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Tag: Entrapment

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Dimitri Romanov --- Gorgeous Boy of the Day

dimmainRussian newcomer Dimitri Romanov has signed an exclusive performance contract with Lucas Entertainment. Romanov, 25, will make his debut in Entrapment.
"I met Dimitri three months ago in Russia and could tell he had the raw talent to become a star," said Lucas Entertainment chief Michael Lucas, who also hails from the former Soviet republic. "I helped him come to the U.S. and signed him as an exclusive right away. He has an unbridled sexuality which comes across in every scene. Dimitri is also versatile and enjoys fucking and getting fucked, which I find very valuable in a performer."
In Entrapment, a story inspired by recent events in New York City's adult video stores, Romanov stars as a man placed under false arrest by the local police. He appears in two scenes, first with muscular Vin Costes and then with Ryan Raz.
"Working with Dimitri is great," said Lucas Entertainment creative director Mr. Pam. "He's incredibly sexy, and his fun personality and bubble butt are so adorable. Plus, watching his fat, uncut cock stand at attention while he's getting his ass pounded is mesmerizing."
Romanov said working with Lucas and crew has been like a dream for him.

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"I'm so happy to be working with Michael and living in the United States," he said. "Michael has helped me start a path towards the American Dream. This is a great opportunity, and I will not let him down."
Entrapment, a two-disc feature, is slated for release March 23. In addition to Romanov, Costes and Raz, it features Trae Angle, Isaiah Foxx, Andrew James, Murphy Maxwell, Kayl O'Riley and Lars Svenson. Romanov also has a starring role in Lucas Entertainment's 100th release, Wall Street, which recently wrapped production and is expected to street April 21.

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$50 For Sex = Jail in NYC

vidstoreprotest2Members of the Coalition to Stop the Arrests, a gay group protesting police stings that nab gay men in adult businesses for allegedly "loitering for the purpose of prostitution," have met with the District Attorney for Manhatten over the arrests. A Mar. 9 article in the Gay City News said that Coalition founder Robert Pinter, who was motivated to establish the group by his own arrest, and Coalition member Joey Nelson attended the Mar. 6 meeting with DA Robert Morgenthau, along with an array of other individuals, officials, and organizations. Nelson is also the Queer Justice League’s coordinator, the article said. The article quoted Nelson as saying, "The first thing Morgenthau said was, ’We are going to investigate all these cases." The meeting lasted about an hour, and gave concerned New Yorkers, citizens and officials alike, hope that the matter would be taken seriously. At issue are a string of about 30 arrests at a handful of adult-oriented establishments, some of which were targeted for closure under "nuisance abatement" laws. But the question in the minds of gay New Yorkers is whether the video shops and other businesses they frequent were marked for closure in advance, with their arrests taking place as a justification for shutting the establishments down. Pinter’s own case suggests that the straightforward story told by the police may not be all that is going on with the sting operations. The 52-year-old massage therapist related how an attractive young man allegedly approached him at the Blue Door video shop last October. As it turned out, the man was an undercover police officer. stopthearrests The young man was "charming and persistent, and we agreed to go home for consensual sex, but as we were leaving he said, ’I want to pay you $50 [for sexual services]," Pinter said, adding, "I didn’t respond, but I thought it was strange." Then a number of other undercover police who were waiting outside hustled Pinter up against a wall. Because they did not identify themselves as police, Pinter said, "I thought I’d been set up by a gang." Added Pinter, "I asked them why they were doing this to me. I was totally clueless.
"They handcuffed me and said, ’Why the fuck do you think we’re arresting you--loitering for the purpose of prostitution.’"
Pinter said that he then spent several hours in a van before he was taken to police headquarters, where he spent another "16 or 17 hours," after which a Legal Aid lawyer "strongly suggested I plead guilty to disorderly conduct." Pinter took that advice--and now wishes that he hadn’t. Angered by his arrest and the outcome, he’s started the Coalition to Stop the Arrests. Said Pinter of the meeting with the DA, "They were going to go back and start looking at all the individual cases. "They really seemed genuinely concerned that something wrong was happening here." Other officials have also expressed concern and outrage, including Christine Quinn, the openly gay speaker of the New York City Council, and openly gay state Sen. Thomas Duane, who headed up the Mar. 6 meeting. Said Nelson, "I thought Tom Duane was very, very strong in putting out the lay of the land. "He called [the stings] homophobic," Nelson added. "He said it was a set-up." The meeting followed one last month between officials, including Quinn, activists, and the city’s police, who denied any entrapment but said that they had suspended sting operations for the time being. Morgenthau suggested that it was possible that some of the men who have chosen to take their cases to court, rather than pleading guilty to a lesser charge, may see the charges against them dropped, the article said. Said Nelson, "He said that those would be easier to act on, but there was no promise of automatic dismissal. "He said they would investigate those cases and that those would be the first that they would investigate," Nelson continued. The article noted that the DA’s office has already prolonged some of the cases; one speculation is that Morgenthau may be attempting to run the clock out on the cases so that they will be dropped. More problematic would be the reversal and expunging of guilty pleas such as the one that Pinter entered at the advice of his Legal Aid counsel and later regretted.
"At this point, we should be doing an all-points bulletin that people who have been arrested should be contacting the district attorney’s office to ask if their cases can be vacated." Said Pinter, "The message, at least in the DA’s office, was heard really loud and clear," the article reported.
For more info and to get involved please contact: Coalition to Stop the Arrests Robert Pinter, Coordinator 212-674-3495 STOPTHEARRESTS@aol.com
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Entrapment ?

Police Sting in Video Store: Gay Entrapment?

A gay New Yorker says he was entrapped and arrested for prostitution by the NYPD as he browsed at a local video shop. The cops say the man offered sexual services to an undercover officer for a fee.

The Gay City News related both sides of the story in an Oct. 30 article.
Robert Pinter, 52, was at Blue Door Video in the East Village when, he says, an attractive young man came up to him. Describing the young Asian-American, Pinter said, "He is smiling, he’s really a cute guy, very friendly." Added Pinter, "He initiated the conversation and drove the whole conversation." Pinter’s side of the story is that the young man claimed to be 29 and consented to a sexual encounter with Pinter, offering his car as a place for the rendezvous. As the men left the video store, Pinter said, his new acquaintance made a monetary offer for the encounter that Pinter says they had already agreed would take place. Said Pinter, "He sort of threw in ’Oh, I want to pay you $50 to suck your dick.’ "When he offered me the money my first thought was he wanted me to pay him the money.  "When I realized that it wasn’t that way I thought it wasn’t logical." By then, it was too late: as the men stepped out onto the sidewalk, a number of police officers appeared. Said Pinter, "At first I thought it was a gang because they didn’t say anything, they didn’t identify themselves as police." 

Added Pinter, "They took my bag, started going through my possessions.  "I must have asked them four or five times, ’Why are you putting me under arrest?’" Pinter had to wait, handcuffed, in a van as the group of policemen continued their work at various spots in Manhattan. Then he was booked and charged with prostitution before being arraigned the day after his arrest, the Gay City News item said. Pinter was advised by a lawyer from the Legal Aid Society to plead guilty to the lesser charge of disorderly conduct; he received an order to go to classes on health, and fined. The article said that the Manhattan South Vice Enforcement Squad had made other arrests at the video store during 2008, and have made similar arrests in at least one other shop since 2005.

At the start of this year, Blue Door Video was the site of ten arrests for alleged prostitution; the shop closed temporarily last summer. The article said that one aspect of the arrests was consistent across the board: the arrests took place after the undercover officer broached the subject of payment. The article quoted Legal Aid senior staff attorney Russell Novack, who said that some of the arrests at Blue Door were of European men. Said Novack, "I really don’t think that European tourists are coming down to the Bowery to be prostitutes." Added the lawyer, "The police send undercovers in there to solicit guys."Other men allegedly guilty of prostituting themselves at Blue Door included a 19-year-old from Virginia and a California man, aged 53. The article said that all ten men arrested in Jan. and Feb. of this year did as Pinter did, and pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, because that was the least expensive way both in terms of time and money to clear the matter up. The records of all those arrests will be sealed in 2010, the article said, disappearing from public view. But the question is whether the police are luring and then entrapping gay men in the first place. Said Legal Aid supervising attorney Linda Poust Lopez, "You really do have to walk away" in order not to get arrested and charged with prostitution in such a case. "Say very clearly ’No, thank you’ and walk away," Lopez advised.
In response to inquiries about the arrests, NYPD spokesperson Paul Browne wrote in an email message, "Robert Pinter was arrested for prostitution on October 10 after he asked the officer how much money he had, and then offered to perform oral sex on the officer for $50." Continued the email, "The location, Blue Door Video, has been the subject of prostitution complaints previously.  "It’s currently enjoined by the court from conducting, permitting, or promoting prostitution." Added the message, "Blue Door Video and the landlord paid $2,500 in settlement costs stemming from the injunction."
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