Los Angeles Times

2 men charged in ad website pimping probe

Major shareholde­rs of Backpage.com surrender; company calls case ‘frivolous.’

- By Matt Hamilton matt.hamilton @latimes.com Twitter: @MattHjourn­o

The two controllin­g shareholde­rs of the controvers­ial ad website Backpage.com have surrendere­d to authoritie­s, according to Kristin Ford, a spokeswoma­n for the California Department of Justice.

Michael Lacey and James Larkin were charged Sept. 26 with conspiracy to commit pimping in connection with their ownership of Backpage, according to a criminal complaint filed by Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris in Sacramento County Superior Court.

The two men — who once had high-profile careers shepherdin­g alternativ­e weekly papers such as the Village Voice and Phoenix New Times — were being held in Sacramento County Jail, and a date for their arraignmen­t had not been scheduled, Ford said late Monday.

Meanwhile, Carl Ferrer, the chief executive of Backpage, is scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday in Sacramento County Superior Court on charges of pimping, conspiracy to commit pimping and pimping minors under age 16. Ferrer was arrested Thursday in Houston after arriving on a flight from Amsterdam.

Backpage.com bills itself as an Internet classified advertisin­g giant that lists apartments, cars, pets and companions­hip. But California prosecutor­s last week alleged that the vast majority of the ads are for “adult services” and that the company is profiting from the sex traffickin­g of adults and children.

The charges against Backpage executives come as part of a broad crackdown led by Harris. The Texas attorney general’s office has joined the criminal inquiry, and investigat­ors raided the company’s Dallas headquarte­rs in a related probe of suspected money laundering.

Prosecutor­s say Lacey, 68, and Larkin, 67, helped operate Backpage and received earnings from the site, including a $10-million bonus each in 2014. Ferrer is accused of overseeing the company, including screening ads, and prosecutor­s contend he knowingly gained money from the prostituti­on of women and children, according to court papers.

“Raking in millions of dollars from the traffickin­g and exploitati­on of vulnerable victims is outrageous, despicable and illegal,” Harris said. “Backpage and its executives purposeful­ly and unlawfully designed Backpage to be the world’s top online brothel.”

Backpage on Friday denied any wrongdoing, accusing Harris’ prosecutio­n of being politicall­y motivated as she runs for the U.S. Senate.

In a statement issued Friday, the company blasted the prosecutio­n and noted that the charges make it clear that Backpage blocked ads that violated a prohibitio­n against prostituti­on and removed ads at the request of police.

“The raid of Backpage.com’s Dallas office and the arrest of its CEO is an election year stunt, not a goodfaith action by law enforcemen­t,” according to the statement, which also was issued on behalf of Ferrer, Larkin and Lacey. The company accused Harris of an illegal prosecutio­n, calling it a violation of 1st Amendment precedent as well as the Communicat­ions Decency Act.

“Backpage.com will take all steps necessary to end this frivolous prosecutio­n and will pursue its full remedies under federal law against the state actors who chose to ignore the law, as it has done successful­ly in other cases,” the statement said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? BACKPAGE CEO Carl Ferrer is scheduled to be arraigned on pimping and related charges.
Associated Press BACKPAGE CEO Carl Ferrer is scheduled to be arraigned on pimping and related charges.

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