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STUDY: There's A Much Better Way To Control Prostitution

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prostitute

There's a way to end human trafficking, and it involves punishing the men who seek out sex instead of the women selling it, social scientists say. 

Current laws against prostitution endanger women who are often victims themselves, according to a study by Samuel Lee at NYU and Petra Perrson at Columbia University

Because prostitution is illegal, women are denied opportunities to receive healthcare or go to police for help in a bad situation, the authors wrote. 

The solution? Legalize prostitution and heavily criminalize johns who seek out services outside the legal parameters. 

The authors explain: 

The optimal policy is to combine regulated prostitution with severe criminal penalties on johns who buy sex from unregulated sources. This policy is the most effective against trafficking precisely because it creates a “safe harbor” for voluntary sex work and thereby drains the demand for trafficking. Second, if the objective is to abolish prostitution—be it voluntary or involuntary—completely, the optimal policy is to enforce severe criminal penalties on johns in general...Finally, criminalizing johns is strictly superior to criminalizing prostitutes. The former can always deter as much voluntary prostitution as the latter, but it is more effective in reducing trafficking and comes without the unjust side effect of penalizing involuntary prostitutes.

No one's tested this system, Lee and Perrson say.

Here's a chart showing the top destination countries for human trafficking and their policy on the practice. This shows that just legalizing prostitution isn't enough to deter trafficking. 

prostitution countries

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Why We Are More Interested In Sex During The Summer

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Sexy Couple

People in the U.S. are most interested in sex during the early summer, as well as in December and January, according to a new study.

Researchers analyzed the keywords that people in the U.S. used in Google searches over four years, and found that every year, searches for keywords related to finding dates, prostitutes and pornography showed distinct peaks during June and July, and again during the winter.

"Wherever we looked within these three different areas — whether it was searches for 'eHarmony,' or for 'brothel' — there was this exact same pattern," said study researcher Patrick Markey, an associate professor of psychology at Villanova University in Pennsylvania. The timing of the peaks was remarkably consistent from year to year, he said.

Exactly why these two peaks in sexual interest occur isn't completely clear, Markey said, but the findings suggest they are linked to a general increase in the amount of time that people spend being around other people.

Previous studies of birth records have also suggested these peaks in sexual activity, especially in December, and researchers have speculated that one reason for this is a natural tendency toward giving birth in the late summer or early fall.

"But if that was the only reason, there'd be no reason to watch porn or find a prostitute," Markey said. "It's more like, something about being around more people, or being around people more often, that makes us more interested in sexual activity," he said. The summer time tends to bring a flurry of social activities, and December can bring holiday gatherings and shopping crowds.

Yearly variations in sperm quality and hormonal fluctuations have also been proposed as explanations, according to the study.

Along with studies of birth records, research into STD diagnosis rates and abortion rates have suggested that sexual activity peaks during these two times of year. But most of these reports have looked at things that happen after people have sex. The new study added to what was known, the researchers said, by looking at behaviors that tend to occur in advance of sexual activity.

The researchers analyzed the keywords used in Google searches in the U.S. between January 2006 and March 2011. They looked at searches that included certain keywords related to mate-seeking behaviors (such as "eHarmony" and "Match.com"), prostitution (such as "call girl" and "escort") and pornography (such as "porn" and "boobs"). As a control, they also looked at the number of searches for neutral keywords, such as "dog" and "windshield."

For each keyword, they used an online tool that shows the percentage increase in searches relative to the normal amount.

They found that searches for prostitution-related keywords increased by 2.78 percent, and mate-seeking searches increased by 5.67 percent above average during January and July. Searches for pornography increased 4.28 percent above average during December and June, according to the study.

"Those somewhat small percentages represent a huge number of searches," Markey said, when you consider the millions of searches that are performed every day.

The researchers noted that in analyzing their data, they had to throw out one particular outlier: Searches related to prostitution showed "a dramatic 35 percent increase" in March 2008, they said. "Such an increase likely occurred because, on March 10, 2008, the Eliot Spitzer prostitution scandal began, which ultimately led to his resignation as governor of New York," they wrote.

The study was published online July 19 in the journal Archives of Sexual Behavior.

Pass it on: Interest in sex peaks in the U.S. in early summer and early winter, a new study shows.

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Meet The Olympic Athlete Who Was So Desperate For Cash He Started A Brothel

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Logan Campbell Taekwondo

Some athletes make fortunes at the Olympics, but the vast majority don't. For some it even becomes an enormous expense.

Yahoo! Sports has a revealing story about one athlete who had to go to extreme measures to meet those costs. Logan Campbell, a member of New Zealand's taekwondo team, came home from Beijing 4 years ago with debts of $160,000. He reasoned that London would cost him $200,000. To make that money, he decided he needed to open a brothel.

Now we should bear in mind that New Zealand decriminalized prostitution in brothels in 2003, and Campbell balked at the idea of being a "pimp". "Pimps are more tough-type guys. I'm an owner of an escort agency," he said in 2009.

However, when the brothel made headlines in New Zealand, the country's usually cash-strapped sporting authorities suddenly came up with funding for taekwondo — perhaps a sign that they weren't too keen on having the sport associated with prostitution.

Campbell doesn't seem too keen on reliving his time as a brothel owner.

"I sold the brothel so I don't really want to talk about it now, OK," he told Yahoo!

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German Insurance Company Release Report On Their Prostitute-Filled Party On The Danube

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Munich Re Budapest

In May 2011, Ergo Versicherungsgruppe, a Dusseldorf, Germany-based subsidiary of Munich Re, was at the center of a huge scandal when details of a huge, prostitute-filled party in Budapest appeared in the German press.

The party was held for Ergo-owned subsidiary Hamburg Mannheimer International (HMI) and occurred in 2007. It was described as "killer fun" by one attendee, but others weren't so sure. Reports of a 120 person in the historic Gellért thermal baths orgy with "color-coded" prostitutes eventually led to a number of employees being fired from the insurance firm and Munich Re issuing a full page apology for the party in a German newspaper.

Ergo has finally released a report investigating the party. Some of the new details are interesting — for example, Der Spiegel notes that a boat floated by on the nearby Danube River carrying "topless hostesses" holding placards reading "We love HMI".

But what may be even more damaging is financial irregularities during the trip. The flights, which cost around €36,000 ($44,193), were paid for twice, and 20 people too many were mysteriously added to the bill. The report also reveals that the company may have had a history of excess. Der Spiegel reports that "prostitutes were flown in as part of an HMI leadership seminar at Lake Zurich in the late 1970s."

Prostitutes in Budapest say that corporate sex parties are surprisingly common, and the only thing exceptional about the Ergo party was its scale.

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Experts: Most Prostitution Laws Aren't Enough To Prosecute Websites

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prostitute

A college professor and former college president in New Mexico were recently acquitted of charges they were running a prostitution ring when a judge ruled their website, which functioned like a message board linking women to potential customers, wasn't a true "house of prostitution."

That ruling, and scores of others, highlight the current problems plaguing prosecutors as they struggle to convict digital-age pimps using decades-old laws, The Associated Press reported Sunday.

"Sometimes states' laws are too specific and were written years ago, long before the Internet," Baylor University professor Scott Cunningham told the AP. "That's why we are seeing some successful challenges to laws when websites are involved."

The same confusion has reigned in Florida and Minnesota where website operators have gotten off because outdated prostitution laws don't apply to their current activities.

In Florida, charges against the operators of escort service website Bigdoggie.net were dropped when a defense attorney argued the men were "hobbyists" using the website to brag about their experiences with escorts but not actually trying to run an escort business, according to the AP.

"What some of these sites are doing are screening prostitutes and screening potential customers, much like what pimps have historically done," Cunningham told the AP. "The question is: Can they be prosecuted like pimps?"

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Latin America's Largest Beverage Company Gives Payout After Forcing Employee To Attend Prostitute Parties

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Ambev Factory

SAO PAULO (AP) — Latin America's biggest beverage company Ambev must pay $25,000 to a worker who was forced to attend prostitute parties as part of a manager's incentive program, Brazil's top labor court ruled.

Anheuser Busch InBev's Brazilian unit AmBev must pay because of the embarrassment and bullying the employee suffered, the court stated in a release on its website.

The statement says incidents with prostitutes happened at least 10 times in 2003 and 2004.

The court's Monday statement says the worker at one point was tied up at work and forced to watch pornographic films and a stripper performed in his office. The statement described the worker as a married evangelical Christian.

The worker's manager used the services of prostitutes to reward salesmen who met their goals.

Ambev said Tuesday in an emailed statement that "old cases" don't reflect the company's daily operations, adding that it "preaches respect and values teamwork."

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No, There Was Not A Prostitution Raid On Sand Hill Road

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Rosewood

For weeks, people in Silicon Valley have been passing around a satirical publication's fake report about a supposed prostitution raid at a hotel on Sand Hill Road, the hub of California's venture-capital firms.

A local newspaper, the San Jose Mercury News, has investigated. Good news! The fake story is fake.

For one thing, the Rosewood Hotel is in Menlo Park, Calif., not Palo Alto. But in any event, there don't seem to have been any reports of illegal activity there, and the hotel's general manager strongly denies that there's anything more risqué than your run-of-the-mill seed funding going on.

What has been happening at the Rosewood: an informal event every Thursday known as "Cougar Night," where women are openly looking for husbands, Linx Dating owner and self-described "love concierge" Amy Andersen told the Mercury News.

The fake report, and the hubbub it's caused online, has had one real effect: Cougar Night seems to have gotten less popular recently.

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NYC's 'Millionaire Madam' Just Pleaded Guilty To One Count Of Prostitution

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Anna Gristina

Anna Gristina, also known in the NYC press as the "Millionaire Madam" has pleaded guilty to one count of promoting prostitution, NBC New York reports.

The count refers to an engagement she planned between two prostitutes and an undercover cop posing as a client.

The Gristina saga has been going on since February, when the news of an Upper East Side brothel bust rocked Wall Street.

Gristina, a mother of four, was then arrested on charges of prostitution and, at the time, was allegedly trying to get a Morgan Stanley employee to back her in another business venture.

She was released from jail on $250,000 bond in June and will not have to return. Instead, the Court will order to serve five years probation on November 20th, NBC reports.

As yet, Gristina has said that she will not name any clients, even though she told Dr. Phil that she felt that prosecutors were looking for information about someone specific.

If you missed the backstory behind Gristina, click here for the full low-down>

 

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Human Sex Trafficking Is Now Affecting America's Elite Communities

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Prostitution

Long thought to be a problem only in America's poorest cities or the world's most impoverished nations, human trafficking is now making a move toward the upper fringes of society.

During a speech Thursday at the University of Mississippi School of Law, federal prosecutors said sex trafficking, both in terms of victims and suspects, has spread to wealthy suburbs as well as small rural towns, The Commercial Appeal reported.

"We have an 18-year-old white trafficker who didn't weigh more than a hundred pounds, but she was beating the crap out of the victims and threatening to kill them," assistant U.S. attorney in Memphis Jonathan Skrmetti told students.

Between 2008 and 2010, 2,515 alleged incidents of human trafficking were reported in the U.S., 82 percent of which involved claims of sex trafficking, according to Northeastern University.

A study from Shared Hope International released in December 2011 found that most states aren't doing enough to save their residents from sex trafficking.

"I was absolutely shocked when we started sending people into states [posing] as sex tourists, and they would go in, and they would come into the city maybe from another country, maybe from another state, and they could buy kids so easily," Shared Hope International founder former Rep. Linda Smith told NPR.

Globally, prostitution is a much larger problem. Of the 40 to 42 million prostitutes in the world, about 1 million live in the U.S.

While that data did not note which trafficking incidents were tied to wealthy suburbs, there is other anecdotal evidence that the problem is reaching affluent communities.

The nonprofit Georgia Family Council says much of the demand for human trafficking in the state comes from the wealthy suburbs of Atlanta.

Earlier this week President Barack Obama condemned the "outrage of human trafficking" and pledged to increase assistance for anti-trafficking training.

This Study Says There's A Much Better Way To Control Prostitution >

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'Bubbly' Zumba Teacher Accused Of Turning Fitness Studio Into A Brothel

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Alexis Wright in Portland, Maine court

The first batch of more than 100 men accused of paying a fitness instructor for sex were laying low after police began releasing their names in a small New England town where rumors have run rampant for weeks.

Police on Monday released 21 names of men who were issued summons for engaging in prostitution with a 29-year-old Zumba instructor who's charged with turning her dance studio into a brothel in this seaside community and secretly videotaping her encounters.

Residents watched the news flash on their local evening TV news, and people could be heard discussing who was on the list as they walked through a supermarket parking lot and stood in line at a convenience store shortly after the names were made public.

The rumors are likely to continue in the weeks ahead as police release the names of other accused johns in police activity reports that are issued every other week listing people charged with offenses ranging from allowing dogs to run at large and marijuana possession to driving under the influence.

A judge ordered the release of names without ages or addresses, so it was not immediately clear their occupations and roles in the community, if any.

Kim Ackley, a local real estate agent, said that disclosure of the names will cause temporary pain for families but it's only fair because others who are charged with embarrassing crimes don't get breaks.

"What's fair for one has to be fair for the other," said Ackley, who believes she knows several people on the list. "The door can't swing just one way."

Residents had been anxiously awaiting the release of names since 29-year-old Alexis Wright was charged this month with engaging in prostitution in her dance studio and in an office she rented across the street. Police said she kept meticulous records suggesting the sex acts generated $150,000 over 18 months.

Wright, from nearby Wells, has pleaded not guilty to 106 counts of prostitution, invasion of privacy and other charges. Her business partner, 57-year-old insurance agent and private investigator Mark Strong Sr., from Thomaston, has pleaded not guilty to 59 misdemeanor charges.

Police said more than 150 people are suspected of being clients and many of them were videotaped without their knowledge.

In town, residents heard the list could include lawyers, law enforcement officers and well-known people, heightening their curiosity.

The list of names was delayed Friday by legal action by an attorney representing two of the people accused of being johns. The lawyer, Stephen Schwartz, said releasing the names will ruin people's lives, even if they're acquitted of the misdemeanor charges against them.

Superior Court Justice Thomas Warren on Monday denied a motion seeking to block disclosure of the names. But he ordered that addresses should be withheld for those people who might have been victims of invasion of privacy when their acts were recorded. The Associated Press reached out Monday evening to men on the list, but it was difficult to confirm their identities without knowing their addresses.

Andrew Stanley, of Kennebunk, said the names should've been released sooner. Wright's alleged customers, he said, were mostly people with money or power who attempted to buy their way out of trouble through legal action.

"I think the names should have been released the second they were charged," he said.

But resident Leonid Temkin had mixed feelings about publicizing the names because it could cause marriages to dissolve and men to lose their jobs.

"I think it'll cause a lot of hardship," he said.

The prostitution charges and ensuing publicity, which reached across the country and beyond, came as a shock in the small town of about 10,000 residents, which is well-known for its ocean beaches, old sea captains' mansions and the neighboring town of Kennebunkport, home to the Bush family's Walker's Point summer compound.

Some people in town said they had their suspicions about Wright, but others were in the dark about the life of the bubbly dance instructor who introduced many local women to the Latin-flavored dance and fitness program.

Ackley's daughter, Alison Ackley, who participated in Wright's class four or five times, said she had no inkling of any illegal activity.

"She was so young," Alison Ackley said. "She had a lot going for her. It's a shame she was hanging out with these older men and getting money from them."

But Kim Ackley said she believes the interest will die down once all the names become public in the coming weeks.

"A year from now it won't even be talked about, once it goes through the courts," she said. "You've got to move on and go on with your lives."

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Associated Press reporter David Sharp in Portland contributed to this report.

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A Former Mayor Is A Suspected John In The Zumba Studio Brothel Scandal

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Alexis Wright in Portland, Maine court

The first batch of men charged with being clients of a woman accused of turning her Zumba dance studio into a brothel included a former mayor and men from more than a dozen towns in Maine, as well as one each from Massachusetts and New Hampshire.

After initial confusion caused by the release of names without ages or addresses, a judge on Tuesday granted a request for additional information about the first 21 names out of what's believed to be more than 150 men accused of paying a fitness instructor for sex.

The list included former South Portland Mayor James Soule, who didn't return calls to his home and business, and didn't answer his door.

Others on the list included a lawyer and a real estate appraiser. The men ranged in age from 34 to 65.

The town had been awaiting the release of the list since 29-year-old Alexis Wright was charged this month with engaging in prostitution in her dance studio and in an office across the street and secretly videotaping many of her encounters. Police said she kept meticulous records suggesting the sex acts generated $150,000 over 18 months.

Wright, from nearby Wells, has pleaded not guilty to 106 counts of prostitution and other charges. Her business partner also pleaded not guilty to 59 counts.

The Kennebunk Police Department plans to release the remaining names of clients every other week as they're issued summonses on an activity log, meaning the disclosure of names could continue until the end of the year. The next batch is due to be released Oct. 26.

The first wave of names initially created havoc for some innocent men because the lack of addresses and dates of birth made it impossible to verify exactly who was among the accused.

The addresses, ages and other identifying information of the johns were withheld after a judge ruled that state law required them to be kept confidential because the alleged sexual encounters may have been videotaped, making the men potential victims of privacy invasion.

On Tuesday, Superior Court Justice Thomas Warren reversed course, ruling in favor of a request from The Portland Press Herald newspaper that sought the release of the addresses and other information.

Press Herald attorney Sigmund Schutz argued Tuesday that releasing only partial information was unfair to people not on the list.

"The fact is that by releasing names only, you're getting a lot of false positives. You're implicating people who may be completely innocent and simply share the same or similar names with people charged, and that's a real harm," Schutz told The Associated Press.

One of those men was Paul Main of Alfred, whose quiet evening was shattered Monday by a phone ringing off the hook and a half-dozen TV crews showing up on his porch. Reporters wanted to know if the retired sheriff's deputy was one of the johns.

It turns out Main's name is shared by at least 20 others in Maine, including one of the clients.

He spent Monday night and Tuesday trying to clear his name.

"I don't have a problem with releasing names. I think it's a wonderful thing, but I'll be darned if it's right to do it in a shoddy manner," said Main, a retired spokesman and head of the detective division for the York County Sheriff's Department.

Some news organizations published the initial list. Others, including the AP, declined to release any names without first verifying them.

Roy Peter Clark, senior scholar at the Poynter Institute, a Florida-based journalism think tank, said that just because a name becomes public doesn't mean news organizations have to race to publish it.

"What journalistic purpose is served by publishing the name, and how do you balance that against the harm that may be done to these people, their families, their children?"

Clark said the situation would be different if the name of a public figure appeared.

"If the police chief is on the list, if the school superintendent on the list, I would approach those people directly and try to determine whether their actions are not just a personal moral failure but climb to the level of social, public hypocrisy," he said.

As a former law enforcement officer, Main said releasing the names helps hold suspects accountable for their misdeeds. But, he added, other information should be released as well to protect those whose only connection to the case is having a common name.

"I don't want to see other people going through the same thing that I've been through," he said.

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Associated Press writers David Sharp in Portland and Glenn Adams in Augusta contributed to this report.

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In The Absence Of Government Funding, A Greek Soccer Team Is Sponsored By Brothels

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greek soccer team pink jerseys

Desperate times call for desperate measures.

The Associated Press reports that a cash strapped Greek soccer team, once the recipient of government funding, has found the money it needs to survive by taking on two new sponsors — brothels called Villa Erotica and Soula's House of History (h/t NYO).

The amateur Voukefalas club isn't the only team that's had to seek funding from non-traditional sources. But its peers stuck to businesses like kebab stands and feta cheese makers.

Prostitution, for the record, is legal in Greece.

From AP:

"Unfortunately, amateur football has been abandoned by almost everyone," said Yiannis Batziolas, the club's youthful chairman, who runs a travel agency and is the team's backup goalkeeper. "It's a question of survival."

Of course, not everyone is happy about this.

Though garish neon signs advertising their services are tolerated, the soccer sponsorship has ruffled some feathers in the sports-mad city of Larissa. League organizers have banned the pink jerseys during games, saying the deal violates "the sporting ideal" and is inappropriate for underage fans.

Batziolas acknowledges the sponsorship took his team by surprise. "They didn't believe it in the beginning," he said. "But when they saw the shirts printed, they thought it was funny."

Sponsor and brothel owner Soula Alevridou has paid $1,312 for the jerseys, so he's fighting the ban.

Good luck with that.

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The Prostitution Scandal Is The Least Of The Secret Service's Problems

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Colombian Prostitute

The findings of a Department of Homeland Security internal Inspector General investigation into the Secret Service prostitution scandal contradicts the agency’s initial responses to the incident, ABC News’ Jake Tapper reported on Thursday evening.

At a May Senate Homeland Security committee hearing, Secret Service director Mark Sullivan said, in reference to the 12 agents who were accused of boozing with and soliciting prostitutes in Colombia before President Barack Obama’s visit to the country, that “this just is not part of our culture.”

“Thus far, we have not found that this type of behavior was exhibited by any of these individuals before,” Sullivan said during that hearing.

According to Tapper, though, the internal DHS investigators’ report “revealed that one of the agents who was in Cartagena during the scandal and picked up a prostitute ‘admitted to soliciting a prostitute on two previous occasions, once in El Salvador in 2008/2009 and one time in Panama in 2009.’”

“The report also mentioned allegations of similar misconduct by agents on trips to Romania and China,” Tapper continued. “Details from the report, labeled ‘law enforcement sensitive,” were shared with ABC News by sources who had reviewed it.’”

“The investigation found that while Secret Service personnel were still on the ground in Cartagena, one of the supervisors that had engaged in misconduct was alerted that his actions had become known,” Tapper added. “He, in turn, warned other Secret Service staffers in Colombia that they should not bring prostitutes back to their hotel rooms.”

Quoting a “senior Secret Service official with knowledge of the investigation,” Tapper wrote that “Sullivan had been briefed prior to his testimony, and that ‘while some agents had been truthful regarding their conduct with prostitutes in Cartagena, none had confessed to prior contact with prostitutes. One agent, who later admitted to the OIG that he had indeed engaged in prior misconduct with prostitutes in El Salvador and Panama, had previously denied in an interview with USSS Office of Professional Responsibility that he had not had prior contact with prostitutes.’”

Tapper also said that the Secret Service has obstructed the DHS IG investigation, as 10 current and former senior agency officials refused interviews.

Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson told ABC News, too, that he and other senators are “concerned that the inspector general was interfered [with] in terms of his investigation, that was constrained and hampered.”

“These are very serious charges — the fact that the Secret Service has been implicated in this kind of behavior that puts the president’s life at risk, our national security at risk, and we cannot get the answers,” Johnson added.

Johnson added that he’s suspicious there may be a cover-up going on.

“The fact that we’ve hit a brick wall just makes me highly suspicious that there is something being covered up here and the American public has a right to know.”

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Brooklyn Family Man Busted For Allegedly Running A Wall Street Brothel

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william thomas prostitution

No one in his low-key Brooklyn neighborhood would have guessed this father of four was allegedly a pimp responsible for running four brothels in Manhattan.

Fort Greene resident William Thomas is accused of not only operating brothels in the Financial District and Midtown East, but also running raunchy sex websites featuring pictures of naked, busty Asian women, the New York Post reported Tuesday.

Thomas, 42, worked in IT for Compuware in New Jersey before divorcing his first wife and moving to New York to date a string of Asian women, the New York Post reported, citing unnamed sources.

He has been operating the prostitution ring since at least September 2011, according to the Post, which cited a criminal complaint. The illicit business catered to "white collar Johns," DNA Info reported.

Neighbors and family alike were shocked at Thomas' arrest but his son wasted no time throwing his dad under the bus.

"Awesome dad! way to make the thomas family proud.," Thomas' 11th-grade son Noah Thomas tweeted. “My dad is the upcoming story on nbc news if anyone wants to watch . . .Pretty surreal to hear your dad’s name on the news in connection to a massive prostitution ring bust. had to happen eventually i guess.”

william thomas prostitution tweet

william thomas prostitution tweet

Police busted Thomas' business after an undercover cop posed as a John and was allegedly directed to one of the ring's four brothels, according to the Post.

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Former Dean At Scarsdale High School Was Arrested In A Huge Prostitution Case

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Scarsdale High School

New York state's attorney general said today that 19 people had been indicted for allegedly participating in a massive money laundering and prostitution ring.

Prosecutors say defendants  laundered money from prostitution, sex trafficking, and drug sales through the small-business ad company Somad Advertising.

Somad, in turn, allegedly advertised the ring's prostitution services on Backpage.com and the Village Voice.

One of three "johns" who was arrested separately was David Mendelowitz, an ex-guidance counselor and dean of students at the prestigious Scarsdale High School, NY AG Eric Schneiderman said in a press release.

Mendelowitz, who was involved in the high school's drug task force, is charged with paying for both crack and sex, according to the attorney general. He's being arraigned today, a Schneiderman spokeswoman told BI.

Here's his mug shot:

David Mendelowitz

Here's a summary of the prostitution ring charges, from Schneiderman's press release:

Somad's lucrative enterprise partners were large-scale prostitution managers Ying Li, Wei Qu, Jian Hui Nu, Woosub Kim, Jay King and No Mi Kwon, and their employees, some of whom provided cocaine in addition to sex for sale. This enterprise utilized numerous shell corporations created with false information and which were used to process millions of dollars in credit card transactions which hid the true nature of the charges by claiming the corporations services were for cleaning, acupuncture, antiques, and party planning rather than for sex and/or drugs.

Each prostitution prong of the enterprise utilized the income derived from their illegal prostitution and drug related businesses to pay Somad for their advertising services, effectively laundering money through Somad, disguising the origin of the proceeds as legitimate advertisement payments. These payments to Somad were used to both pay Somad employees who ran the advertising business and to place additional ads which promoted their prostitution businesses. According to a review of Somad's financial documents, between January 1, 2010 and October 2012, prostitution businesses paid in excess of $3 million in advertising to promote their prostitution business.

And here's a list of the defendants:

  1. SOMAD ADVERTISING
  2. MILAGROS KATZ, 50, Jersey City, NJ
  3. CHRISTOPHER FAIRBAIRN, 24, Forest Hills, NY
  4. SEAN BAGDONAS, 37, Lake Ariel, PA
  5. VICTOR CONCEPCION a/k/a TORIO, 45, Caivta, Rizal, Philippines
  6. ARLENE MEYERS, 67, Hendersonville, NC
  7. YING LI a/k/a LILY, 48, Bayside, NY
  8. JAY KING, 52, Whitestone, NY
  9. WOO YANG a/k/a AHJUCI, 6o, Oakland Gardens, NY
  10. WEI QU a/k/a WILLIAM, a/k/a ANDY, 51, Flushing, NY
  11. JIAN HUI NIU a/k/a JAMES a/k/a BILL, 40, Flushing, NY
  12.  XIAO JING QIAO a/k/a JOY, 25, Brooklyn, NY
  13. WOOSUB KIM, 46, Fresh Meadows, NY
  14. SUN T. FINK, 61, Flushing, NY
  15. NO MI KWON a/k/a SARAH, 49, Palisades Park, NJ
  16. FANNIE HUBBARD a/k/a ALEX, 23, of Yonkers, NY
  17. MELANIE REYES, 27, Jamaica, NY
  18. SHI IN KANG a/k/a "OLDER MISS KANG", 58, Flushing, NY
  19. RENSHUN KANG a/k/a "YOUNGER MISS KANG", 53, NY
  20. JACOB KIM, a/k/a "SARAH'S DRIVER"36, Flushing, NY

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Notorious Manhattan Madam Case Ends With a Whimper

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Anna GristinaAnna Gristina — known in the press as the “Soccer Mom Madam” and the “Manhattan Madam” — just received a sentence of six months Tuesday for her role in leading a multi-million dollar prostitution ring on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

Gristina, who will likely be released today for “time served,”  pleaded guilty in September to one count of promoting prostitution.  At the time, prosecutors said that they had discovered no evidence to support her claims of connections to high level officials within the New York Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The sentencing was a quiet denouement to a case that was once reportedly the result of a five-year investigation into public corruption. The drama allegedly involved many high-profile, powerful and wealthy customers.

In August, Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan ordered prosecutors to confine the case to the single incident that gave rise to the charge against her.  That incident involved arranging for a meeting between a customer known to her as “Anthony” and two prostitutes. As a result, none of the names of other alleged customers have come to light.

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Scarsdale High Dean Charged In Sex And Cocaine Case Retired 'Very Abruptly'

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David Mendelowitz

The arrest of a former Scarsdale High School, N.Y., dean of students this week for allegedly buying sex and cocaine came out of nowhere, a former student says.

"It's really a tragedy, and it's really upsetting," Ken Hershey, a 2009 Scarsdale graduate and current Yale student, told Business Insider.

Ex-dean of students David Mendelowitz, 58, was one of three accused "johns" who allegedly patronized a prostitution ring that spanned the tri-state area.

Hershey told BI that Mendelowitz – whose role was essentially that of a guidance counselor at the posh school – always seemed kind and approachable to those students who actually knew him.

While the ex-dean's arrest came as a shock to Hershey, there was at least one sign that something might be awry.

In June Mendelowitz retired abruptly after missing several weeks of school, Scarsdale10583.com reported at the time.

Hershey remembers reading that news article and being surprised by the news.

"He says he loved his job, and he acted like it," Hershey said, adding that his retirement seemed "spontaneous."

The former dean's publicly appointed attorney, Monroe Mann, said he has been instructed not to speak to reporters about the case.

SEE ALSO: Former Dean At Scarsdale High School Was Arrested In Huge Prostitution Ring >

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New Database Tracks Cities That Target The 'Demand Side' Of Prostitution

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Prostitution illustration grayscale

The town of Kennebunk, Maine, recently made headlines for releasing the identities of men charged with patronizing a Zumba instructor-turned-prostitute named Alexis Wright.

Despite all the attention, the strategy of "john shaming" is far from unique. It's just one of several tactics city and county police departments across the country routinely use to target the men who pay for sex, rather than the women who sell it.

Michael Shively of the Cambridge, Massachusetts, research firm Abt Associates has spent the past several years gathering loads of information about strategies that aim to reduce the "demand" side of prostitution.

Shively and his colleagues have compiled a database of at least 825 cities that employ at least one of these tactics.

The work has produced comprehensive reports for the Department of Justice [PDF] as well as a new website called DEMANDForum that tracks the "anti-demand initiatives" occurring across the United States:Prostitution demand map

Shively's work has shown that targeting demand can be much more useful than arresting the so-called "supply" side of prostitution: the women themselves, or the pimps trafficking sex.

Most communities begin by sweeping the streets for the suppliers of sex, but ultimately find the approach ineffective, he says. The women are often victims themselves who've been forced into the trade for various reasons, and the pimps are easily replaceable once they're taken off the street.

"Focusing on the supply, the supply of sellers of commercial sex, is not found to be effective," says Shively. "Police never find it to have any lasting or substantial effects other than short-term displacement or moving the problem around."

Isolated anti-john initiatives date back to the early 20th century, says Shively, but the trend really took off in the 1970s when groups began calling for equal enforcement of prostitution laws.

Since that time a number of strategies have emerged: from the "reverse sting" (undercover female officers solicit buyers) to "john schools" (programs designed to educate men about the risks of prostitution) to shaming. Shively's latest D.O.J. report charts the first cities of anti-demand: 

Anti-demand prostitution chart

 

Shively credits St. Petersburg, Florida, for implementing some of the strongest early programs, back in the mid-70s, aimed at both reducing demand for prostitution and providing social support for female victims of it.

A pioneering john school started by San Francisco in 1995 reduced recidivism rates by nearly half, Shively reports, and became a global model for other cities.

A sustained program of reverse stings in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, established in the mid-1980s, led to a 75 percent decline in prostitution.

Other cities have turned to shaming because it's much cheaper than running schools or deploying undercover officers. Several places in addition to Kennebunk publicize names of johns on billboards, over the internet, or through press releases.

There are legitimate ethical concerns about the tactic — some argue that it unfairly maligns men who haven't yet been convicted of a crime — but from an effectiveness standpoint, police interviews and community surveys suggest it's a strong behavioral motivator.

"Cities have gotten themselves into position to pursue these tactics for many different reasons," says Shively. "In some cases, it's been a nonprofit organization that maybe heard something or was looking for something. … In other cases the police have said, what we're doing isn't working, what else is out there."

Cook County, Illinois, which encompasses Chicago, is doing the best overall job targeting demand today, says Shively. The county is part of a wider statewide anti-demand campaign called End Demand Illinois, driven largely by the Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation, with an aim to shift the attention of law enforcement onto patrons, not prostitutes, and create support networks for victims.

Nashville, Tennessee, also deserves praise for its aggressive john school, he says, which generates about $100,000 a year for survivors.

Budget is a major obstacle for some cities when it comes to fighting prostitution, but criminal priority is also significant, says Shively.

Some police departments or district attorneys choose not to emphasize the crime because it's only a misdemeanor instead of a felony. Still many officers recognize that most of the felonies targeted by cities — from weapons offenses to murders — are found in high concentrations around prostitution rings.

"Police that connect the dots and that connect all the crimes together, they  think it's time well spent to focus on prostitution," says Shively. "They know they don't get anywhere with supply and distribution, so the ones that are consistently aggressive about demand see that they're attacking the market that drives many of their other problems."

Shively hopes DEMANDForum will give cities the information they need to pursue whatever tactic they deem best for them. (The site is live but still being updated, he says, with an official public release planned for the coming weeks.) He's especially hopeful that some places will be able to learn from the efforts of others.

Cities that have given up on john schools because they couldn't get support from a district attorney, for instance, might follow the lead of Waco, Texas, where program leaders turned to the city attorney instead.

"One of the reasons we put the information together was so that people would not have to reinvent wheels if they're interested in a wheel," he says. "We want to make the information about what communities have done accessible, so others can get new ideas they haven't thought of, or find solutions to problems that have been solved elsewhere."

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'Manhattan Madam'/Former Hedge Fund VP Kristin Davis Is Running For NYC Mayor

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kristin davis

Kristin Davis, the "Manhattan Madam" who provided call girls for Eliot Spitzer,  is running for New York City Mayor, according to her website [via Absolute Return's Lawrence Delevingne]. 

If she becomes the next mayor, Davis, who used to work at a hedge fund, says she will work with the industry.

Davis told Absolute Return in an interview that she wants to work with hedge funds on compliance with SEC rules and finding a level of transparency to boost trust between the markets and the funds.  

For the campaign, she's running as a Libertarian and branding herself as the "Libertarian Lady." Her platform focuses on ending restrictions on soft drink sizes, gambling and marijuana, AR points out. 

Now check out her bio from her campaign website here: 

Kristin Davis, Libertarian, Entrepreneur, businesswoman, former Hedge Fund VP, also former Manhattan Madam who supplied disgraced Governor Eliot Spitzer with escorts. In 2008, she was convicted of 1 count of promoting prostitution in the 3rd degree and served 4 months in Rikers Island, also forfeiting all of her assets.

“No one values freedom as much as someone who has lost it. In prison I read Milton Freedman, Rand, Von Mises, Goldwater and de Tocqueville. I became a deep believer in personal and economic freedom.” Said Davis.

Davis ran for Governor of NY 2010 as a protest candidate on a Libertarian platform. She is a critic of Sexism in our Criminal Justice System and strong advocate of Marriage Equality and legalization and taxation of Marijuana, now running non-profit-HOPE HOUSE to combat sex trafficking and help women who are forced to a life of prostitution against their will. www.westoptrafficking.com

Kristin Davis is a member of the NY Libertarian Party and is a strong supporter of Former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson and his campaign for President

We imagine she has some stiff competition.

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'The Baddest Lawyer In The History Of New Jersey' Goes On Trial Again

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Paul Bergrin

New Jersey's most infamous defender of drug lords, gang members, and pimps, Paul Bergrin, was back in Newark federal court on Tuesday and facing a laundry list of charges from drug trafficking to racketeering.

The man dubbed by New York Magazine as "the baddest lawyer in the history of New Jersey" is on trial for the second time, after a hung jury failed to convict him in November 2011, Reuters reports.

He's accused of using his law practice to promote prostitution, orchestrate the 2004 murder of federal informant Kemo DeShawn McCray, and plot to kill witnesses, along with 24 other counts. 

Bergrin, who has been in federal custody since his arrest in 2009, claims the government's case is shaky because it relies on the testimony of career criminals trying to reduce their prison sentences.

"You'll find in this case conclusively that you can't trust any of the witnesses against me," Bergrin, who is representing himself, told the jury during opening arguments on Tuesday, according to Reuters

The Bentley-driving attorney also represented himself in 2011 when he was tried the first time.

The first presiding judge in the case wouldn't allow the government to introduce evidence about two murders in which Bergrin had allegedly been involved. Then the prosecution team asked the case to be reheard, accusing the judge in the first trial of favoring Bergrin, WSJ Law Blog reported.

Federal prosecutors say they have a smoking gun that will make the murder and conspiracy charges stick – a tape of Bergrin allegedly ordering a "hit" on a witness who would testify against his client, drug trafficker Vicente Esteves, the Newark Star-Ledger reports.

"We gotta make it look like a robbery. It cannot under any circumstances look like a hit," he says on the tape, according to a recent legal opinion issued by U.S. District Judge Dennis M. Cavanaugh cited by the Star-Ledger.

SEE ALSO: More Than 20 Women Are Suing A Texas 'Revenge Porn' Site And GoDaddy

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