Pesquisar

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

American tourism operator facing federal suit alleging underage sex

Age of Consent (film)Image via Wikipedia
Amazon River near Manaus, Brazil
(Credit: Wikimedia)
(CBS/AP) ATLANTA - Four Brazilian women are suing an American fishing tour operator, claiming that he coerced them with alcohol, drugs and the promise of money to perform sex acts with tourists on his boat along the Amazon.
The federal complaint filed Tuesday targets Richard Schair, who until 2009 operated the Wet-A-Line Tours. It contends he recruited the four then-underage Brazilians and others from an impoverished community, and duped them into performing sex acts on him and his customers, who were often affluent American travelers.
Schair told The Associated Press he is innocent and that the claims originated in a "quest by a competitor to ruin me" but declined further comment.
Schair began operating the tours in 1998, and eventually began running weeklong trips along rivers and basins aboard his boat, the Amazon Santana. He began to actively recruit "sex tourism" customers from the U.S. to come on the tours, and many of his clients were wealthy Americans, the lawsuit said.
The fishing expeditions gave way to wild parties that involved underage girls, drugs and sex, the complaint said. The suit alleges Schair sent fishing guides and other employees into the community of Autazes and a nightclub along the Amazon to recruit young girls and buy drugs. In return, it said, they were paid a "modest" sum of money.
The lawsuit in federal court in north Georgia was brought by four unnamed plaintiffs who said they were between 12 and 17 when the sex acts took place. It was filed by attorneys from Atlanta law firm King & Spalding and coordinated by Equality Now, a human rights group.
"With this lawsuit, we hope to shine a spotlight on such conduct and the real harm it does to the victims, and to get justice for the victims," said John Harbin, the attorney who filed the complaint.
Taina Bien-Aime, the executive director of Equality Now, said she hopes the lawsuit sends a message to suspected sex tour operators "that sex trafficking victims anywhere can bring a case against those who exploit them by pressing for damages in the U.S."


Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-20071157-504083.html#ixzz1PMPwk19l


Click here for the daily Met-Art Gallery. Never be disappointed :-) Met-Art
Enhanced by Zemanta