Backpage.com lawyers want executives’ pimping charges tossed
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The operators of Backpage.com pushed for pimping charges to be tossed out for the second time Tuesday, two weeks after the website that prosecutors dubbed an online brothel stopped advertising adult services in the face of a congressional investigation.
The case sets up the latest in a series of legal battles — one of which already reached the U.S. Supreme Court — over a federal law designed to protect free speech online by granting immunity to websites that post content created by third-party users.
The California attorney general’s office charged Backpage executives Carl Ferrer, Michael Lacey and James Larkin last month with conspiracy to commit pimping and 26 counts of money laundering. Ferrer also is charged with 12 counts of pimping, seven involving children.
They are accused of knowingly profiting from prostitution. The charges allege that the three laundered nearly $37 million derived directly or indirectly from illegal activity from July 2014 through August 2016, with the monthly take often topping $2 million.


