| 24th November | |
| Lap dancer argues that she was working under sufficient employer controls so as to qualify for employment rights
| See article from
guardian.co.uk
|
The rights of thousands of women working as lap dancers are to be tested after a judge ruled that an appeal tribunal should establish whether Stringfellows employed its performers. In a newly released decision, the judge in the case, Jeremy
McMullen QC granted Quashie permission to take her case against Stringfellow Restaurants Ltd to an employment appeal tribunal in this very unusual case . The fact that she was regularly rostered to work on pre-arranged days meant,
the judge said, that she had an arguable case that she was employed by the club. Stringfellows, which won an unfair dismissal hearing last year, has appealed against the latest ruling. The case, which provides an insight into the financial
incentives offered and fines imposed on lap and pole dancers, is likely to be heard early next year. Quashie's solicitor, Shah Qureshi said: This decision is a small victory for common sense. His Honour Judge
McMullen accepted that there were good arguments to support the case that my client was an employee at Stringfellows. Dancers in clubs are often exploited due to their lack of employment status. The clubs insist on them being
self-employed despite the fact that they have obligations like any other employee including the provision of services, set working hours and financial penalties for not working.
Nightclub owner, Peter Stringfellow, said his company
would contest the appeal. Update: Appeal Date Set 29th November 2011. See
article from thelawyer.com
It is understood that Stringfellows has counter-appealed with the full hearing of the appeal due to be heard on 1 March 2012.
|
| 16th November | |
| Fined 29,000 for running a brothel in Wokingham
| See article
from getwokingham.co.uk
|
A man has been fined more than £ 29,000 for managing a brothel. he had already been given a 12-month suspended sentence, a 12-month community order and 240 hours of unpaid work after pleading guilty to a charge of
managing a brothel for prostitution back in April. The victim must pay exactly £ 29,510 within six months of face a default 15-month prison sentence.
|
| 15th November | |
| Jailed for 9 months and fined 68,000 for running a brothel
| See article from
stalbansreview.co.uk
|
A woman from St Albans who ran a brothel has been ordered to pay £ 67,840 under the Proceeds of Crime Act. She was sentenced at Luton Crown Court in March this year for managing a brothel and money laundering offences.
She had pleaded guilty and was given nine months imprisonment. On November 2 the case was back at Luton Crown Court for the confiscation hearing. The brothel was run from a flat in Old Watford Road in Bricket Wood, where workers were based
and would pay a cut of their earnings.
|
| 11th November | |
| A year's jail for running a dating agency cum brothel
| See article
from thisisplymouth.co.uk
|
A Plymouth couple who made £ 200,000 in eight months by running brothels under the guise of an Asian dating agency have been jailed. They ran establishments in Plymouth and Torquay. The brothels used women
from China, at least one of whom was an illegal immigrant who was deported after her visa expired, but there was no suggestion of any trafficking. Williams set up a website and the couple sent prostitutes to customers' homes for an enhanced fee. The couple admitted two charges of brothel keeping and they were both jailed for 12 months by Judge Graham Cottle at Exeter Crown Court. He told them:
For eight months you ran two properties simultaneously from which the business of prostitution was carried out. It is impossible to quantify accurately the amount of money involved and the
police have tried to calculate the level of cash involved, but it is inescapable that £ 30,000 was sent to China. The financial gain is an aggravating feature. For a significant period you were
successfully operating two brothels.
|
| 6th November | | |
Nine months jail just for letting sex workers use his flat
| All this prison time handed out just to try and prevent guys from having a little paid for fun in life. See
article from
scotsman.com
|
A Thai student who allowed his upmarket flat in Edinburgh to be used as a brothel was sentenced to nine months in prison. The student who travelled to the UK on a student visa, allowed the Castle Terrace flat to be used by Thai women who used it
as a brothel, the court heard. He had pleaded guilty at the city's Sheriff Court earlier this month that being the tenant, lessee or occupier he knowingly permitted the premises or any part of it to be used as a brothel or for the purposes of
habitual prostitution. Sheriff Paul Arthurson said: You have pled guilty to a serious charge. I am satisfied that I can impose a backdated custodial sentence for a duration of nine months.
|
| 2nd November | | |
Bala man falls victim to the Dangerous Pictures Act
| 5th October 2011. Thanks to Teddy See article from
cambrian-news.co.uk |
A Bala man has pleaded guilty to six charges of downloading extreme pornography involving animals on his laptop. Dolgellau magistrates were told that the charges against the man were so new that there were no magistrates' court guidelines
available. Tom Morgan Jones, prosecuting, said that three of the charges involved 59 extreme pornography videos involving animals and women, two charges involved extreme images showing serious injury to men's and women's private parts and one
charge involved 25 extreme still images. Update: Sentenced 2nd November 2011. See article from
cambrian-news.co.uk The Bala man who fell victim to the Dangerous Pictures Act has been placed on a two-year community order and must carry out 250 hours unpaid work
after pleading guilty to six offences under a new Criminal Justices and Immigration Act. Alun Humphreys, persecuting, said that three of the charges involved 59 extreme video pornography images involving animals and women, two charges involved
extreme images which caused serious injury to men and women's private parts and one charge involved 25 still images. The accused pleaded guilty to all six charges after the images were found on his computer after a search warrant was executed on 31 March
this year.
|
| 17th October | | |
Traffickers jailed for forcing girls to work as prostitutes in Chelsea and Earls Court
| See article from
kensington.londoninformer.co.uk
|
A couple who trafficked young women into the UK and forced them to work as prostitutes in Chelsea and Earls Court have been jailed. Sergey Konart was sentenced to 10 years in prison, and Ekaterina Kolesnikova to two and a half years after
admitting a series of charges including trafficking and controlling prostitution. Southwark Crown Court was told how Metropolitan police from the Human Exploitation and Organised Crime Command arrested the pair in December after raiding five
properties - two in Chelsea, two in Queensway and one in Earls Court. The pair, who were operating as part of a Russian and European organised criminal network, recruited vulnerable young Eastern European women ,promising them well-paid work as
waitresses, shop assistants or dancers. Once in the UK, they took the girls' ID and travel documents. They then held the girls to a debt bond of up to £ 80,000, which they forced them to pay off by working as prostitutes, charging clients up
to £ 200 a visit. The girls were threatened with violence and plied with ecstasy and cocaine to gain compliance.
|
| 16th October | | |
Kendal man falls victim to severe punishment under the Dangerous Pictures Act
| See
article from thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk
|
A Kendal man has been jailed for five months after admitting possessing extreme pornography showing women engaged in sexual activities with animals. Some of the footage found at the home of Gary Sharples was so supposedly disturbing that
the policeman given the horrendous task of viewing the footage could not watch it, South Lakeland magistrates were told. Lisa Hine, prosecuting, told the court that police searched the man's property while he was in custody on unrelated
matters. During the search, police found 22 DVDs containing extreme pornography. In mitigation, John Batty told the court that Sharples had relocated to Kendal from Greater Manchester, leaving behind family. It is something of a lonely
existence, he said: This gentlemen knows what he did was naive and stupid. Batty said he acknowledged that the threshhold for custody had been passed given the seriousness of the footage but asked magistrates to suspend any sentence of
imprisonment because of the defendant's previous good character. He said Sharples would not wish that anybody featured in the DVDs was harmed and thought the people involved were consenting adults. But magistrates claimed that because the
footage was so serious, they had been left with no choice but to send him to prison. Sentencing Sharples to 150 days' custody, lead magistrate Peter Benning said: This sentence is passed because of the extreme nature of what was on those DVDs
and the level of seriousness - they are right at the top. We have no other option than to treat this seriously in the way that we have. Sharples also admitted possessing cannabis resin but he was not sentenced for that offence because of the
severity of the other punishment. Magistrates ordered that the DVDs and cannabis resin be confiscated and destroyed.
|
| 10th October | |
| So it seems that the authorities have to make it up
| 4th October 2011. See article
from thescotsman.scotsman.com |
The Scotsman writes: Police have vowed to eradicate human trafficking after securing the first sentencing for the crime in Scottish history. Stephen Craig was jailed for three years and
four months for arranging travel, accommodation and advertising for 14 women. His co-accused, Sarah Beukan, was jailed for a year and a half for her part in his human trafficking network. Lord Advocate
Frank Mulholland called it a landmark case , while Detective Inspector Stephen Grant said it should act as a warning to others who are involved in this abhorrent way of life that we are coming to get you .
BUT... then proceed to describe the case further explaining that
Sheriff Sam Cathcart accepted that no pressure or force or threat was directed at any of the individuals involved.
The 23 sex workers involved with Craig's business were from Brazil, Bolivia,
Nigeria, Fife, Glasgow, Inverness, Airdrie and elsewhere in the UK. Craig had no part in bringing in the girls in from abroad. In fact is believed the prostitutes were previously working independently as sex workers before being recruited by the pair.
Craig merely arranged accommodation and travel for the girls to work in his business. Pre-paid credit cards were used to transfer money and pay for the rental of properties, so the women would not carry cash when they travelled. They also provided
accommodation for them to work from, put advertisements in newspapers and online. In return for this, the sex workers gave Craig a reasonable one third of their earnings. Craig and Beukan had been running four brothels in Glasgow, at Argyll
Street, Wallace Street, Newton Terrace, and Clyde Street. They also ran a brothel in Aberdeen, at James Street, and one in Queens Square, Belfast. But the prosecutors had the last nasty words: Sheriff Sam
Cathcart told Craig and Beukan there was no alternative to custody. He said that, by their actions, they had exerted control, direction or influence over the movements of the women, but accepted that no pressure or force or threat was
directed at any of the individuals involved. DI Grant, of Strathclyde Police, said that Craig and Beukan were despicable individuals . Human beings are not products which can ever be bought and sold, and this will never
be tolerated. Frank Mulholland, QC, said: This is a landmark conviction for human trafficking in Scotland and represents the success of close working between police and prosecutors across the UK.
Offsite Comment: Is there really a sex-trafficking epidemic? 10th October 2011. See
article from heraldscotland.com
[turn off javascript to skip registering] Last week Stephen Craig and Sarah Beukan, the first people to be convicted of human trafficking in Scotland, were given the short jail sentences of 40 months and 18 months
respectively. For many of those who followed the case -- which exposed a vice ring that moved prostitutes round the country, between brothels in Glasgow, Belfast and Aberdeen -- it seemed a puzzling conclusion.
In the lead up to the sentencing there were reports of threats and intimidation; a police debriefing described how one witness said Craig had threatened to pour boiling water down her throat . But last Monday, based on the
facts provided to him by the Crown, the presiding sheriff stated that there was no pressure, force or threat on the women. Rather, the pair pled guilty to, and were convicted of, arranging travel, accommodation and advertising for around 15
prostitutes. It was an offence that was hardly, as Ken Waddell, the solicitor for Stephen Craig points out, what most people consider to be trafficking. ...Read the full
article Update: Fined £ 45,000 19th July 2012. See
article from scotsman.com A man convicted of running a brothel (with an unlikely sounding link to trafficking) has been ordered to pay £ 45,000, the Crown Office said. Lindsey Miller, head of the serious and
organised crime division of the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, said: Stephen Craig took part in a criminal prostitution operation that spanned the United Kingdom. Today's confiscation order for £ 45,000 represents the full
amount which is available to us at this time from Stephen Craig.
|
| 24th September | | |
Court acquits a woman running a bondage and domination service of running a brothel
| See article from
kentonline.co.uk
|
Police who raided a house in Folkestone discovered a fantasyland of sex toys, whips, chains, sex toys and frilly clothes ... and more than 2,000 condoms. But a jury at Canterbury Crown Court thankfully found that homeowner Lindy Cruse was
not running a brothel. Persecutor Denzil Pugh told how in March this year police raided the house and discovered a variety of bondage equipment. Cruse also ran a number of businesses, Matrix Enterprises, Fantasyland, Retro Clothing, and an
Internet site called 'Sissies In Frillies'. Cruse said she had placed adverts for Fantasyland in newspapers. She denied running her home at Victoria Grove, Folkestone, as a brothel and a jury acquitted her. Cruse told the jury:
I found a niche in the market. I am not classing myself as the norm so I was finding it very difficult to go originally to indulge in any of my fantasies. One of the rooms was set up for domination and bondage which is why
it had extra mirrors. The other room was for people who just wanted to come in and cross-dress. If I am working and I am doing things of a sexual nature it's for my own actual, personal pleasure. I don't offer sexual ?services.
Mine is not sexual, as in having intercourse, but a service for bondage and domination. The sexual side of that doesn't actually enter into it.
|
| 15th September | | |
Two and a half years for running a brothel
| See article
from thisisbristol.co.uk
|
A woman who ran a brothel has been jailed after continuing to trade despite repeated warnings and raids from the police. Si Man Chan was first warned about running a massage parlour in Lodge Causeway in 2007, then given a written warning to shut
up shop in January last year, Bristol Crown Court heard. But four months later undercover policemen posing as punters visited the premises and found sexual services still on offer. Chan pleaded guilty to keeping a brothel for the purposes of
prostitution between January 20 and June 4 last year, and converting criminal property between November 2006 and June last year. Her partner Brian Davies also pleaded guilty to keeping a brothel and converting criminal property. Chan was jailed
for two-and-a-half years and Davies was given a 12-month suspended sentence, with 240 hours' unpaid work. In July 2007 Avon & Somerset police searched the premises and found Chan with two women who were illegal immigrants. A regional crime
squad called Operation Zephyr became involved in the investigation and worked with HM Revenue and Customs, South Wales Police and the Metropolitan Police. Another search was conducted in January last year by policemen from Gloucestershire and the Met.
One woman told them she was working at the brothel because she was in debt bondage to an unknown man in Chinatown, and was moved around the UK to work as a prostitute. But in court, Timothy Rose, defending Chan stressed the case was
not about people trafficking and there was no evidence of sex workers being threatened or coerced. A hearing under the Proceeds of Crime Act, to confiscate the cash made by the couple will take place next month.
|
| 11th September | | |
Unlicensed video shop assistant banned from the West End
| See
article from hornseyjournal.co.uk
|
A man has been banned from the West End after he was caught working as a shop assistant in a Soho porn store. Edward Squire-Eveleigh was arrested a day after being fined for selling unclassified pornography in the same unlicensed video shop,
Seymores in Walkers Court, off Brewer Street. Victoria Forbes, prosecuting, told City of Westminster Magistrates' Court that the teenager was the only person in the store when police raided it on March 24 this year. They arrested him and
seized a total of 1,065 DVDs, six of which were sent to the BBFC to see if they had been certificated. None had certificates and all were pornographic. She said that just a day earlier Squire-Eveleigh was fined £
500 for exactly the same offence . Cassandra Bligh, defending, said he had only gone back to work in Seymores to earn money to pay off the fine, adding: It was foolish and he accepts that. Squire-Eveleigh admitted six
charges of possessing unclassified video recordings for supply and was banned from the entire City of Westminster for six months from September 5. He was also ordered to pay £ 85 costs.
|
| 5th September | | |
4 traffickers jailed
| See article from
bbc.co.uk
|
A man at the centre of a human trafficking and prostitution ring in Norfolk has been jailed for 11 years by a judge at Norwich Crown Court. Nerijus Lekecinskas had been found guilty of trafficking a young Lithuanian woman before forcing her into
prostitution. Another man, Skirmantas Kvedaras, was jailed for six years. Both he and Lekecinskas were found guilty on one count of rape See
article from bbc.co.uk Two men from Oxfordshire have been jailed for
trafficking women and using them as prostitutes. Anastassios Papas was given a seven-year sentence, plus four years on licence. Graham Cochrane received five years for his involvement in trafficking women. The case at Oxford Crown
Court was brought after concerns were raised about their Oxford escort agency Fun Girls. Passing sentence, Judge Gordon Risius said Papas and Cochrane had taken advantage of vulnerable girls who had come from Eastern Europe and exposed them to a
degrading and often risky business.
|
| 1st August | |
| Newsagent jailed for selling supposedly obscene mail order DVDs
| See
article from
gallowaygazette.co.uk |
A newsagent who ran a mail order business distributing supposedly obscene videos and DVDs has been jailed for 11 months at Kirkcudbright Sheriff Court. Ronald Smart was told by Sheriff Shirley Foran that he had shown a complete disregard for his
family and the law by committing the offence almost immediately after a previous penalty imposed on him for virtually the same thing. At an earlier hearing the newsagent admitted selling supposedly obscene videos and DVDs. A hearing under the
Proceeds of Crime Act will be held later. The court was told that police seized 148 videos and 199 DVDs on February 6, 2009, when they raided his King Street shop in Castle Douglas. They contained supposedly extreme material,and were said to
contain lurid films featuring scenes of extreme 'degrading sex acts' including bondage, orgies and other 'obscene' material. The police had also obtained lists of customers of Smart from computers and police had called at houses and addresses in
many parts of the country.
|
| 16th July | | |
| First trial under the Dangerous Drawings Act
| Strange that the drawings were reported as if they were somehow worse than the real pictures. See
article from news.uk.msn.com See
article from bbc.co.uk
|
A man who led the Paedophile Information Exchange, admitted charges relating to 3,000 drawings found at his south London home. The drawings found at the man's home, where the group met, were described at the Old Bailey as vile and disgusting
. Police found he had been drawing images of children being raped. The harrowing drawings were said to be amongst the worst seen by police. The trial was the first under the 2009 Coroners and Justice Act which includes sketches among
indecent images. Police also found about 14,500 pictures and films on computer disks at the home of the man and two of the other defendants. Tens of thousands of images were stored on encrypted hard-drives, officers believe. The man pleaded
guilty to 10 specimen charges of possessing incident images, three charges of distributing the material and one count of failing to disclose the password for an encrypted computer. He was given an indeterminate term for public protection with a minimum
term of 30 months. The other defendants were given prison sentences from 12 to 24 months. Comment: In the shadow of more serious offences From Angelus So, the first prosecution
under the "Dangerous Cartoons Act" was successful. And as usual in these matters, the police and the CPS have started with the low-hanging fruit. Given the gravity of the other offences these people were charged with, there is no doubt that no
questions were raised about the legality of the Coroner's and Justice Act's provisions to criminalise the possession of drawings with respect to universally accepted and understood principles of freedom of conscience.
A drawing is a record of a
thought, an idea, and the freedom to think and to communicate ideas is essential in a free society. It does not and should not matter that the thought itself may be repugnant to the vast majority of people - what matters should be the right of people to
think what they choose and to communicate those thoughts. If those thoughts then lead to actions then full weight of the law should rightly descend upon them, but the transmission of ideas, even repugnant ones, should and must remain a fundamental right.
|
| 14th July | | |
| Police claimed high profile 'rescue' of girls from brothel when it appears that they knew they were volunteer workers all along
| Thanks to Alan See
article from expressandstar.com
|
Police withheld evidence that casts a serious question mark over the conviction of a Black Country man who is serving seven years for running a brothel, a court heard. A judge said he was greatly distressed by the claim that officers
did not disclose a witness statement in the case of Carl Pritchett, which suggested prostitutes were working at the Cuddles Massage Parlour in Bearwood voluntarily. Pritchett's case is now being examined by the Criminal Cases Review Commission,
and Judge Michael Dudley said he was writing to the country's top prosecutor over the revelations. Pritchett was jailed for running Cuddles in Hagley Road in 2006. It followed a high media profile raid on the brothel in 2005 when police found 19
foreign women employed as sex workers. At the time, the police claimed to have 'rescued' trafficked girls but it turned out to be a well run brothel with willing, albeit foreign, girls. But it now appears that the police new before the raid that the
girls had been working voluntarily at the brothel. Pritchett appeared before Judge Michael Dudley at Wolverhampton Crown Court for a hearing under the Proceeds of Crime Act. Judge Dudley revealed Pritchett had handed him papers at a previous
hearing, which he had now read. He said: There is information in there undermining the conviction, that the police were in possession of a statement revealing people were working in these premises voluntarily 16 days before the raid took place.
He said police had publicised the raid as an operation to rescue women who had been trafficked into the country, and that he was greatly distressed by the documents: I'm pretty sure I was told at the time of the trial there were no
statements from prostitutes that in any way undermined the case. But there patently was, 16 days before the raid. It doesn't necessarily mean the conviction will be overturned but all I know is there is a serious question mark and it's blatant
non-disclosure. Comment: Slightly Contradictory Press reports from a previous trial with the same judge suggested that Pritchett was jailed for 2 years. It was also established then that the girls weren't
trafficked, and that the brothel was well run. Presumably this new revelation is more about the conduct of the police, rather than what was already apparent about the absence of trafficking. Update: Straigtened 16th
July 2011. Thanks to Alan I think that the discrepancy arises because Pritchett originally got two years, but then got extra because he didn't cough up the amount of proceeds of crime determined - I know not how - by the court.
|
| 6th July | | |
| Suspended jail sentence for mail order porn business
| See
article from
yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk
|
A man was given a suspended prison sentence for selling gay porn DVDs from his Leeds home. He had advertised his DVDs in gay magazines during seven years of running the mail order operation. He sold them for between £
5 and £ 8 each. Leeds Crown Court heard police discovered around 1,500 DVDs during a raid on the man's home. At Leeds Magistrates Court in March, the man admitted using a premises as a
licensed sex establishment and five offences of possessing unclassified video recordings for purposes of sale. Handing the man a six month prison sentence suspended for two years and 150 hours unpaid work, Mr Justice Butterfield told him: The
persistency in which you carried out this business suggests to me you require a clear indication from the court of what is going to happen if you were unwise enough to continue to offend in this way. A confiscation hearing will be held at
Leeds Crown Court at a later date to determine how much the man profited from the business.
|
| 11th May | | |
3 jailed over brothels at London saunas
| See article from
build.co.uk
|
Three members of a family have been jailed for their part in a brothel business. Clyde Standing, his wife Lyubov, and Clyde's son James were sentenced at Croydon Crown Court after setting up and running three saunas which were in fact
brothels. The group from Essex also ran a fourth unconcealed brothel out of a residential flat above shop premises. The east London venues were open 24 hours a day and exclusively employed women from Eastern Europe, predominantly of
Romanian nationality. A total of 17 women were found at the premises and subsequently referred to victim reception centres. [no suggestion of trafficking though]. Throughout the course of their employment they were expected to work 24-hour shifts,
with their time often divided between two of the venues. The three were sentenced for conspiracy to control prostitution. Clyde Standing was given 18 months imprisonment. Lyubov Stending and James Standing were both given 12 months imprisonment.
|
| 10th April | | |
Hanna Morris given suspended sentence as 'reward' for helping police to protect sex workers from violent thuggery
| See article from
getsurrey.co.uk
|
Three people who ran a number of brothels across Surrey have been convicted of running brothels. Ms Morris, together with her partner Michael Jones and their friend Valerie Coster, had all admitted to running the Cloud 9 brothel in Constitution
Hill, Woking as well as sites in Guildford and Camberley Morris was given a 12-month sentence suspended for 2 years and was also ordered to carry out 240 hours of unpaid work. Her partner, Michael Jones was also sentenced to 12 months in prison,
suspended for two years and ordered to carry out 180 hours of unpaid work for four counts of using criminal property in connection with the keeping of a brothel. Valerie Coster received a 16-week jail term, suspended for 12 months, after pleading
guilty to assisting in the management of a brothel. She was made the subject of a 12-month supervision order, with the requirement of carrying out 120 hours of unpaid service. All three entered guilty pleas after failing in an abuse of power case
against Surrey Police. Morris and Jones were arrested when Morris made a 999 call after two men burst into a Woking flat used by Cloud 9. The men were armed with what was thought to be shotguns, and poured petrol around the Park Heights apartment.
Police cordoned off the street as they investigated the matter, only later were Ms Morris and the other defendants arrested on suspicion of brothel keeping. The court heard how Hanna told officers where her other brothels were as she
believed the attackers were heading there and wanted to ensure the women working in them were safe. All three had their sentences suspended after Judge Suzan Matthews QC described their circumstances as unique . Sentencing, Judge Matthews,
said: You were a keeper of brothels and made substantial profits from it. This was a substantial brothel keeping.
|
| 26th March | |
| PCSO jailed for handling the money from his wife's mini brothel business
| See
article from telegraph.co.uk
|
Sean Griffin, a Police community support officer with the Met Police, was arrested after cops found his wife Debbie with four clients at his flat in Stevenage, Herts. Police seized diaries revealing Griffin's wife has used their rented flat
as a mini brothel and been a prostitute for more than 20 years. The couple used the cash to pay off the mortgage on their home. Griffin was jailed for nine months at Cambridge Crown Court after admitting money laundering (ie handling the
money). He denied a charge of running a brothel and this will now lie on file. Judge Gareth Hawkesworth said: The money was put into your bank account which I am told only represents a fraction of the profits. Judge Hawkesworth
jailed Debbie for 16 months for keeping a brothel used for prostitution and converting criminal property and transferring criminal property (ie spending the proceeds). He said: You have pleaded guilty to keeping a brothel between July 2008 and
July 2010 although it is appropriate to point out you have been in that premises from 2005 working on your own. I accept that there was no intimidation or trafficking of girls it was a very English enterprise but a criminal one and a profitable one.
Judge Hawkesworth also ordered a Proceeds of crime application (Poca) hearing to force the couple to pay back the financial gains from their prostitution business. The court heard Griffin was suspended from the Met Police after he was
arrested in July last year but has now been sacked.
|
| 16th March | | |
Suspended sentence for running Birmingham brothel
| See
article from
birminghammail.net
|
A woman who ran a brothel offering sex for sale in an affluent Birmingham suburb has been given a suspended prison sentence. Shelly's Indulge was set up in St Mary's Row, Moseley, last summer. Serina Lowin who admitted a charge of managing a
brothel, was sentenced to 16 weeks' imprisonment suspended for 18 months. Judge Rupert Mayo said: The guidelines make it plain that any involvement in prostitution in the way you have admitted is going to lead to a custodial sentence. But
he said he had taken into consideration her guilty plea and admissions she made to the police. Women came in operating on a self-employed basis. Lowin told police she thought there were about 20 clients per day who would turn up and pay for sex.
|
| 11th March | | |
Rotherham magistrate convicted of possession of bestiality porn
| 3rd March 2011. See
article from thestar.co.uk
|
A Rotherham magistrate has been convicted for the possession of bestiality extreme porn. Michael Hall was found in possession 230 photographs and 150 videos which were discovered when police raided his home. Some showed women engaging in acts with
horses, a donkey, dogs, a gerbil, a frog and a live snake. Officers acted on a tip-off after discovering the magistrate, whose online activity had raised concerns, had an account on a file-sharing website. (Presumably one noted for this type of
material). Hall was sentenced to a three-year community order which requires him to spend 144 days completing a programme for sex offenders. He was also ordered to pay £ 85 towards court costs and will be
supervised by the probation service for three years. Hall was appointed to the bench in 2007. He was also a governor at three Rotherham schools. And he was a member of Rotherham Council's Children and Young People's Scrutiny Panel, which is made
up of councillors and lay members with links to education or social care. He has resigned from all these posts. Sally Sharp, head of the Crown Prosecution Service's Rape and Serious Sexual Offences Unit in West Yorkshire, told The Star: This
case is particularly repugnant, involving multiple charges of possessing extreme pornographic images. The fact the defendant was a magistrate, and in a position of public authority and trust, is additionally an aggravating feature.
Update: Sentenced 11th March 2011. See article from
dinningtontoday.co.uk Michael Hall was sentenced to a three-year community order which requires him to spend 144 days completing a programme for sex offenders. He was
also ordered to pay £ 85 court costs.
|
| 10th March | | |
Man sentenced to 7 years for rape and trafficking a girl from Poland
| See article from
swindonadvertiser.co.uk
|
Two men who were found guilty of trafficking a woman and forcing her into prostitution have been sentenced to jail. Jacek Sokolowski was found guilty in January of trafficking a person with intent to cause her to work as a prostitute and
controlling, or inciting, a person to work as a prostitute for financial gain. He was also found guilty of rape and was sentenced to seven years. Tomasz Slabaszewski was also found guilty of the trafficking offence and was ordered to serve two
years in prison.
|
| 8th March | | |
British prostitution approach sets up sex workers as target for gang of armed robbers
| 7th March 2011. See article
from thisishampshire.net |
A gang of Southampton robbers had planned to exploit sex workers' vulnerability of being unable to call for police assistance lest they get arrested themselves. Police had unearthed a list of brothels and other potential victims that were to be
targeted by the gang. Officers then visited known prostitutes to warn them they were at risk, and of course immediately arrested 2 potential victims for running a brothel. The pair told officers they rented the flat together to work safely, but
from the authorities viewpoint, that made the operation illegal as they were working as a duo. The operation was revealed as the two women were sentenced at the city's crown court for running a brothel from a Southampton flat. Kim Byrne and Claire
Smith worked between 2009 and 2010 by offering themselves for sex from the rented city centre property. When police raided their St Michael's Street flat they found mobile phones with text messages confirming appointments and prices. Southampton
Crown Court heard they were raided after being warned they could be in danger. Defending Byrne, Peter Asteris told the court the police were aware of the pair, who had helped them in the past and informed them about an under age Eastern European
girl working in the sex trade. Both admitted charges of assisting in the management of a brothel. Recorder Ian Pringle gave Byrne a 12-month supervision order, while Smith was ordered to carry out 120 hours of unpaid community work.
Comment: Mr Plod's Piggy Bank 8th March 2011. Thanks to Alan That's two cases you've mentioned in the last month of coppers going after prostitutes in cases of assault or threatened assault on
the women. I wonder if the prospect of proceeds of crime is lighting up Mr Plod's piggy little eyes yet again? As for this unpaid work shite, why don't people call it what they did when it occurred in the
Soviet block - slave labour? Why are judges such spineless creeps? This was a case which called out for absolute discharge, no award of costs to the prosecution, and a few sharp words to Mr Plod.
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| 28th February | | | CPS throw the book at extreme porn victim
| See
article from
telegraph.co.uk
|
A top judge has queried why a man was prosecuted for possessing supposedly indecent images of children - when the photos were available for sale in a string of respectable mainstream bookshops. Lord Justice Richards said it was very
unfair that Stephen Neal was pursued by the law for having four artistic photo books - which prosecutors claimed contained the lowest level one child porn - when the books' publishers and retailers who sold them were left alone. The
judge, sitting at London's Appeal Court, said the issue of the pictures' alleged indecency was a legitimate question for a properly directed jury . But overturning Neal's convictions and clearing his name, the judge added: It is,
however, very unfair for a person in the position of Neal to be prosecuted for possession of the photographs in these books in these circumstances. If the Crown Prosecution Service wishes to test whether the pictures in the books are indecent, the right
way to deal with the matter is by way of prosecuting the publisher or retailer, not the individual purchaser . Following a police search of his home, Neal was convicted of five counts of possessing indecent images of children at Snaresbrook
Crown Court in November and received a community sentence. One of the books was Still Time - containing a varied collection of images by the lauded American photographer, Sally Mann, whose work includes photos of animals, the landscape and
her own children. Another title seized was The Age of Innocence by David Hamilton. Neal had also been charged with possessing an extreme pornographic DVD, but was cleared of that allegation on the trial judge's direction. Against this background, it is a matter of surprise that charges were brought against this individual in respect of the pictures,
said the judge: It is legitimate to wonder if such charges would have been brought against him but for his prosecution in relation to the DVD . Quashing Neal's convictions, he said the trial judge had failed to adequately direct the
jury on the correct objective standards to be applied when assessing whether the photos were indecent. The Crown Prosecution Service's application for a retrial was refused after Lord Justice Richards concluded that re-prosecuting Neal was
not in the public interest .
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| 13th February | | |
16 months jail for dangerous pictures seized from illegal immigrant copy DVD seller
| No mention about the type of images in question. Extreme porn seems to be taking the rap when surely being an illegal immigrant and selling copy DVDs is the
major crime. Based on article from
dailymail.co.uk
|
Li Ding was found guilty by St Albans Crown Court of possessing extreme pornography, which he hoped to sell. But Judge Andrew Bright QC said he had been shocked to discover that Ding had been brought before his court nine years after first being
refused permission to stay in the UK in 2002. The court had heard how Ding made a living selling counterfeit DVDs, including pornography. He was unanimously convicted by a jury of possessing extreme pornography. He had earlier admitted
possessing criminal property. The judge said: I am baffled how you could be refused political asylum in 2002 and still be here in 2011. The fact is you have been here illegally for a good number of years now. Passing sentence, Judge
Bright told Ding he had been found guilty of a particularly unpleasant offence. Referring to the pornographic DVDs, he told Ding: You were willing to sell them to whoever was willing to buy them. There was a good chance that they would have
fallen into the hands of children who would have been corrupted at the very sight of those images. Sentencing Ding to 16 months in jail, Judge Bright told Ding that his continued presence in this country was not conducive to public good
. He will now be automatically considered for deportation when he has served his sentence but the final decision will be for the UK Border Agency.
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| 8th February | | |
Brothel keeping sentences and pay backs
| See article
from messengernewspapers.co.uk
|
Ian Barnett ran brothels in Altrincham, Cheetham Hill, Levenshulme and Shudehill. He pleaded guilty to four counts of keeping a brothel used for prostitution, three counts of conspiracy to keep and manage brothels for prostitution and one count of
controlling prostitution for gain in 2008 and was jailed for three years and eight months. Barnett, who had previously been convicted of a similar offence in 2005 and was on a suspended prison sentence, was charged following a report from a 19
year-old Lithuanian woman who was trafficked into the UK by an Albanian crime gang and forced to work in the brothel at Shudehill. His wife, Michelle Barnett was also sentenced in 2008 to six months' imprisonment, suspended for two years, after
being found guilty of laundering £ 9,000 of the brothel takings. A Proceeds of Crime Act hearing at Manchester Crown Court Crown Square on Wednesday February 2, found that the Barnett's had made more than
£ 5.25m from their crimes. Ian Barnett was ordered to pay £ 4,000, and Michelle Barnett was ordered to pay back £ 250,890 within
12 months or face three months and three years respectively behind bars.
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| 6th February | | |
Lost job, kids taken away and community service
| See article
from thetelegraphandargus.co.uk
|
Pornographic images of sex with animals were downloaded on to a school lap top by a Bradford teacher, magistrates were told. Evidence of them was later spotted on Stephen Walker's school's lap top by a supply teacher. Investigators found 20
downloaded videos of adult bestiality. Walker pleaded guilty to three charges of possessing extreme pornographic images. He was sentenced to a 24 months community order and to carry out 200 hours of unpaid work. He was also ordered to pay
£ 85 court costs. Since the investigation began, Walker had been denied access to his children and had resigned from his job Paul Ramsay, prosecuting, said links to the images came to light from
Walker's emails read when he was on holiday. He was asked to bring his laptop from home and 20 videos of adult bestiality were discovered. Paul Fitzpatrick, for Walker, said there was no danger that children could have seen them. Walker was
told by the Bench they accepted he was a man of previous good character and the probation service did not consider he was a risk to the public. They understood he suffered great personal consequences including the loss of employment, standing in the
community and access to his children.
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| 24th January | | |
Extreme porn used to top up blackmail conviction
| Given that the extreme porn law is being used to top up more serious offences by adding to the charge sheet, then I wonder if a precedence is being set for
very high levels of sentencing. Could for instance, the 4 months sentence in this case contribute to sentencing guidelines? Could some innocent victim of the law found with just a few extreme images now be facing prison? See
article from thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk
|
A Kendal man has been jailed for more than three years after blackmailing a respected member of the local community over his secret gay sex life. When police searched his home computer they also found 185 images of extreme pornography.
When the extreme pornography was discovered Ellis admitted he had viewed the images, but told police he had done so out of interest rather than sexual gratification. He sometimes works in an environment where such images are shown in
an attempt at building site humour, the court was told. Judge Peter Hughes QC sentenced Ellis to three years three months imprisonment for the three counts of blackmail and four months imprisonment to be served concurrently for possessing
extreme pornography.
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| 24th January | | |
24 weeks suspended jail sentence for running brothel
| See
article from
readingchronicle.co.uk
|
In what sounds like a sexed up local newspaper article, it appears that a couple were have been convicted of running a brothel. The article picks up on associations with trafficking but these doesn't seem to have been born out by the light sentence.
Mark Newbold and his wife Suwadee were given a 24-week sentence suspended for 12 months and ordered to complete 150 hours unpaid work each. The husband and wife were arrested
following raids on houses in Reading and Northampton by UK Border Agency. Officers were investigating allegations that women were being controlled by them and moved around the country as prostitutes and took three women, from Thailand, Lithuania and
Brazil, into care. At an earlier hearing in November last year both had admitted two counts of controlling prostitution for financial gain. John Donachy, UK Border agency spokesman,
said: The Newbolds clearly exploited the women who worked in their premises for substantial personal financial gain. Some of these women had been moved around the UK specifically to work in the sex industry. A financial investigation is also underway
to ensure they don't profit from their crimes.
|
| 20th January | | |
A year in jail for running 3 brothels in East Anglia
| See
article from edp24.co.uk
|
A businesswoman who ran a string of brothels in Norfolk and Suffolk has been jailed for a year. Norwich Crown Court heard how the brothels were set up between 2006 and 2008 at the Cavendish Hotel in Princes Road, Great Yarmouth, and a Chinese
herbal medicine shop in Upper Orwell Street, Ipswich. A third brothel operated out of a house in Chalk Hill Road, Norwich. Shu Quin Wang admitted conspiracy to manage brothels and was jailed for 12 months. Her brother Jian Zhane Wang was found
guilty of money laundering for the operation and was jailed for eight months. Pin Yo Wang. from Newport, who admitted conspiracy to manage brothels, was fined £12,000, which was cash seized on her arrest by police. The judge accepted that none of
the girls working in the brothels had been coerced into prostitution.
|
| 7th January | |
| First crown court trial for victim of the Dangerous Pictures Act
| Thanks to emark 6th January 2010. See
article from thisisstaffordshire.co.uk
|
A man is on trial for downloading sexually violent porn images known to be staged. He is being prosecuted under laws banning the possession of extreme pornography. The charges follow a police raid on Kevin Webster's home and the seizure of his two
computers in August 2009. Webster denies three charges of possessing extreme pornography depicting images likely to result in injury to a person's breast and one similar charge depicting an act which threatens a person's life. Darron
Whitehead prosecuting said: We know the images were fake, we know it isn't a knife in someone's breast. The question is whether it is realistic or portrayed in that way. You have to be satisfied the people in
those images are real. Plainly they are. The intentions of the persons within those images, the actors and actresses, are irrelevant. It is what is depicted in those images which is material. Why is there a need for
this new legislation? There is a need to regulate images portraying sexual violence, to safeguard the decency of society and for the protection of women.
The trial is continuing. Update:
Not Guilty 7th January 2011.
 | News of the acquittal reaches Nu Labour HQ (picture thanks to
MichaelG) |
Kevin Webster has thankfully been acquitted of the possession of extreme porn images downloaded from Drop Dead Gorgeous featuring on the 'infamous' but popular NecroBabes website. He was advised in defence by
Backlash , the group leading the campaign against this nasty piece of legilsation. The defence called two expert witnesses, Professor Feona Attwood of Sheffield Hallam
University and Dr Clarissa Smith of the University of Sunderland. They are probably the leading academic authorities in the field, and together wrote the definitive study of how the new law came into being - Extreme Concern: Regulating 'dangerous
pictures' in the UK. In perhaps an important analogy that caught commentators attention, Attwood described the pictures, depicting a knife attack and a drowning in a bath, as like stills from a Hammer horror film of the 1970s, The
importance of the verdict was well summed in an article from
heresycorner.blogspot.com : The case represented an important test of s.63. For the first time (at least in a case of intentional downloading of sexual images) a defendant pleaded Not Guilty; and for
the first time a case went before a jury. Previously, charges of possessing extreme porn have been uncontested. They have also tended to involve images of animal abuse, whose illegality is less controversial, or been charged alongside child porn
offences. Here were pictures that were admittedly consensual and obviously staged, and yet appeared to fall within the definition of the Act. In many ways this was the case that campaigners against the law have been waiting for.
The news came this afternoon that Webster has been cleared. Had he been convicted, it could well have opened the floodgates to many more such prosecutions. Will his acquittal have the opposite effect, and make the CPS think twice
about their own definitions of extreme pornography? If this illiberal law (which seems unlikely to fall victim to Nick Clegg's much-anticipated Freedom Bill, despite a vociferous campaign to have it repealed) has any
justification, then it should be restricted to cases which appear to feature images of actual sexual violence and abuse. In other words, for realistic to be interpreted as meaning likely to be real . The vast majority of such material, even
the most extreme , is however known to be staged. Some of the participants, indeed, are articulate advocates for their subculture. Several have their own blogs. While fans of the genre, as Clarissa Smith told the court, knew and recognised the
regular performers who played dead for the camera. We are dealing with pure fantasy. It's good to know ordinary members of a jury can tell the difference between fantasy and reality, even if the law and its enforcers decide that the distinction
doesn't matter.
Update: Mock Erotic Murder Scenes 20th January 2011. See press release from
backlash-uk.org.uk Prosecutors fail first test case to make mock erotic murder scenes illegal.
Kevin Webster, who downloaded erotic fantasy images with violent themes from the internet, was found not guilty of possession of extreme pornography at Stafford Crown Court today. The jury were asked to decide whether
obviously faked death images were in fact realistic depictions of sexual violence; despite the prosecution having to accept, before the trial even began, that the images were clearly staged . In a victory for common sense and free speech
the jury unanimously acquitted Mr Webster of all charges. Mr Webster's solicitor Myles Jackman of Audu and Co, who has now successfully defended a number of extreme pornography prosecutions, said: The jury's clear
and unequivocal message is a damning blow to the credibility of the ill-conceived and prurient extreme pornography legislation. It has previously led to the state prosecuting the possession of dirty-jokes; and in Mr Webster's case what were clearly
unrealistic high-camp horror fantasy images . Expert witness Prof Feona Attwood of Sheffield Hallam University described the images in question as less realistic than a British soap opera.
According to Alexandra Dymock of Backlash, the sexual civil liberties organisation who put Mr Webster in contact with his specialist legal team, said: This ill-conceived, insufficiently researched and poorly written law has now
been shown to be not only a waste of valuable legal aid and police resources, but that it is also out of step with the attitudes of ordinary members of the British public in the face of reasonable argument, even if they find the material itself
distasteful. Backlash have petitioned the Coalition to include the extreme porn act in the forthcoming repeal bill and hope Mr Webster's case illustrates the need for this repressive and intrusive legislation to be
removed from the statute books.
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