Posts tagged ‘Maine’

Boston Area Escort Ring Dealt Double Convictions

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Read more at WBZ.com

Guilty verdicts in MA prostitution ring trial

Federal prosecutors say two Massachusetts members of a violent prostitution ring have been found guilty of forcing teenage girls as young as 15 to work as prostitutes, taking them to several states.

The two men were convicted in U.S. District Court on Friday. Prosecutors had previously said the 26-year-olds were members of a Boston-based group that operated from 2001 to 2005 in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, New York, New Jersey, Florida and Pennsylvania.

Trafficking victims who were minors when the offenses occurred said in court that Tavares and Jones switched underage girls between themselves and viciously beat them.



Alleged Maine Escort Agency Busted

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Read the whole story at The Bangor Daily News

Orland woman, 42, pleads guilty in prostitution case
By Judy Harrison

The owner and operator of Cinnamon’s Sweets, an escort service that advertised online, pleaded guilty Tuesday in 3rd District Court to four counts of promoting prostitution.

Judge Jessie Gunther ordered the woman to pay fines of $500 per count for a total of $2,000.

The woman was one of seven women charged in April with promotion of prostitution, a Class D misdemeanor.

The women were released on bail shortly after their arrests.

Each faced up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $2,000.

No other escorts or their clients have been charged, according to the Penobscot County District Attorney’s Office.

The women were arrested as the result of a sting operation conducted on April 2 and 3 by the Brewer police. Detective Sgt. Jay Munson said at the time of the arrests that he and other officers had visited Craigslist and similar sites a few days earlier.

“We started making phone calls and making appointments,” Munson said. “We ordered up five girls,” but during the process “we were able to order a sixth girl. Three of them came from Cinnamon’s Sweets.”

The women showed up at a Brewer motel one or two at a time to meet with an undercover officer who purportedly had hired them as escorts or to perform exotic dances.

“Through our investigation, we were quoted prices anywhere between $200 and $1,000,” Munson said in April.



Life After Craigslist for Online Sex Trade

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A look at how the industry is reacting to Craigslist working with law enforcement in its fight against escort services. Read the whole story at InternetNews.com

Life After Craigslist for Online Sex Trade
By Kenneth Corbin

Craigslist made a splash last month when it announced a set of policy changes aimed at stamping out sex crimes facilitated through the Erotic Services section of its site. But sex workers and legal experts say the measures are likely to have scant impact on the shadowy world of online prostitution.

Following the initial report about the new policies, a reader who identified herself as a “working girl in San Francisco” told InternetNews.com that Craigslist is hardly the only game in town.

“Because of the new procedure on Craigslist, we are turning to other Web sites … to promote our services,” she wrote in an e-mail. “These sites are free and just as effective. I don’t believe that this change in Craigslist will do anything to affect the industry.”

The reader declined to be interviewed further for this report, but people on both sides of the war on prostitution agree that the multiplicity of adult-oriented sites on the Internet has made the policeman’s work considerably more complicated.

“It’s really just a function of today’s digital economy,” said Alex Southwell, an attorney with the law firm Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher and a former federal prosecutor. “The Internet’s ability to make illicit services available is really groundbreaking.”

“It’s a question of convenience,” Southwell told InternetNews.com. “It used to be for prostitution you would have to go to some shady corner of town at night. Now you can do it on the Internet.”



Craigslist & Law Enforcement: Perfect Together?

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Some interesting analysis on Craigslist’s new found cooperation with law enforcement regarding the erotic services niche. Read the whole story at The Las Vegas Sun

Hawking erotic services? Craigslist now has your number
By Abigail Goldman

Mahria is a “beautiful blonde” offering “erotic wrestling” for $100.

Dru is charging $80 for an hour of “sensual massage.”

Alicia can be at your door in half an hour.

These advertisements, which come with photos a family newspaper won’t print, are a small sample of what can be found in the “erotic services” section of Craigslist in Las Vegas — an online classified ads Web site that, aside from helping people find roommates or sell old lawn mowers, has become one of the most popular ways for Clark County escorts to peddle their wares to the electronic masses. It’s an Internet buffet of costly companionship, but perhaps not for long.

Just over two weeks ago, Craigslist began charging a fee to advertise on the site’s “erotic services” section. The fee is small — $5 — but the consequences are huge.

The fee must be paid with a credit card, and Craigslist will supply this credit card information to law enforcement officials, should they subpoena it. Erotic services advertisers must also provide a phone number, which an automated system will call before any posting is published online.

In short, Craigslist is working with the police.

Erotic services advertisements in the dozens of American cities Craigslist serves have fallen dramatically since Nov. 6, when the fee took effect, the company’s chief executive, Jim Buckmaster, told the Sun. On Monday in Las Vegas, that meant there were only 362 erotic services ads posted on Craigslist. The Monday before the traceable fees, there were more than 1,100 ads.



Craigslist cracks down on erotic services postings

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Is the party over for working girls on Craigslist? Read the whole story at SFGate.com

Craigslist to crack down on prostitution ads

Under the watchful eye of law enforcement in 40 states, Craigslist pledged Thursday to crack down on ads for prostitution on its Web sites.

As part of Craigslist’s agreement with attorneys general around the country, anyone who posts an “erotic services” ad will be required to provide a working phone number and pay a fee with a valid credit card. The Web site will provide that information to law enforcement if subpoenaed.