern is that police should spend their time on serious vice cases, the only apparent vice here was making huge amounts of money.

Update: 22 December, 2006, brothel keepers walk free.