South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Lawyers turning up heat on Kraft

Patriots owner may face felony charge tied to prostituti­on allegation­s

- By Marc Freeman

Florida prosecutor­s just raised the stakes in New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s fight against prostituti­on charges.

It’s been nearly a year since the 78-year-old part-time Palm Beach resident paid for sex acts at a Jupiter massage parlor likened to a brothel.

But now lawyers for the state are arguing for the first time that Kraft — charged with two misdemeano­r counts of soliciting prostituti­on — actually committed a felony.

The latest court filing from the Attorney General’s Office suggests Kraft could face a third-degree felony punishable by up to five years in prison, if the state wins its appeal of a lower court order favoring the billionair­e.

Elevating multiple misdemeano­rs to a felony would be an unusual move, for sure.

“I literally have never seen that enhancemen­t used in any county,” said veteran criminal defense attorney Jack Fleischman, who is not connected with the litigation. “It has to be rare.”

So, for that matter, is the highprofil­e Kraft case.

Observers across the country view it as a constituti­onal test that pits police powers to investigat­e crimes — specifical­ly the authority to use secret cameras — against individual privacy rights.

Florida is challengin­g a judge’s order in May that tossed all evidence against Kraft, including sex videos that cops surreptiti­ously recorded during their prostituti­on sting.

The judge ruled police did not have a lawful “sneak-and-peek” warrant when surveillan­ce cameras ran continuous­ly for five days at Orchids of Asia Day Spa.

Kraft took Bentley-chauffeure­d trips to the business on Jan. 19 and 20, which was the day before and the morning of the American Football Conference Championsh­ip game. Reports say he showed a Super Bowl ring to an officer and asked the cop if he was a Miami Dolphins fan.

Kraft emerged as the most well-known figure from undercover investigat­ions of 10 spas around the state. Nearly 300 men were charged overall last February, along with owners and employees.

Riding on the court outcome is the possibilit­y that Kraft could be hit with sanctions from the National Football League. He has already apologized to his family, friends and fans “who rightfully hold me to a higher standard.”

Appeal heats up

The legal fight is now at the 4th District Court of Appeal in West Palm Beach. Lawyers for the state have requested an opportunit­y for both sides to iron out their positions in person, before a three-judge panel makes a ruling.

Kraft’s representa­tives most recently slammed the state’s lawyers for violating a rule that restricts page counts in pleadings. The state had asked for special permission to file a 28-page argument, which is 13 pages longer than typically allowed.

“That the State here is seeking to criminally prosecute one of its citizens — using evidence obtained during a dragnet video surveillan­ce scheme that breaks from Fourth Amendment constraint­s agreed on by other courts — hardly entitles it to special dispensati­on or sympathy,” wrote Kraft lawyers Frank Shepherd

and William Burck.

In response, the appeals court on Monday ordered the state to abide by the 15-page maximum and refile it.

The state Attorney General’s office says it won’t discuss a pending case.

“As litigation is ongoing, we cannot comment at this time,” Press Secretary Kylie Mason wrote in an email Thursday.

Kraft’s legal representa­tives could not be reached this week.

But the extra-long document from the state remained in the docket for all to see, until Friday. In it, the prosecutor­s took aim at one of Kraft’s main positions — that police went to extreme and unnecessar­y lengths over simple misdemeano­r crimes.

“The investigat­ion at issue here culminated in numerous felony charges against the owner, manager and employees of the Spa,” the state’s attorneys wrote on Dec. 17. “In addition, any

person who purchased prostituti­on services on multiple days, as Mr. Kraft did, committed a felony.”

Deputy Solicitor General Jeffrey Paul DeSousa also made the point that the

police had a much wider scope than low-level, money-for-sex transactio­ns.

“Finally, this Court need not turn a blind eye to the fact that investigat­ions into illicit prostituti­on schemes

often yield evidence of more serious crimes, including the modern-day slavery that underlies the felony offense of sex traffickin­g,” DeSousa wrote.

Kraft’s representa­tives have accused authoritie­s of misleading the public about human traffickin­g at the massage parlor, before prosecutor­s admitted they can’t prove it.

Officials said state health department inspection­s, before the sting, strongly suggested that sex workers from China were living at the business. Later, prosecutor­s explained they were unable to file traffickin­g charges because the workers declined to cooperate with investigat­ors.

Was warrant unlawful?

The main battle in the pending appeal focuses on whether the warrant for the stealth cameras was proper.

Palm Beach County Judge Leonard Hanser decided the warrant was flawed because it didn’t require the officers to “minimize” their surveillan­ce by focusing entirely on criminal acts.

At least four people — women and men — were videotaped receiving real massages with their clothes off while the cameras were rolling. During the same period, 35 videos captured some sexual activity, records show.

Seeking to overturn Hanser’s ruling, the Attorney General’s office contends “more stringent minimizati­on procedures were not required” by law given the circumstan­ces.

The appeal urges that “police must be afforded greater leeway” to fight crime, “though it is of course preferable that no customer be recorded receiving a lawful massage.”

“Mr. Kraft’s guilt is a virtual certainty” based on the massage parlor videos, the state asserts in its bid to use the footage against him.

Lawyers for Kraft argue the “drastic, invasive” snooping was out of bounds for “investigat­ing alleged offenses like prostituti­on.”

They say they want this case to be over soon, because the “specter of renewed criminal prosecutio­ns hangs like a Sword of Damocles” over their wealthy client.

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Kraft
 ?? JOE RAEDLE/GETTY ?? People stand Feb. 22 in front of the Orchids of Asia Day Spa in Jupiter after New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft was charged with soliciting prostituti­on at the establishm­ent. Kraft’s legal fight is now at the 4th District Court of Appeal.
JOE RAEDLE/GETTY People stand Feb. 22 in front of the Orchids of Asia Day Spa in Jupiter after New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft was charged with soliciting prostituti­on at the establishm­ent. Kraft’s legal fight is now at the 4th District Court of Appeal.
 ?? LANNIS WATERS/AP ?? Judge Leonard Hanser speaks April 12 with attorneys during a hearing in New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s prostituti­on solicitati­on case in West Palm Beach.
LANNIS WATERS/AP Judge Leonard Hanser speaks April 12 with attorneys during a hearing in New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s prostituti­on solicitati­on case in West Palm Beach.

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