Los Angeles Times

Seattle writer to be tried on rape charges

Matt Hickey told women he could make them into porn stars. Instead, prosecutor­s say, he attacked them.

- By Rick Anderson Anderson is a special correspond­ent.

SEATTLE — For a decade, self- proclaimed f ilmmaker Matt Hickey combed the internet and scoured Seattle’s Capitol Hill, looking for the next adult f ilm star. Or so he said in his online ads.

A journalist and photograph­er, Hickey didn’t have f ilm credits in his resume. But he did have the sales pitch of a Hollywood agent: the power to make someone a star.

His studio of sorts was his modest Seattle apartment, and his staff consisted of himself and a female recruiter, who prosecutor­s say was actually Hickey himself, posing as a woman named Deja Stwalley — the name of a grade school classmate who was unaware of the charade.

Some of the women who answered his ads told authoritie­s they were sexually attacked after arriving for a “screen test.” Seattle police have interviewe­d six women who alleged they were forced to have sex with Hickey, though some said they couldn’t recall details of the encounter because they were drugged or plied with alcohol.

Hickey, 41, is charged with four counts of rape and, after a year in custody, could be tried as soon as this month.

His alleged trail of sexual offenses was f irst reported by the alternativ­e newspaper where he once worked as a freelance journalist.

Some of the alleged victims in Seattle say they first turned to police but came away feeling that investigat­ors weren’t interested in pursuing their allegation­s. But when their stories began showing up on Facebook pages, an editor at the Stranger — an aggressive alternativ­e newspaper for which Hickey had once covered Seattle nightlife — took note.

The editor, Charles Mudede, passed along the tip to one of his reporters, Sydney Brownstone, who got one of the women who’d posted their stories on Facebook to talk on the record. That woman led Brownstone to two others who agreed to talk.

“The story snowballed from there,” Brownstone said.

She says the paper, which is published biweekly, had no hesitation about investigat­ing one its own former writers, who had also freelanced as a technology writer for Forbes and online sites including CNET.

When King County prosecutor Dan Satterberg f iled rape charges against Hickey last year, his office and police credited the Stranger for do- ing the initial detective work. Several other alleged victims had also come forward after publicatio­n of the story, “The Audition,” on June 8, 2016.

Police say their investigat­ion has since turned up alleged rapes dating to 2001, and detectives speculate there could be dozens of victims.

Hickey, who was arrested last November in Las Vegas — where he relocated after the Stranger published its story — has pleaded not guilty. He maintains that any sex with his accusers was consensual.

Ads that Hickey placed on Craigslist in Seattle and Las Vegas described the screen tests as consisting of a question- and- answer session to establish sexual preference­s, posing for nude photos and having an “audition.”

“You’ll audition with one of our specially selected guys.… It’s not for everyone, and if it’s not for you, that’s ok. But keep in mind, we’re auditionin­g for hardcore, so the ability to have sex with a [ stranger] while keeping a smile on your face is important,” the ads read.

Hickey allegedly sought a mostly anonymous pool of candidates, typically women between the ages of 17 and 25 whom he spotted on Facebook, according to court records.

“He then contacted those young women through the [ fake online] Stwalley profile and presented them with an opportunit­y to audition for a local indie/ alternativ­e adult film studio,” and eventually earn up to $ 3,500 a day as a porn star, court records state — they just had to “audition with one of our specially chosen ‘ hunks.’ ”

In each case, prosecutor­s say, the audition was conducted by Hickey.

One alleged victim says she blacked out and in the morning woke up in bed naked, a condom wrapper nearby. She told authoritie­s she didn’t want to have sex with Hickey and didn’t remember it. The woman told Seattle Police Det. Michelle Gallegos that she “cried and vomited through the day [ and] felt disgusted and embarrasse­d.”

Hickey has already been found liable of civil fraud in a consumer- protection case — the f irst of its kind in Washington — brought by the state attorney general. In March, King County Superior Court Judge Ken Schubert hit Hickey with $ 332,000 in f ines and court costs for posing as a f ilmmaker and as his own female assistant to deceive six women with a porn scam.

Hickey, the state complaint charged, “posed as a talent recruiter named ‘ Deja Stwalley’ in order to deceive women for his own personal gain … [ with] no intention of securing jobs for these women. He created a f ictional business and audition process to obtain nude photos for his photograph­y portfolio and to satisfy his sexual desires.”

The complaint said that Hickey continued to maintain possession of the nude photos he took of women who responded to his ads.

Hickey is being held on $ 200,000 bail.

 ?? Jason Redmond For The Times ?? MATT HICKEY is arraigned last November in Seattle, where he’s being held on $ 200,000 bail. He says that any sex with his accusers was consensual.
Jason Redmond For The Times MATT HICKEY is arraigned last November in Seattle, where he’s being held on $ 200,000 bail. He says that any sex with his accusers was consensual.

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