SlaveSpace.com Shut Down by DOJ
Website owner convicted of "forced labor" and "sex trafficking"
By: Jed Nottingham
Posted: 05/23/2007
BALTIMORE -
Bondage Webmaster Glenn Marcus had his website SlaveSpace
shut down by the U.S. Department of Justice after being
convicted of "forced labor" and "sex-trafficking" charges for
his sadistic sexual encounters with one of his so-called
slaves.
On March 5, a judge found Marcus guilty of "sex trafficking"
and "forced labor," but Marcus was found not guilty of
distributing obscene materials. His attorneys responded by
filing a motion asking for a new trial or acquittal on
technical grounds, including that the sex-trafficking law was
not meant to apply to consensual BDSM activities.
On May 17, U.S. District Judge Allyne Ross ruled that the
conviction remains intact.
SlaveSpace.com relied on a novel business model: finding sex
slaves on the Internet, tying them up, whipping them, and
posting online photographs of the process. Membership to
SlaveSpace started at $20 for 30 days of access.
In 1998, a woman named Jodi (referred to in court documents
by her first name only) began researching BDSM — bondage,
dominance/discipline, submission/sadism, and masochism — and
found Marcus in an AOL chat room. He went by the screenname
"GMYourGod" and demanded absolute obedience.
Later that year, Jodi traveled to Maryland to meet Marcus
and a fellow sex slave named Joanna. He whipped Jodi, with
her consent, and carved the word "slave" on her stomach with
a knife. The next month, she sent a petition to Marcus saying
in part: "I am begging to serve you Sir, completely, with no
limitations."
In January 1999, Jodi moved to Maryland to live with Joanna,
and Marcus regularly visited them from his home on Long
Island. Occasionally the BDSM/sex sessions became severe:
Marcus once burned Jodi with cigarettes all over her body. He
put a Whiffle ball in her mouth and tried to sew her lips
shut with surgical needles. Other encounters were too graphic
to be described fully to the media.
Many of these incidents were photographed and uploaded to
SlaveSpace, which Jodi spent much of her time updating,
including writing diaries for the site. She referred to
herself as "pooch" or "poochie" and wrote lengthy, rambling
essays indicating, "I need to serve Him, to please Him. I not
only want to, I need to. I feel this so deeply, every single
part of me feels this."
At some point in August 2001, Jodi and Marcus became
estranged; but, according to Jodi, she felt unable to escape
the relationship because she was afraid of him. She later acknowledged staying in contact with him
through 2003, even going camping with him.
After Marcus would not remove the photos from the Internet
(he claimed to have a valid model release), Jodi contacted
the FBI. Federal prosecutors charged Marcus with sex
trafficking, forced labor, and dissemination of obscene
materials through an interactive computer service.
For the jury, consent was key: Did Jodi agree to the
sadistic activities at the time? A Village Voice article indicated: "It's possible that
she regretted her participation and re-wrote her role into an
unwilling victim, but it's equally likely that Marcus lost
touch with reality, believed he actually owned her, and
behaved accordingly."
Marcus, 53, is free until his June 5 sentencing, at which
time he could face 30 years to life in prison.