Oz filmmaker”s TV virgin auction bid facing legal problems in Las Vegas

Melbourne, May 14 (ANI): An Australian filmmaker with plans to auction off virgins in Las Vegas may have to put his venture on hold, as he could face legal trouble for human trafficking.

Justin Sisely, the filmmaker, had to move his controversial project to Las Vegas from Australia to avoid prostitution charges.

Sisely, the brain behind the new low in reality-TV, is a Melbourne-based filmmaker who plans to turn the auction into a documentary, the Daily Telegraph reported on May 10.

But according to the Las Vegas Sun, those familiar with the Nevada sex industry now say the project could be stopped if Nevada authorities find it violates human trafficking laws.

Specifically, it could challenge the US Mann Act, which prevents the transport of females across state lines for “immoral purposes”.

George Flint, a lobbyist for many of Nevada”s brothels, said Sisely “could be walking into real trouble”.

Sisely has spent more than a year recruiting male and female virgins willing to auction themselves on camera.

He plans to pay each virgin 20,000 dollars and they will also receive 90 percent of their sale price, with the remaining 10 percent going to the Nevada brothel where the auction will be held.

Bids will be placed online before the final auction.

Sisely held “auditions” for the auction in Sydney in 2009, using posters with “Virgins Wanted” plastered over an image of the Virgin Mary.

Sydney waitress “Veronica”, 21, who plans to participate in the auction said her parents were furious when they heard about her selling herself, but said she signed up to earn money and change perceptions about sex.

“Technically I”m selling my virginity for money, technically that would be classified as prostitution, but it”s not going to be a regular thing, so in my head I can justify that I”m not going to be a prostitute,” News.com.au quoted her as saying.

The project has infuriated family advocates, with Senator Steve Fielding of the Family First party branding it “absurd, ridiculous and disgusting”. (ANI)

Twitter in legal trouble after triggering Sarkozy infidelity rumour mill

London, Mar 20 (ANI): Twitter has found itself in legal trouble after rumours of French President Nicolas Sarkozy and wife Carla Bruni’s respective affairs started making rounds.

The message on Twitter by Aude Baron, a French online journalist, and repeated by other reporters, set the Internet alight.

And soon, the rumour spread like wild fire with gossip columnists and newspapers around the world chasing the story, and eventually forcing Sarkozy into an angry denial during a press conference with Gordon Brown in London last week.

However, it has now been revealed that the reporters who spread the claims said that they did not have the remotest idea whether they were true.

Even Baron said that she had merely repeated “gossip” without checking it.

“It was a kind of joke,” the Times quoted her as saying.

It was rumoured that Bruni is having a liaison with Benjamin Biolay, the singer, and her husband, Nicolas, with Chantal Jouanno, the Ecology Minister.

The ensuing row has sparked a debate in France over the legal status of Twitter.

And some users have claimed that it is a private forum where you can say what you want with no risk of being sued.

Mark Stephens, a leading London libel lawyer, said that they were wrong.

“Libel, privacy, obscenity, harassment and other laws apply with equal force to all forms of media,” he said. (ANI)

Kiefer Sutherland to surrender to NYPD to avoid jail time

New York, May 07 (ANI): Canadian actor Kiefer Sutherland is expected to surrender to New York Police to answer the complaint involving fashion designer Jack McCollough and actor Brooke Shields.

Sutherland landed in legal trouble after he allegedly assaulted McCollough at an early morning party in New York City.

Sources say that the actor will be charged with third-degree assault for the attack when he surrenders.

The actor will be issued a desk appearance ticket for the misdemeanour, which means that he won’t be jailed and will be free to travel before he’s arraigned.

“When the lawyer realized paparazzi could be sitting on his [Sutherland's] doorstep for two to three weeks, suddenly he wanted to come in right away and make it all go away,” the New York Daily News quoted a police source as saying.

A pal told The News that Sutherland felt bad about the bizarre display.

“Kiefer is sorry it happened. Absolutely. It’s terribly regrettable,” the friend said.

The pal also said that Sutherland lashed out inside because McCollough bumped into actress Shields and didn’t apologize.

“Kiefer was provoked,” the pal said. (ANI)

Sexting may land teens in legal trouble

Washington, May 7 (ANI): Police officials in Virginia have warned that sexting-a term used to describe the act of sending sexually explicit photos by cellular phones-may land teens in legal fix.

The warning comes in the wake of a recent scandal in Fairfax County, in which the police discovered a cache of images of naked girls in the mobile phone of a teenage boy.

The police said that some of the photos could qualify as child pornography, a felony in Virginia.

“He thought it was a mischievous, fun game, without realizing he was asking these girls to commit a crime and he was committing a crime,” the Washington Post quoted Sgt. Bill Fulton, of the Fairfax Police Department, as saying.

Authorities are concerned that the sexting issue has almost hit a tipping point in public concern. They say that it has raised an array of practical questions about how police and prosecutors should respond and what the long-term fallout could be for children.

“This whole phenomenon seems to have exploded in the last 60 days,” said John McCarthy, the state’s attorney for Montgomery County, adding that prosecutors across Maryland had exchanged ideas about the troubling trend.

According to him, the problem is that child porn laws never contemplated “children sharing images of themselves,” and youthful sexters have little concept of their actions as a crime.

“You can literally see the shock on their faces,” McCarthy said.

If police officials are to be believed, sexters are often “the good kids” with strong grades and no criminal history.

They say that most of such youngsters send photos without realising that they could be widely circulated or posted on the Internet in view of strangers, predators and potential colleges and employers.

The officials warn that landing on a sex offender registry is possible for those prosecuted. (ANI)

Apple faces lawsuit over ‘explosive’ iPod

London, March 14 (ANI): Apple has landed in legal trouble after a mother alleged her son endured second-degree burns when the company’s iPod touch music players exploded in his pocket.

Lynette Antrobus, from Cincinnati, is claiming 75,000 dollars plus punitive damage after accusing the multinational corporation of “gross negligence and recklessness” and of behaving “maliciously and fraudulently”.

Legal papers, filed with Ohio Southern District Court, said that while at school on December 4 last year, the child heard an “unexpected pop” from the gadget, that was switched off, then a “burning sensation” followed by the realisation that his “pants” were on fire.

“Plaintiff A.V immediately ran to the bathroom and took off his burning pants with the assistance of a friend,” the Telegraph quoted the document as saying.

“[The iPod touch] had burned through Plaintiff A.V’s pants pocket and melted through his nylon/spandex underwear, burning his leg,” it was added.

While Apple is yet to issue a statement regarding the case, the device’s battery is thought to have caused the alleged explosion.

The consumer electronic and software giant had in 2008 paid an undisclosed amount to a man after he suffered burns when his Mac laptop battery caught fire. (ANI)

Brother of Colombian minister arrested over ties to drug boss

Brother of Colombian minister arrested over ties to drug bossBogota – Colombian authorities on Thursday arrested lawyer Guillermo Valencia, the brother of the country’s Interior and Justice Minister Fabio Valencia, over alleged ties to a runaway drug boss.

Guillermo Valencia, who was until recently head of the public prosecutor’s office in Medellin, was arrested in that city and was set to be taken to Bogota for questioning, the authorities said.

The scandal broke early last month, when the public prosecutor’s office launched a probe of the minister’s brother over alleged ties to Daniel Rendon. Rendon, known by the alias “Don Mario,” reportedly leads a paramilitary drug-trafficking gang and is wanted by the authorities.

At the time, Guillermo Valencia was transferred from Medellin to the town of Tunja, although he was finally sacked once telephone conversations became public that suggested he was close to members of Rendon’s entourage.

One of those conversations suggested that Valencia interceded to have at least one person removed from a police wanted poster with photographs and information about the bosses of the criminal organization.

The man to whom Valencia was talking, a businessman who was arrested in August, promised an all terrain vehicle (ATV) in return for the favour. The authorities recently seized such a vehicle from among Valencia’s possessions.

The political opposition in Colombia has demanded the resignation of the Interior and Justice minister over his brother’s behaviour. The minister, however, noted that criminal responsibility is personal and that he cannot be held accountable for his brother’s wrongdoing, although he believes Guillermo Valencia is in fact innocent.

The opposition insists it is “unheard of” that a brother of the Interior and Justice minister should be in legal trouble over ties with the paramilitaries and with drug gangs. (dpa)