AZN747

 找回密码
 立即注册
搜索
查看: 2306|回复: 1

Maine town's agony prolonged in prostitution case

[复制链接]
发表于 2012-10-13 03:40:21 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
http://news.yahoo.com/maine-towns-agony-prolonged-prostitution-case-211704460.html

KENNEBUNK, Maine (AP) — Residents of this seaside community will have to wait at least the weekend to learn which of their friends and neighbors stand accused of giving business to a fitness instructor charged with running a prostitution operation out of herZumba studio.
The police department declined Friday to release any of the more than 150 names of suspected clients because of an appeal pending before the state supreme court.
The delay prolongs the agony for town residents, who have heard that the list of could include lawyers, law enforcement officers and some well-known people.
"We're hearing that there are selectmen, there are policemen, that there are firemen — people that we're going to know in town," saidElaine Nicholson. "So everyone is, like, waiting with bated breath."
Alexis Wright, a 29-year-old fitness instructor from the nearby town of Wells, has pleaded not guilty to prostitution, invasion of privacy and other charges for allegedly accepting money for sex and secretly videotaping her encounters. Her business partner,Mark Strong Sr., a 57-year-old insurance agent and private investigator from Thomaston, pleaded not guilty to 59 misdemeanor charges. Their lawyers did not immediately return messages Friday.
Searches of Wright's studio and office turned up video recordings of sexual acts, billing information and meticulous records about clients, according to court documents.
Kennebunk police have begun issuing summonses to Wright's suspected johns on misdemeanor charges of engaging a prostitute. The first set of names was supposed to be released Friday, but police held off because of the legal action.
A lawyer for two men on the list filed an appeal Friday to challenge a decision by a district judge who declined to halt the public release.
"We believe very strongly that their names ought not be released. The mere releasing of their names will have devastating consequences in a case in which the government, we believe, will have great difficulty proving," said the lawyer, Stephen Schwartz.
Schwartz took the case to the state Supreme Judicial Court and vowed "to fight to the end for our clients."
The appeal asked the court for an expedited hearing on the appeal. The earliest that can happen is Monday.
"We fully expect that they won't be convicted, but the damage is done once the horse is out of the barn," he said.
The prostitution charges and ensuing publicity — which reached across the country and beyond — came as a shock in this small town, 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 say they had their suspicions about Wright, but others were totally in the dark about the energetic dance instructor who introduced many local women to Zumba, a Latin-flavored dance and fitness program.
Alison Ackley, who participated in Wright's class, said she had no inkling she might have been leading a double life.
"She was very professional. She was an amazing dancer and she held a good class, so I liked going," Ackley said. "I thought she was a little, not risque, but a little flirtatious with a couple of the male participants in the class. But it's Zumba. You're there to have fun. I didn't think anything of it."
Her mom, Kim Ackley, said she hopes the names are released soon so people can move on with their lives.
"The list will be released eventually. They're just doing everything they can to stall it," she said. "Everybody is really ready to see who's on the list."
Not everyone wants the list to be released, however.
"Do I agree that what the men did was right? No. But I think it's a matter for the police, and not for us to know," said Josiah Currier, a resident.




回复

使用道具 举报

 楼主| 发表于 2012-10-17 00:33:26 | 显示全部楼层
How a Zumba instructor’s prostitution charges have become the talk of a small town
http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1272068--how-a-zumba-instructor-s-prostitution-charges-have-become-the-talk-of-a-small-town

KENNEBUNK, MAINE—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 rumours 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 rumours 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 offences 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.
The charged men are: Gary D. Bahlkow, Jens W. Bergen, Norman P. Crepeau Jr., Joseph P. Cuetara, Kenneth A. Fairbanks, Donald F. Hill, Monie B. Hobbs Jr., David Kline, Robert R. Labonte, Dale P. Madore, Paul A. Main, Harry J. McMann, Kevin L. Pagliccia, Claude S. Palmer Jr., Philip K. Parker, Colin P. Powers, Clinton J. Ray, James A. Soule, John D. Verreault, James P. White, and Peter M. Wormell Sr.
One of the men charged, James A. Soule, is the former mayor of South Portland, according to the Portland Press Herald.
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, Pure Vida 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 misdemeanour 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 misdemeanour 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 have 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 neighbouring 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-flavoured 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."
The 21 men are scheduled to appear in Biddeford District Court on Dec. 5.




回复

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 立即注册

本版积分规则

AZN747

GMT-5, 2024-4-18 22:25 , Processed in 0.036222 second(s), 13 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.4

Copyright © 2001-2021, Tencent Cloud.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表