State agents raided the Dallas headquarters of adult classified ad portal Backpage and arrested Chief Executive Officer Carl Ferrer on Thursday following allegations that adult and child sex-trafficking victims had been forced into prostitution through escort ads posted on the site.
Ferrer,
55, was arrested on a California warrant after arriving at Houston's
Bush Intercontinental Airport on a flight from Amsterdam.
"Making
money off the backs of innocent human beings by allowing them to be
exploited for modern-day slavery is not acceptable in Texas," Texas
Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, said in a statement.
California
Attorney General Kamala Harris said that Ferrer was arrested on felony
charges of pimping a minor, pimping, and conspiracy to commit pimping.
He is being held in lieu of $500,000 bond and will face an extradition
hearing before he can be returned to California.
"Raking
in millions of dollars from the trafficking and exploitation of
vulnerable victims is outrageous, despicable and illegal," said Harris, a
Democrat who is running for the U.S. Senate in next month's election.
"Backpage and its executives purposefully and unlawfully designed
Backpage to be the world's top online brothel."
An
attorney representing Backpage, Liz McDougall, did not immediately
respond to telephone and email messages left by The Associated Press.
The
site's controlling shareholders, Michael Lacey, 68, and James Larkin,
67, have been charged with conspiracy to commit pimping, Harris said in a
statement. Neither of them has been taken into custody by late Thursday
although warrants have been issued for their arrest. Under California's
law, felony pimping is defined as making money off of prostitutes or
soliciting customers for prostitution.
Lacey
and Larkin are former owners of the Village Voice and the Phoenix New
Times. An attorney who previously represented the two men, Michael
Manning, did not immediately respond to a telephone message from The AP.
Backpage
advertises a wide range of services, but the California arrest warrant
alleges that internal business records obtained through a search warrant
show that 99 percent its revenue came from its adult services section
between January 2013 and March 2015. California officials said the site
collects fees from users who use coded language and nearly nude photos
to offer sex for money.
Worldwide
revenue from sex ads topped $3.1 million in just one week last year,
according to a court affidavit. It says Ferrer expanded Backpage's share
of online sex marketing by creating affiliated sites including
EvilEmpire.com and BigCity.com with related content.
The
site operates in hundreds of cities worldwide, authorities said,
including more than 30 in California. It collected $2.5 million per
month just from California, or more than $51 million during the 29
months covered by the internal revenue reports.
Larkin
and Lacey each received $10 million bonuses from the website in
September 2014, according to the court filing. It says Backpage was
created in 2004, but since 2014 has been owned by a Netherlands-based
company that has Ferrer as its only named partner.
California
authorities said the state's three-year investigation found many of the
ads include victims of sex trafficking including children under the age
of 18.
One
of the advertisers, identified only as 15-year-old "E.S.," ''was forced
into prostitution at the age of 13 by her pimp," according to an
affidavit filed with the complaint. She used other online advertising
services until they were shut down, the court filing says, when she
turned to Backpage.
"I
mean really, coming from someone my age, there is too much access, like
it's too easy for people to get on it and post an ad," she told
California Special Agent Brian Fichtner, according to his affidavit.
California
officials said their investigation was prompted in part by the National
Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which reported 2,900
instances to California authorities since 2012 when suspected child sex
trafficking occurred using Backpage.
The
criminal complaint includes allegations that five minors, three of them
including "E.S." under age 16, paid to post advertisements on Backpage.
The charges against Ferrer could bring him nearly 22 years in prison, while Larkin and Lacey face a maximum six years.
Backpage
has been the subject of recent Senate hearings into its classified ads.
Last month, the Supreme Court refused to block a Senate subpoena
seeking information on how Backpage screens ads for possible sex
trafficking.
U.S.
Sens. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, chairman
and ranking member of the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations,
issued a statement hailing the criminal charges resulting from what they
called "the scourge of online sex trafficking."
They
put the site's estimated annual revenues at more than $150 million,
calling it "a market leader in commercial sex advertising."
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