Mar 20 2009
Improper Sexual Trysts Abroad Can Lead to Loss of Fortunes and Big Jail Time in the U.S., But the 2004 Law Protecting Children is Being Severely Abused for Financial Gains:
Improper Sexual Trysts Abroad Can Lead to Loss of Fortunes and Big Jail Time in the U.S., But the 2004 Law Protecting Children is Being Severely Abused for Financial Gains:
By Marc Chamot
Photo of the Mexican kid, Daniel Garcia who falsely accused an American of sexual improprieties.
Living a sexual deviant lifestyle with younger kids, can be financially unhealthy and very deadly for some older homosexuals:
I, for one don’t feel sorry for the fate of older homosexuals that like to fling around with younger boys, I also don’t feel too sorry for a hetero-sexual male and female that does the very same thing. But unfortunately their fate can be horrific at times. But this article in the San Francisco Weekly really caught my eye.
There is an obscure law in the United States that is directed at child molesters, especially the ones that leave the country to participate in despicable sexual activities with children in foreign countries.
As it turns out, it looks like the American law that protects children abroad, may also be wide open for exploitation, it’s unfair and may be very flawed, and can be easily manipulated by unscrupulous attorneys and cash needy foreign kids.
Even if you’re innocent, it can be exploited against you. I believe as more and more of the poorer nations become aware of this law, it’s going to have an adverse reaction for Americans traveling abroad, mainly to Asia and Latin America.
The Law:
U.S. Is Now Pursuing Americans Who Commit Sex Crimes Overseas
By ERIC LICHTBLAU and JAMES DAO
“One suspect was a convicted pedophile from Baltimore accused of molesting boys in two Asian countries. Another was a doctor from Georgia who the Russian police said drugged his young victims in a St. Petersburg hotel. A third was a retired Army sergeant from Seattle who may have molested up to 50 children.
The three men would once have almost certainly fallen outside the grasp of United States prosecutors. But with the long arm of American law growing ever longer, all three could face significant prison sentences in the United States because of a measure passed by Congress last year that gives federal officials much more power to prosecute people suspected of molesting children on foreign soil. Officials have already used their expanded authority to prosecute five American men, four of whom are awaiting trial. Dozens more investigations are under way from Sri Lanka to Costa Rica.American officials are hoping their investigations will help break what they believe are shadowy Internet networks used by pedophiles to share photographs of children and travel tips about countries with thriving child sex industries.
But so far, prosecutions under the new law have focused on people who traveled on their own.”
But unfortunately for older homosexuals, their lifestyles have serious consequences that are becoming more tragic and very public everyday.
Not only that folks, but recently the fates for older homosexuals have been pretty fatal since the Andrew Cunanan serial murders of 1997. Andrew was known for the murders of various elder homosexuals that he once frequented, his sight of revenge caped off with the murder of Gianni Versace.
The Consequences:
Now, in the San Francisco Bay Area, we’ve got a case where a wealthy gay man Thomas Frank White, who had a mansion in Puerto Vallarta, was accused of frequenting with young Mexican boys. He not only was convicted in the U.S. and Mexico for these crimes, he was also sued for $7 million.
It seems like the attorney, Replogle, who chased Thomas White in Mexico to bring in a conviction and to sue, this attorney bribed these kids to falsely identify and testify against White out of photos, just to steal all of his money.
And so now these two culprits who were behind the White scheme, the one Mexican kid, Daniel Garcia who testified against Thomas White, and Garcia’s shyster lawyer Replogle, are now both involved behind the recent theft and disappearance of another suspected wealthy homosexual, in 74 year-old Palm Springs man, Cliff Lambert.
What a sorry lifestyle folks, that’s all I got to say about it. If you are unfortunately snarled into this deceit, best keep witnesses on record and avoid contact with any minor what so EVER.
The Thomas White Affair
Palm Springs arrests cast doubt on the prosecution of a San Francisco man in a sex tourism case.
By Matt Smith
Published: March 18, 2009
Thomas Frank White, 73, once a famed San Francisco stockbroker and philanthropist, sits in a Puerto Vallarta jail cell, facing charges that he invited boys to a mansion there so he could have sex with them. White was arrested in Thailand in 2003 and later extradited to Mexico, and hasn’t seen freedom since. Back home in San Francisco, newspaper pictures of him shirtless and surrounded by Mexican youths have become symbols of what was seen in the early 2000s as a growing international scourge of sex tourism.
White got this reputation with the help of San Francisco attorney David Replogle, 60, and his client Daniel Garcia, 26, who traveled repeatedly to Mexico to recruit underage plaintiffs willing to testify that White had sex with them.
“I want to see justice for the children of Puerto Vallarta,” Replogle was quoted as saying in one of several San Francisco Chronicle stories describing the quest to bring White to justice. “I am a gay man, which makes what Tom White has done doubly offensive to me. This is not just a variation on being gay. It’s wrong — ethically, morally, legally, every way.”
White now faces Mexican and U.S. charges alleging that he traveled to Puerto Vallarta to have sex with boys. Replogle and his clients, including Garcia, settled for $7 million, after filing a lawsuit demanding $100 million. “But no amount of money can give back the most important thing Mr. White took from them, and that is their innocence,” Replogle was quoted as saying in another Chronicle story.
Recent events, however, now throw into question Replogle’s own innocence in the Thomas White affair. Replogle and Garcia recently pleaded not guilty in Palm Springs to unrelated fraud, embezzlement, and forgery charges, which, if true, could cast doubt on their credibility and raise the possibility that two alleged con men led U.S. law enforcement officials on a costly international manhunt while unfairly condemning a man to a half-decade in a Mexican jail.
As in the White case, the allegations against Replogle in Palm Springs suggest the attorney became associated with a group of young men who knew a wealthy, older homosexual man and then managed to extract money from him. Bail for Replogle and the other defendants have been set at $5 million.
Unsealed litigation documents, meanwhile, allege that Replogle may have been more mercenary than anti-sex-abuse missionary in his pursuit of White. “I think [the Palm Springs arrest] puts the allegations against [White] in a different light,” said Stuart Hanlon, White’s attorney. “He’s always said he was set up and framed by Garcia and Replogle. Now there are allegations that they have a reputation of doing this kind of thing.”
White is accused of having sex with numerous Mexican boys whom he invited into his mansion. Garcia claimed White abused him when he was a teenager. Click Here for Full Story: