CEO of male escort site, 6 workers charged with prostitution

  • By Tom Hays Associated Press
  • Tuesday, August 25, 2015 1:09pm
  • Business

NEW YORK — The chief executive of a Manhattan-based online male escort service and six of his employees at Rentboy.com were arrested Tuesday on charges of promoting prostitution.

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn accused Jeffrey Hurant of selling advertisements to high-priced male prostitutes for several hundred dollars, then charging Rentboy.com customers up to $299 a month to access the ads. The operation took in more than $10 million since 2010, prosecutors said.

Hurant, 50, was awaiting a court appearance later Tuesday. The name of his attorney wasn’t immediately available.

Rentboy.com had listed disclaimers saying its purpose was companionship, and set guidelines banning offers of sex in exchange for money. But a criminal complaint cited several ads that referred to various sex acts, offered reviews of sexual performance and listed rates ranging from $150 an hour to $3,500 for a weekend.

“As alleged, Rentboy.com attempted to present a veneer of legality, when in fact this internet brothel made millions of dollars from promotion of illegal prostitution,” Acting U.S. Attorney Kelly Currie said in a statement.

Hurant claimed in interviews the term “rentboy” meant male escorts while in Great Britain attending Oxford University, according to the criminal complaint. He has said he started the website because “escorts were a disenfranchised group,” it says.

“We just want to keep the oldest profession in the world up to date with all the latest technology,” the complaint quotes him as saying.

Rentboy.com also hosted an annual awards show for escorts called the Hookies, the complaint says. Promotional material billed the show as “recognizing 17 categories covering all aspects of the oldest profession as presented in the newest media.”

Asked by an undercover investigator who went to the 2015 Hookies how the show started, Hurant responded, “Have you ever had sex with anyone and it was so good you had to tell someone? That’s what this is about,” the complaint says

Each defendant faces up to five years in prison if convicted of conspiring to commit crimes involving interstate or foreign travel.

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