Posts Tagged ‘strip club rules’

Detroit strip clubs face booze ban

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Detroit strip clubs face booze ban
Attorney says Detroit’s threat to end liquor sales if dancers don’t cover up is all-out war

Detroit –Detroit may soon deliver an ultimatum to its strip clubs: Cover up or no booze.

The City Council on Wednesday is set to weigh a broad crackdown that would ban alcohol at clubs with topless dancing. The new rules also would stop lap dancing, close VIP rooms and force dancers to wear opaque pasties — even at dry clubs.

The rules are certain to reignite debate over the city’s 31 topless bars, and owners are vowing a fight.

“The city of Detroit has now decided they want an all-out war,” said Michael Donaldson, an attorney for All Stars and the Penthouse Club. “They cannot win. They are being totally stupid.”

But city staffers point to state and national court cases that support the legality of an alcohol ban. Richard Mack, an attorney and member of Perfecting Church, said the city must reject its status as Michigan’s strip club capital and home to 31 of the state’s 81 topless bars.

“Our goal is to do all we can within the law to root them out,” Mack said. “We don’t want the city of Detroit to be the dumping ground for lascivious behavior.”

The crackdown stems from a court battle in which a federal judge in 2007 struck down Detroit’s regulations on where clubs could open and ordered them rewritten. City staffers have recast the laws, but they have added tougher restrictions elsewhere — such as the alcohol ban. Pastors and community leaders have pushed for the changes and persuaded the council to get advice from Scott Bergthold, a Tennessee attorney who has worked nationwide to shut clubs down.

Here are some of the proposed changes:

• Alcohol can’t be served at any existing or new topless clubs. Once the City Council passes the change, existing clubs would have until their license expires, which is renewed every year, or the anniversary of the date the law was passed, to comply. A Michigan Liquor Control Commission official said Monday it’s up to the city to set those restrictions on the liquor licenses.

• Dancers would have to be 6 feet from patrons and on a stage at all times. A stage must be at least 18 inches off the floor in a room of at least 600 feet. That requirement likely would stop clubs from letting customers interact with dancers in smaller rooms, often called VIP areas.

• Dancers would also have to wear pasties..

Several council members did not return calls Monday on whether they would support the proposals. And Mayor Dave Bing’s staff said he hasn’t seen the proposals.

Rob Katzman, owner of the Toy Chest Bar and Grille, said the potential changes would put nearly all of the clubs out of business.

“You could not operate,” said Katzman, who argued that most clubs cause no problems. “You just wonder what the motivation is.”

But Mack argued the clubs lower property values and increase crime.

“Whenever they want to do their dirt, they come into the city and then return to their white picket-fenced suburban communities,” Mack said. “We want the same white picket-fenced communities.”

U.S. District Judge Julian Cook ordered the city to rewrite its rules, finding they gave city officials too much power to deny new clubs and didn’t address how long they had to act on applications. Under the old rules, clubs had to meet 15 broad criteria — including claims they wouldn’t reduce nearby property values — before the city signed on.

Cook ordered the city to revise its rules “forthwith.”

But the city has repeatedly delayed doing so. All the while, the council and mayor’s office have frozen transfers of liquor licenses that would allow clubs to open. The city is facing at least five recent federal lawsuits over its laws governing adult businesses.

CU student aims to open topless café in Boulder

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

CU student aims to open topless café in Boulder
By Amy Bounds (Contact)
Monday, July 6, 2009

BOULDER, Colo. — Boulder’s Dan Kennedy wants to open a coffee shop — but instead of competing with the likes of Starbucks by offering specialty drinks, he wants to steam up basic coffee and pre-packaged pastries with topless waitresses.

He’s looking to open a shop in August, one day a week in the morning.

Kennedy — who said he will be a sophomore at the University of Colorado in the fall after transferring from Whitman College in Washington — has placed ads on Craigslist for bouncers and women willing to work topless, saying he’s interviewing three women and three potential bouncers Friday. He’s offering to pay the women $80 to $100 for a morning.

But he said he’s still researching the steps he needs to make the cafe legal. He also needs a location. His ideal spot would be a conference room at CU, though he’s also looking on University Hill.

By offering only drip coffee and prepackaged food, he said, “There’s no license and no regulations.”

But, CU spokesman Bronson Hilliard said, there are strict regulations governing businesses on campus — plus a student code of conduct that would prohibit operating an adult business at the university.

He said students can rent conference rooms for “normal campus activities,” such as study groups. Bottom line, he said, a topless coffee shop “is not going to be allowed.”

“This is a half-baked idea,” he said.

Kennedy said CU students are a big part of his target audience, and he’s considering charging a $12 cover fee to avoid attracting a crowd just looking to ogle the waitresses.

His job listing for the bouncer says the employee “will be checking IDs to make sure they are 18 plus. Making sure topless girls feel safe and no inappropriate behavior from customers.”

He acknowledged that some people likely will object to his risque business venture.

“It’s probably going to cause a pretty big stir,” he said.

A controversial topless coffee shop in a rural Maine town drew national attention — and was burned down in June by an arsonist after just four months in business. Before the fire, the owner had received 150 applications for 10 positions.

Locally, a strip club off the Pearl Street Mall that opened in late 2007 drew concerns from zoning and building-code officials soon after it opened. The city recently looked into ways to regulate adult businesses before they opened, but the Boulder City Council has yet to agree to any changes.

The city’s options include using zoning rules to limit where such establishments could open. Some cities, for example, forbid strip clubs from doing business within 1,500 feet of a church, school, child-care center, park or other adults-only venue.

The city could decide to issue licenses to strip clubs instead, a process that could resemble the way liquor licenses are handed out now.

Mayor Matt Appelbaum said it may be worth looking at the zoning regulations and giving the community a chance to offer feedback.

“Our regulations don’t really preclude these businesses,” he said. “There clearly are locations where they are not appropriate.”

City Councilwoman Susan Osborne said she doesn’t want the council to spend time on the issue, adding that she hasn’t seen much of a market for strip clubs and similar adult businesses in Boulder.

“There are so many big things going on right now,” she said. “This would just be a distraction.”

Take me out to the strip club… Judge says play ball

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Ah, baseball.

America’s pastime. Cracker Jack. Cold beer. Hot dogs.

And body glitter?

That’s the upshot of a decision issued Friday by a King County Superior Court judge, who cleared the way for a proposed Déjà Vu strip club — adult cabaret in the court’s parlance — near Safeco Field.

Stripper’s pole meets foul pole.

Over the objections of the Seattle Mariners and the public utility that operates the field, Judge John Erlick found that the City of Seattle did not err in permitting the proposed First Avenue club.

Erlick rejected the Mariners assertion that the City Council meant to keep strip clubs at least 800 feet away from “areas where children congregate” or sports arenas. That language is absent from the city ordinance drafted after Seattle’s wholesale ban on new strip clubs was rejected as unconstitutional.

“If (the council) had intended to require dispersion from all places where children tend to congregate, it would have specifically included that language,” Erlick said Friday. “This court refuses to read words into the ordinance which do not exist in the plain language.”

During an earlier hearing, attorneys for the Mariners argued that the city had erred in permitting the club because Safeco should be considered a park or open space. One area the Mariners pointed to was a park is primarily used for bus parking; another is private property that may be developed in the future.

The proposed Déjà Vu would be on First Avenue South just south of Safeco Field, about 400 feet from the main home-plate entrance. The rear door of the club would be about 120 feet from a parking garage plaza where school buses frequently drop off students attending games.

Opponents of the club will decide in coming days whether to appeal Erlick’s ruling, said Bart Waldman, Mariners executive vice president for governmental affairs.

“We’re obviously disappointed,” Waldman said. “For now, we’re just going to absorb the opinion.”

Lauding the ruling, Peter Buck, attorney for the club owners, said the Mariners’ moralizing throughout the legal proceeding strained credulity.

Buck dismissed the Mariners’ assertions that children would be harmed by the strip club as specious.

Buck noted that a Déjà Vu club across First Avenue from Pike Place Market has done little to discourage or offend tourists there. And, like all Washington state strip clubs, the proposed facility will not serve alcohol.

The Mariners, however, do at Safeco Field.

“The Mariners mainly made a moral pitch, that this facility would be harmful to children,” Buck said. “If they were really worried about children, they’d clean up their own act.”

Erlick’s ruling marked the first serious test of the 4-year-old restrictions on where strip clubs can be. Buck praised it as showing that business owners can get a fair shake, regardless of the business they’re in.

“It means that an operation such as my client’s can rely on the law as it is written,” Buck said. “This law isn’t about someone’s moral values.”

The Mariners have 30 days to file an appeal. If the team doesn’t appeal, Buck said the club will likely open in six months.

CU student aims to open topless cafe in Boulder

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Boulder’s Dan Kennedy wants to open a coffee shop — but instead of competing with the likes of Starbucks by offering specialty drinks, he wants to steam up basic coffee and pre-packaged pastries with topless waitresses.

He’s looking to open a shop in August, one day a week in the morning.

Kennedy — who said he will be a sophomore at the University of Colorado in the fall after transferring from Whitman College in Washington — has placed ads on Craigslist for bouncers and women willing to work topless, saying he’s interviewing three women and three potential bouncers Friday. He’s offering to pay the women $80 to $100 for a morning.

But he said he’s still researching the steps he needs to make the cafe legal. He also needs a location. His ideal spot would be a conference room at CU, though he’s also looking on University Hill.

By offering only drip coffee and prepackaged food, he said, “There’s no license and no regulations.”

But, CU spokesman Bronson Hilliard said, there are strict regulations governing businesses on campus — plus a student code of conduct that would prohibit operating an adult business at the university.

He said students can rent conference rooms for “normal campus activities,” such as study groups. Bottom line, he said, a topless coffee shop “is not going to be allowed.”

“This is a half-baked idea,” he said.

Kennedy said CU students are a big part of his target audience, and he’s considering charging a $12 cover fee to avoid attracting a crowd just looking to ogle the waitresses.

His job listing for the bouncer says the employee “will be checking IDs to make sure they are 18 plus. Making sure topless girls feel safe and no inappropriate behavior from customers.”

He acknowledged that some people likely will object to his risque business venture.

“It’s probably going to cause a pretty big stir,” he said.

A controversial topless coffee shop in a rural Maine town drew national attention — and was burned down in June by an arsonist after just four months in business. Before the fire, the owner had received 150 applications for 10 positions.

Locally, a strip club off the Pearl Street Mall that opened in late 2007 drew concerns from zoning and building-code officials soon after it opened. The city recently looked into ways to regulate adult businesses before they opened, but the Boulder City Council has yet to agree to any changes.

The city’s options include using zoning rules to limit where such establishments could open. Some cities, for example, forbid strip clubs from doing business within 1,500 feet of a church, school, child-care center, park or other adults-only venue.

The city could decide to issue licenses to strip clubs instead, a process that could resemble the way liquor licenses are handed out now.

Mayor Matt Appelbaum said it may be worth looking at the zoning regulations and giving the community a chance to offer feedback.

“Our regulations don’t really preclude these businesses,” he said. “There clearly are locations where they are not appropriate.”

City Councilwoman Susan Osborne said she doesn’t want the council to spend time on the issue, adding that she hasn’t seen much of a market for strip clubs and similar adult businesses in Boulder.

“There are so many big things going on right now,” she said. “This would just be a distraction.”

Safeco Fields raunchy new neighbor, a strip club, prevails in court

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Strip clubs are back in the headlines, and they add to the cringe factor of an adult-entertainment venue opening up for lap dances next to Safeco Field, the home of the Seattle Mariners.

SEATTLE’S sleazy experience with strip clubs stirs genuine indignation at the prospects of one these degrading establishments opening so close to Safeco Field.

Last week, a King County Superior Court judge announced he could find nothing in the law or in the city of Seattle’s interpretation and application of land-use regulations to stop City Hall from issuing a business permit to Roger Forbes for a strip club in the Sodo area on First Avenue South.

Judge John Erlick worked with the law and facts before him, and his 11-page analysis indicates he was looking for mistakes, overstepping and sloppy use of words. He found none. The Seattle City Council had not used early opportunities to add stadiums — spectator-sports facilities — to the list of land uses and activities that could pre-empt or exile adult entertainment from a neighborhood.

Strip clubs in Seattle are as likely to be viewed as ersatz brothels as they are dingy gathering places for lonely men to sip overpriced soft drinks and ogle the female form. Lap dancing is prostitution by another name.

Law-enforcement issues with strip clubs have a long history, and the headlines are never dormant for long. Check out the latest round of indictments surrounding four clubs that federal charges conclude were no more than whorehouses.

Slimy dealings between strip-club associates and members of the City Council gave the community a political and campaign-finance scandal — memorialized as Strippergate — that yielded guilty pleas, stunted careers and smeared reputations.

Such is the legacy of the sex industry that will be the Mariners’ new neighbor. Baseball fans, young and old, are not going to be pleased to see the neon signs and ads promoting amateur night or the special appearance of a porn star.

The business is degrading to women. These are not victimless enterprises. Promoting base and destructive attitudes toward women is hardly a desirable welcome mat so near a signature, public-gathering place.

Is this a moralistic harangue? Yes it is. Is there a place for adult entertainment in a community? The courts all say so. Next door to Safeco Field is not the place. Somewhere in Sodo might be appropriate, but this establishment is too damn close to families and a general public that is insulted and offended by the intrusion.

Seattle strip club magnate indicted

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Longtime strip-club owner Frank Colacurcio Sr., his son and four associates were indicted Tuesday on federal racketeering, money laundering, mail fraud and prostitution conspiracy charges, the latest in a long line of brushes with the law for the notorious Seattle crime figure.

In a grand jury indictment unsealed Tuesday, the 92-year-old Colacurcio and his associates are accused of promoting prostitution at four Seattle-area nightclubs run by the family’s management business.

“It’s been going on for a number of years,” U.S. Attorney Jeffrey C. Sullivan said in a news conference on the steps of the federal courthouse. “These men made millions of dollars exploiting young women … hundreds of young women.”

The government is seeking forfeiture of three clubs owned by the Colacurcios plus $25 million, the amount authorities believe the defendants earned through prostitution and other illegal dealings. They could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted, Sullivan said.

Dancers had to pay $70 to $130 a day to perform and were told they could earn money from “private dances” in semi-secluded booths, but many if not most found they could not cover those payments without also performing sex acts, he said.

Sullivan would not estimate the total business done at the clubs or how much appeared to be legal but said that after four years of investigation, federal agents know of no bigger prostitution ring in the Seattle area.

Dancers and club managers were dissuaded from reporting prostitution, those who were arrested or caught in acts of prostitution were repeatedly allowed to return to work in the clubs, and receipts from the sex trade were laundered through various bank accounts, according to the indictment.

Investigators also secretly recorded racy conversations between the younger Colacurcio and dancers in which they talked about rampant sex at the club.

A woman who answered the telephone at Talents West, the Colacurcios’ management office, and asked that her name not be used, said no one from the business would comment. John W. Wolfe, a lawyer who has represented Colacurcio Jr. in the past, did not return a telephone call.

Colacurcio Sr. has a rap sheet that dates back to the 1940s and he was identified as a racketeer in hearings before a U.S. Senate organized crime committee in 1957.

Last year, the Colacurcios pleaded guilty to felony criminal charges in Seattle’s 2003 “Strippergate” campaign-finance scandal in which they secretly funneled thousands of dollars in illegal campaign contributions through friends, relatives and business partners to the re-election campaigns of three Seattle City Council members. The scheme occurred shortly before a vote on a key rezoning issue involving a strip club.

The Colacurcios and their associates remain free pending arraignment July 24 in U.S. District Court, said Emily Langlie, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney’s office.

The indictment identified the strip clubs as Rick’s in Seattle, Sugar’s in Shoreline, Honey’s in Everett and Fox’s in Tacoma.

The government is seeking forfeiture of Honey’s, Sugar’s and Ricks, the largest, all owned by the Colacurcios. The owner of Fox’s has not been linked to wrongdoing, Sullivan said.

He said the government did not attempt to seize the clubs immediately because “this organization has some legitimate business and revenues … a strip club is a legal business,” so the U.S. Marshals Service would have had to maintain operations until the case was resolved.

“They really don’t want to run strip clubs,” Sullivan said.

The charges include racketeering conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, conspiracy to use interstate facilities for prostitution and 12 counts of mail fraud.

The four clubs and the Colacurcios’ homes and offices were raided by FBI agents on June 2, 2008. At the time, an FBI agent wrote in an affidavit that Colacurcio Sr. continued to pay his own dancers as much as $1,000 for sex.

The case is the latest round in his more than five-decade battle with the law.

The son of a King County farmer, he received his first conviction in the 1940s for having sexual relations with a 16-year-old girl and entered the topless nightclub business after making a name for himself in Seattle’s pinball industry in the 1950s.

In 1971 Colacurcio was convicted of running a bingo racket and sentenced to three years. In the mid-1970s he served more than two years on a tax evasion conviction that was eventually overturned on appeal.

In 1981 he was convicted of tax fraud for skimming profits from a Bellevue club, and in 1991 he and Frank Jr. were convicted in a similar scheme involving clubs in Alaska.

Named as defendants are Colacurcio Sr., of Lake Forest Park; Colacurcio Jr., 47, of Seattle; Leroy Richard Christiansen, 67, of Seattle, a nephew of the elder Colacurcio, co-owner of key Colacurcio businesses and co-manager of day-to-day business with Colacurcio; David Carl Ebert, 61, of Monroe, another co-owner and manager; Steven Michael Fueston, 61, of Tacoma, manager of Fox’s; Gilbert Conte, 75, of Bothell, manager of Sugar’s and Honey’s, and three Seattle corporations controlled by the Colacurcios.

Ministry wins lawsuit against strip club

Monday, July 27th, 2009

An Ohio pastor has won a lawsuit filed by an adult entertainment club against him and part of his congregation.

Several years ago, Pastor William Dunfee of New Beginnings Ministries in New Castle started demonstrating in front of the “Foxhole” strip club. City attorney Tom Condit represented the church.

“They had signs and they would try to persuade men to not patronize the place. They would try to persuade the girls who danced there not to work there,” he notes, “and they just did the best they could to ideally shut the place down — make it go out of business.”

The protestors took photos of license plates of vehicles whose owners went into the facility and then posted them on the ministry’s website. In response, the club sued the ministry members and the sheriff’s department for not getting rid of the protesters.

“It was actually set for trial in mid-July, and the federal judge saw the evidence that was submitted in writing and said there is no federal claim here, and he threw the case out,” Condit adds.

Condit points out people have a constitutional right to conduct peaceful protests

Las Vegas Strip Club Bust Results in 13 Arrests

Monday, July 27th, 2009

A major bust at a local adult strip club has resulted in 13 dancers being arrested for soliciting prostitution. Police allege the dancers were doing much more than dancing.

Metro made the arrests early Monday morning. Police say busts like this, are not uncommon, but the number of arrests is what makes this one stand out.

“It’s a pretty substantial. I don’t know how many particular entertainers were working in that establishment that night but 13 is a lot of folks,” said Lieutenant Karen Hughes, Metro.

All of the female dancers were arrested for soliciting prostitution. Police say it is now up to them to post bail or wait 48 hours to make a court appearance and be released.

Hughes works with Metro’s vice squad, and would not go into detail about how the arrests were made, but says this is part of her team’s job.

“They’re out there every night, working street operations, hotel operations, book stores, anywhere where people that come to Las Vegas are going to go to find something that’s just off the radar.”

Right now, Metro says Deja Vu management is not facing any charges.

“They will check to make sure there are not any key employees who are involved in those acts, because if that’s the case, then the license will be in jeopardy.”

Deja Vu’s General Manager Bob Proden says this is the first time a bust of this size has happened in the club’s 15 year history. He says the club has received dance code violations in the past but those were eventually dropped.

DJ stabbed by stripper at Fifth Alarm Strip Club

Monday, July 27th, 2009

A DJ at the Fifth Alarm strip club in Springfield was stabbed Sunday by a stripper at the club.

The female suspect is only ID’ed as a 22 year old female from Holyoke. Police are in the process of obtaining a warrant for her arrest.

Springfield Captain C. Lee Bennett told 22News that the stripper lashed out at a male DJ and stabbed him just after 5 o’clock.

The female then fled the strip club on foot and is still at large.

There is no description of the suspect but the incident is still under investigation.

Springfield police believe the male DJ was transported to a local hospital though there is no word on his condition.

Will Pub Become Strip Club…

Monday, July 27th, 2009

In the Poconos a pub owner is trying to sell his business as a strip club and neighboring shops are not happy about it.

Werry’s Pub and Motel in Marshalls Creek is up for sale and one of it’s for sale ads is causing some controversy.

The owner said he took an ad out in an adult magazine trying to sell the spot as the perfect place for a gentleman’s club.

The owner, Middle Smithfield Township Supervisor Bob said, “It’s not 1940. It’s just another entertainment, a facility, it’s no different.”

He added, “It will not decrease property values.”

Township officials said right now the property isn’t zoned for a strip club but a new code book, which is expected to be adopted sometime this fall, would allow it.

“There’s a tree farm, a salon, a car place and then a strip club? It’s not necessary,” said Nicole Barbera. She works at a salon across the street from the property. “The Pocono Mountains is a family-oriented area. I don’t believe that a gentleman’s club is appropriate.”

Seth Richard agrees. He owns the tree farm next door. “I don’t feel it is necessarily a positive addition to our community,” he said.

The owner of the Werry Pub said a strip club might not be the only option. He said there are also talks to put in a drug and rehabilitation facility on the property, something local businesses said they would support.”

“I think that would be a positive addition to the community,” Richard added.