Herald on Sunday

Fugitive Kiwi porn boss on run

US authoritie­s hunt head of pornograph­y video company on sex traffickin­g charges

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ANew Zealand porn boss charged with sex traffickin­g is on the run from American authoritie­s. The United States Department of Justice said yesterday they were looking for Michael James Pratt, who they described as a “fugitive”, after 22 young American women said they were conned into appearing in sex videos.

Pratt heads adult video provider Girls Do Porn, the target of a lawsuit in the San Diego Superior Court.

The 22 women claim Girls Do Porn was advertised on Craigslist as a modelling website and they were lied to about the distributi­on of pornograph­y they took part in. They said they were told the material would only be sold on DVD to “private collectors” and “small video stores” in New Zealand, Australia and Europe, the Daily Beast reported this week.

Instead, the lawsuit alleges the videos were posted to the internet where they have been hugely popular — the Department of Justice’s US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California said financial records showed the websites had generated more than US$17 million ($27m) in revenue.

By 2016, the San Diego-based company’s videos had been viewed more than 667 million times on PornHub, the Daily Beast reported.

Now Pratt, 36, co-owner Matthew Wolfe, 37, and adult film performer and producer Ruben Garcia, 31, have been charged with sex traffickin­g by force, fraud and coercion and, with a fourth person Valorie Moser, 37, conspiracy to commit sex traffickin­g by force, fraud and coercion.

The first charge has a minimum penalty of 15 years in jail and maximum of life and a $250,000 fine, according to the Department of Justice.

The three other defendants are all in custody or accounted for, but the department said Pratt “is a fugitive”.

According to the complaint, the four allegedly used deception and false promises to lure the victims, who had responded to ads for modelling jobs.

To persuade the women to take part, the defendants convinced them they could remain anonymous and their videos would not be posted on the internet, the department said.

In reality, the purpose was to post the videos on the internet.

Eventually the women, all named as Jane Doe in the lawsuit, were told the job was really for adult films, the department said.

Pratt had previously claimed the women were presented with a contract to sign, in which they agreed to the terms of the shoot and the distributi­on of the material.

But the department alleged in the lawsuit that: “Some of the women were pressured into signing documents without reviewing them and then threatened with legal action or outing if they failed to perform; some were not permitted to leave the shooting locations until the videos were made; family and friends and the general public eventually saw the videos online; some victims were harassed and ridiculed and estranged from their families as a result; and some were sexually assaulted and in at least one case raped. Some were forced to perform certain sex acts they had declined to do, or they would not be paid or allowed to leave.”

Girls Do Porn developed a huge following and its dedicated fans obsessed over the amateur actresses, sparking web forums where users revealed the women’s real names, hometowns and social media accounts. Some of the women lost their jobs or were expelled from universiti­es. The fallout cost a Miss Teen Delaware winner her crown.

 ?? Sylvia Whinray ?? Young dancers dressed in elaborate costume shone at Auckland Diwali Festival yesterday. The ancient Indian festival, which features food and performanc­e, continues today in central Auckland.
Sylvia Whinray Young dancers dressed in elaborate costume shone at Auckland Diwali Festival yesterday. The ancient Indian festival, which features food and performanc­e, continues today in central Auckland.
 ??  ?? Michael Pratt
Michael Pratt

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