James Mozie hosted “parties” at his house six days a week, every day but Sunday. With the help of his family members, including his teenage sons, he sold food, alcohol, and drugs to his party guests. He also sold sex, providing young girls who would strip for tips and have sex for money. Many of them were teenagers and one was only thirteen. For them Mozie’s home was a den of degradation.
Mozie found the teenage girls he used by posing as a benevolent businessman who ran a modeling agency. He was anything but benevolent and no respectable business would have been named, as his was, “Pretty Pink Pussy Enterprises.” Mozie preyed on vulnerable girls, many of whom were teenage runaways with no money and no shelter. In return for alcohol, drugs, and a place to stay, the young girls became what he called his “merchandise.”
Mozie’s brothel business led to a ten-count indictment charging him with eight counts of child sex trafficking, one count of conspiring to commit child sex trafficking, and another count of producing child pornography. He was convicted on all ten counts and sentenced to life imprisonment. This is Mozie’s appeal in which he raises three challenges to his convictions and two challenges to his sentence.
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Thursday, May 22, 2014
"Mozie’s home was a den of degradation."
That's one of the opening lines in Judge Carnes' opinion in United States v. James Mozie. I'm sure you can bet how this one is going to come out.... But just in case there was any doubt, here's the whole intro:
Does anyone one else notice the conflict between these two sentences:
ReplyDeleteMozie found the teenage girls he used by posing as a benevolent businessman who ran a modeling agency. He was anything but benevolent and no respectable business would have been named, as his was, “Pretty Pink Pussy Enterprises.”
Under what circumstances could the owner of Pretty Pink Pusey Enterprises come off as a "benevolent businessman"
If it was a free strip bar where, like Publix, tipping is not allowed.
ReplyDeleteDavid continues his man crush on C.J. Carnes
ReplyDelete