News
Prostitution charges stand
03-04-08 02:16
Judges refuses to dismiss prostitution charges against Salem woman
by Julie Manganis
The Salem News (Massachusetts)
March 1, 2008
A judge yesterday denied a motion to dismiss prostitution charges against
a Salem woman who allegedly offered her services to an undercover Salem
police detective.
Paula Webb and her lawyer, Jennifer Koiles, had argued that police
violated Webb's rights when they sent Detective Bill Jennings into her
Albion Street home wearing a wire that transmitted their conversation to
other officers in a nearby surveillance van.
Prosecutors argued that the wire transmitted the conversation but did not
record it and was simply for the officer's safety.
In a decision released yesterday, Salem District Court Judge Dunbar
Livingston agreed that police had the right to use the so-called "Kel"
wire to protect the officer and further found that Jennings did not need
to first obtain a warrant.
He did rule, however, that only Jennings would be able to testify about
the conversation between the two and not the officers who were listening
in the van parked outside.
Webb, 42, was arrested and charged last April, after an investigation
touched off by Webb's husband.
During a police visit to their home because of a domestic squabble, Webb's
husband showed officers a "dominatrix dungeon" in the basement, complete
with eyehooks and various whips and other devices.
It is not illegal to be a dominatrix in Massachusetts. But her husband
told police that when things got slow in that area, Webb would use the
Internet to solicit traditional sexual activity for a fee.
[continued]
To read this entire article, go to:
http://www.salemnews.com/punews/local_story_061083740.html
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