Slashdot Mirror


Seattle Man Accused of Using Social Media To Set Up Fake Porn Agency (nbcnews.com)

The Washington State Attorney General's Office has charged a Seattle man for setting up a fake talent agency for adult entertainers in order to trick women into posing nude and having sex with him. NBC News reports: Michael-Jon Matthew Hickey is accused of creating a fictitious business and using deceptive ads with bogus employment offers to find his victims. The lawsuit alleges Hickey offered and advertised commercial services solely for his "own personal gain" and to "satisfy his sexual desires" with no intention of following through on the promised services to help these women find jobs. Hickey, a 40-year old technology blogger and aspiring photographer, is charged with numerous violations of the Washington Consumer Protection Act and the Commercial Electronic Mail Act. Assistant Attorney General Andrea Alegrett, who is handling the consumer protection case, told NBC News Hickey had developed "a sophisticated scam" which involved fake business websites, fictional people, and bogus contact information. The lawsuit alleges Hickey pretended to be a woman named Deja Stwalley, who claimed to live in Las Vegas where she ran a number of talent companies, including New Seattle Talent, West Coast Talent and FMH Modeling. The New SeattleTalent website stated: "We work as recruiters and scouts for some of the top studios in the Northwest. Our goal is to be the top recruiting group for girls in America. We're woman-founded and woman-owned, and take the talent's safety and welfare seriously." Hickey, posing as Stwalley, would contact women between the ages of 17 and 25 via Facebook and offer them a chance to audition for an adult film studio. Stwalley assured each woman that they "TOTALLY have the look they're going for" and could earn between $1,200 and $3,500 a day, the AG's complaint alleges. Digital Security expert Adam Levin, Chairman and founder of Identity Theft 911, said this case shows just how easy it is for someone to use social media for fraudulent purposes.

3 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. What a loser! by DonaId+Trump · · Score: 0, Troll
    This guy is a total LOSER! Real men don't need to advertise for women, you can just walk up to them and grab them by the pussy!

    this case shows just how easy it is for someone to use social media for fraudulent purposes

    No, this case is SAD! I'm the best example of using social media for bigly fraudulent purposes. No one knows fraudulent purposes better than me, folks.

  2. Re:Rape by fraud? by piojo · · Score: 0, Troll

    Fraud obviates consent. Or, to put it another way, if consent is obtained fraudulently, the consent is not legally effective. Accordingly, there was no legally effective consent to sex.

    You didn't answer the question. Besides, sex is not a contract. Sex is an action. Legally speaking, there is no such thing as "fraudulent sex".

    --
    A cat can't teach a dog to bark.
  3. Re:Rape by fraud? by swb · · Score: 1, Troll

    I'm not sure how fraud can possibly apply to sex unless there is a quid pro quo involved in the sex, in which case it's not consensual sex but prostitution, sex in exchange for something.

    If I tell a woman I'm wealthy, I really love her, or anything similar and then she agrees to have sex with me but find out that none of it was true, how is it rape?

    Most of the plausible situations which might involve "fraud" seem to center around therapists or other medical practitioners who claim that sex is somehow necessary for treatment, and that's already covered by laws regulating professional conduct or the inherent coercive relationship involved.

    I think a good number of women would LIKE it to be rape if a sex partner who says he cares for them and then turns out not to, but of course how would you handle the cases where a man decided he didn't like you AFTER having sex?

    Women too often seem to want to turn buyer's remorse or their own gullibility into rape.