Jeffrey Hurant, who ran the Rentboy.Com site, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Margo K. Brodie in Brooklyn.
"The very thing that is illegal - there is no question it did a lot of good," Brodie said as she announced the sentence, which included a USD 7,500 fine.
Hurant said he created the website so sex workers could proceed in a safer manner.
In letters to the court, the lawmakers, civil rights organizations and other supporters have cautioned that a tough sentence could send the wrong message to the gay community.
Also Read
The case is troubling "because it harkens back to a dark chapter in our nation's history when the government used its vast resources to target and threaten LGBT adults by exposing their private consensual sexual activity," wrote state Sen. Brad Hoylman, a Manhattan Democrat.
Other letters written last year by two Democratic congressmen from New York, Jerrold Nadler and Sean Patrick Maloney, to the Department of Justice and Department of Homeland Security questioned whether the agencies had wasted time and resources on pursuing a victimless crime.
Before authorities arrested Hurant and seized the Rentboy site, it had thousands of advertisers paying up to $300 a month, 500,000 visitors a day and revenues of USD 10 million in the past five years. The business hosted parties and an annual awards show for escorts called the Hookies.
Homeland Security's involvement in the takedown, along with an absence of any allegations that Rentboy was a menace to society beyond simple prostitution - like engaging in human trafficking or exploiting minors - stirred anger and fear in the gay community. Activists questioned why the agency would single out Rentboy when other escort websites, gay or straight, continue to do business.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content