April 24, 2012

Cruise ship pervert’s sex assaults on kids

Vile Paul Trotter, 34, was a kids’ activity supervisor on Cunard luxury liners.

He filmed himself committing the sickening crimes aboard the Queen Elizabeth, Queen Mary 2 and Queen Victoria.

Cops said he preyed on youngsters over seven years in which he went on 295 voyages.

Trotter, of Pontefract, West Yorks, admitted 24 sex offenses involving victims aged between seven and 13 — mostly boys.

They included sexual assaults and making and possessing indecent images of children.

He was remanded in custody at Swindon Crown Court and will be sentenced next month.

Judge Douglas Field ordered Trotter to sign the sex offenders’ register.

After the case, police said cunning Trotter took victims to areas not covered by CCTV where he spanked and molested them. He was caught last August while he was living in Wiltshire.

Officers were tipped off that he had indecent images on his computer and found films of him abusing youngsters.

Horrified Cunard bosses are now working with the NSPCC to tighten up their child protection policies and procedures.

A spokesman said the company was “deeply shocked” by Trotter’s crimes.

Det Insp Nicki Davey, of Wiltshire Police, said a great deal of work went into identifying the children with the co-operation of Cunard.

April 20, 2012

Cunard cruise ship worker abused children in his care

A cruise ship worker yesterday admitted abusing 13 boys whilst supervising the children’s play area on board luxury Cunard liners.

Paul Trotter, 34, pleaded guilty to 24 sex offences, including taking and making indecent images of the children in his care.

He made films of himself abusing the boys, most of whom were under the age of 13, on board Cunard's flagship Queen Mary 2, its sister vessel Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Victoria.

The sexual offenses, which took place between November 2007 and August 2011, went unreported. But when police received a tip off that Trotter was in possession of indecent images, an examination of his computer led to the discovery of a catalogue of films and images taken aboard the ships.

Cunard President Peter Shanks said he was "deeply shocked" by such "appalling crimes".

He said Trotter had managed to avoid detection despite strict safeguarding procedures but admitted that areas of improvement had since been identified.

The children’s supervisor, appearing before Swindon Crown Court, admitted 12 counts of sexual assaulting a child under the age of 13, one count of sexual activity with a child under the age of 13, five counts of taking indecent images of a child, five of making indecent images of a child and one of possessing indecent images of a child.
He was remanded in custody until he is sentenced next month.

Judge Douglas Field told him: “Now that you have pleaded guilty to the charges, you will have to sign forms on the sexual offences register."

Trotter, from Pontefract, West Yorkshire, was arrested by detectives from Wiltshire's Child Abuse Investigation Unit last August whilst living in Swindon.

Speaking outside the court, Detective Inspector Nicki Davey said “a great deal of work” had gone into identifying the young victims, with the co-operation of Cunard.

She added: “Paul Trotter worked in a position of trust with children. He has abused the trust placed in him by the children and their parents.

"His admission of the charges will mean that the families do not have to experience the distress of a trial. We would like to acknowledge their co-operation and understanding following our visits to them."

Mr Shanks said Cunard had been working with the NSPCC to offer expert guidance and help to all families involved, describing Trotter’s actions as “despicable”

“Our own feelings of shock are secondary to those of the families directly impacted,” he said.

"As a parent myself I can clearly understand the emotional pain and anguish they have suffered and endured since they were contacted by the police investigating this case.”

He added: “Paul Trotter was able to avoid detection despite all of our youth staff, including Mr Trotter, having had their criminal records checked.

“We have closed circuit TV on board all of our ships, including all of the children's clubs, and our own rules dictate that a minimum of two members of staff are to be with children at all times.

"Our safeguards were strict but sadly did not stop this one individual from managing to circumvent the system and manipulate those around him.”

The company, part of the Carnival Corporation group and owners of the Costa Concordia which ran aground last year, asked the NSPCC to audit its policies and procedures.

As a result, Mr Shanks said it had changed its recruitment process, introduced new training and improved on board supervision of the youth centres.

"We will do everything in our power to put in place every possible safeguard for children,” he added.

March 20, 2012

Minor Assaulted & Strip-Searched by Employees of Carnival Cruise Lines

A lawsuit has come to light putting Carnival Cruise Lines under scrutiny regarding the strip search of a 17-year-old girl by Carnival employees aboard a vessel bound for Nassau, Bahamas. The victim, who remains anonymous aside from the initials J.G., was interrogated by three female employees when one of them found a small bag of “green leaves and substance” on the floor in an elevator that J.G. was riding in. The employees proceeded to coerce the victim to lift her dress, remove her feminine hygiene product, and then one of the employees visually investigated her vaginal region—all without ever contacting the underage victim’s parents. The process continued to be humiliating for the victim as she was ordered to urinate in front of the employees.

In addition to the three female employees performing the search, two male employees watched the entire process. Following the search, the victim was placed in Bahamian prison where she sustained further abuse. The victim took alternate means of transportation back to Florida with her mother once she was released from jail. The cruise ship sexual assault is being investigated and a lawsuit has been brought to Carnival. The victim has maintained that no marijuana was ever found on her at any point.

February 16, 2012

Former UK Employee of Cunard Arrested for Alleged Cruise Rape of a Minor

A former employee of the Cunard luxury line, previously arrested for possessing indecent images of children, has now been charged with sexually assaulting a child under age 13.

Paul Trotter, 34, had worked for Cunard onboard the Queen Mary 2 as well as its sister vessel, Queen Elizabeth, during the five years leading up to his arrest on August 12. Trotter was most recently a supervisor for an activity area for children aboard these cruise ships. Last summer Trotter was charged with making, possessing and distributing indecent images of children between December 2010 and January 2011, while employed by the cruise line. The ensuing six-month investigation has included a thorough examination of photographic and computer equipment at his home in the UK, but has progressed slowly due to the sensitive nature of the charges and the young children involved.

This latest allegation against Trotter, accusing him of raping a minor cruise passenger, has surfaced in just the last few weeks, and came from a tip from one of the parents of the victims. All of the families affected by the abuse reportedly also live in the UK.

Like Costa Cruises, which owns the recently shipwrecked Concordia, Cunard is also owned by Carnival Corporation. In its corporate statement, Cunard Line said, "We are deeply shocked by these allegations as the safety and well-being of our customers is of paramount importance to us. A thorough police investigation is underway, which we are supporting and cooperating with fully."

The Cunard statement also said the line is working closely with the National Society for the Protection of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), a U.K.-based charity that specializes in supporting children and families, to ensure that affected families and children are offered appropriate support. Cunard has also asked the NSPCC to independently review the facilities, policies and procedures of the cruise line for recommended improvements.

In his recently released eBook, Unsafe on the High Seas, author and maritime lawyer Charles Lipcon devotes all of Chapter Four to: "The Number One Crime on Cruise Ships: Sexual Assault". Lipcon reviews the prevalence of cruise rape at sea, which claims victims of both sexes and all ages. Between 2003-2006, 86% of the reported cruise ship crimes were sexual assaults. Since so many rapes are never reported, their actual incidence level onboard is even higher.

January 22, 2012

Cruise ship sex abuse claims probed

Detectives are investigating claims of sexual abuse against children alleged to have taken place onboard two of Cunard's most luxurious cruise liners.

It is claimed that a crew member committed assaults on the Queen Mary 2 and its sister vessel the Queen Elizabeth.

Wiltshire Police confirmed an investigation had been launched and they would be contacting all the parents who they needed to speak to.

The force also said it was working closely with the NSPCC and the children's charity had staff available to speak to parents if they wanted counselling or advice.

The Mail on Sunday reported that detectives started the investigation after a tip-off and that the unnamed man, who is under investigation, lived in Wiltshire.

A Wiltshire Police spokeswoman told the newspaper: "We can confirm we are investigating historical allegations of child abuse by an employee of Cunard cruise liners.

"Inquiries continue. The employee no longer works for the company."

And a force spokeswoman said: "We are unable to confirm any details at this time due to an ongoing investigation. However, we would like to reassure parents and the public that the police will be contacting all of the parents they need to speak to in the course of the investigation.

"If you are still concerned and would like some professional advice then you can call the dedicated NSPCC number 0800 980 4502. The NSPCC have advisors available who are aware of this matter and can assist parents if they have concerns about their children."

Cunard is part of the Carnival Corporation group - owners of the Costa Concordia, which ran aground off the coast of Italy - and operates the Queen Mary 2, the Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth cruise liners offering luxurious ocean travel.

January 14, 2012

Pool Attendant Allegedly Rapes 14-Year Old Girl Aboard a Royal Caribbean Cruise

It’s the fourth case of a cruise ship sexual assault on an underage girl to hit the news since November. Fabian Palmer, 25, a Royal Caribbean employee, has admitted to having sex with a 14-year-old girl while she was on a cruise with her family during Christmas week.

Palmer has been accused of luring the girl into a men’s locker room on board the Adventure of the Seas cruise ship and having sex with her. He told fellow employees that he thought the girl was 16 years old.
He reportedly first befriended the girl and her family before allegedly raping her. The assault was interrupted when another employee knocked on the locker room door. According to the Baltimore Sun, Palmer has now been indicted on a single count of sex abuse of a minor.
Palmer was born in Jamaica and lives in Malaga, Spain.

January 10, 2012

“Serial rapist” sentenced following sexual assault on a Carnival Cruise

Mobile, AL - Declared by his judge to be a “serial rapist”, 19-year-old Dylan Cole Bloodsworth of Gautier, Mississippi was sentenced to 10 years in prison for sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl on a Carnival cruise ship in March of 2011.

Bloodsworth has been implicated in two sexual assault cases against two different 13-year-old girls. In the case aboard the Carnival cruise ship Elation, Bloodsworth plead guilty to federal charges after allegedly tricking the girl into returning to his cabin to pick up a coat and then forcing her to have sex. He also faces charges in Mississippi for forcing the other 13-yr.old girl to have sex with him, after threatening to kill her and her family if she didn’t comply.

After hearing this federal case, U.S. District Judge William Steele categorized the accused as "a serial rapist who preys on underage girls”. The judge also ordered that Bloodsworth spend the rest of his life under the supervision of the U.S. Probation Office.

Statistics about the number of cruise ship sexual assaults vary widely since many incidents are not reported. CruiseRape.com notes that one large cruise line has reported an average of 2 rapes / sexual assaults per month on each of its ships.

January 6, 2012

Girl, 15, lured into cruise ship room and raped, authorities say

A 15-year-old girl's family Caribbean cruise turned into a holiday nightmare when she was lured into an on-board trap and raped, authorities said.

The suspects in the Iowa girl’s ordeal, Luiz Scavone, 20, of Sao Paolo, Brazil, and an unnamed 15-year-old boy, also of Brazil, were arrested Tuesday by authorities in Port Everglades, Fla., where the Royal Caribbean Allure of the Seas returned from the 10-day trip that set off on Christmas Day.

The girl's saga began on the trip's final night, when she met the teenage boy at Fuel, the ship's teen dance club.

The boy invited her to what he said was a party and escorted her to his room, authorities said. The man was waiting there, and both suspects prevented the girl from leaving and raped her, according to an arrest report.

Scavone is charged with a single count of committing a lewd and lascivious act. The boy is accused of lewd and lascivious battery and is being held at the Broward County Juvenile Assessment Center, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reported.

Royal Caribbean said the cruise liner offered the girl medical care and other attention, and is working with investigators, the Daily Mail reported.

Scavone, who has no criminal history, is being held without bond, the Sun Sentinel reported.

That's because authorities are concerned he could flee to Brazil, whose extradition laws make it unlikely he could ever be brought back to the United States.

Broward County Judge John Hurley said Scavone -- should he be granted bail -- would have to wear an ankle-bracelet monitor. He also ordered that Scavone turn in his passport. Scavone's bail status is to be discussed next week.

“People who are from Brazil can go to Brazil, and there's very little chance that they'll be brought back to the United States,” Hurley said, according to the Sun Sentinel.

Scavone’s attorney, David Raben, said his client comes from an excellent family and intends to plead not guilty, the Sun Sentinel reported.

January 4, 2012

Two arrested, accused of raping teen on cruise ship

Iowa 15-year-old was on 10-day cruise with parents

By Danielle A. Alvarez and Brittany Wallman, Sun Sentinel

A teenager said she was raped by two passengers while aboard a Port Everglades-based cruise ship, lured from a teen dance club to a private room in the wee hours of the morning.

A teenage boy and a young man were arrested at Port Everglades on Tuesday. Both live in Brazil, but are being held in Broward.

The teen and her family, who live in Iowa, set sail from Fort Lauderdale on Christmas for a 10-day cruise aboard Royal Caribbean's Allure of the Seas. The ship called at ports in St. Thomas, St. Maarten, St. Kitts and Haiti.

The teen told authorities that on the last night aboard she'd gone to a teen club called Fuel, and at about 1:45 a.m. was invited to a party by a 15-year-old boy. She said she thought she'd be meeting friends in his private room, but said that when she got inside, another man was present, and the two would not allow her to leave.

The 15-year-old said she told them she had a curfew and tried to leave, but said both males raped her. She reported it immediately to ship officials, according to arrest documents.

The adult suspect, 20-year-old Luiz Scavone, stood before judge John "Jay" Hurley at a first-appearance court hearing Wednesday, accused of one count of committing a lewd and lascivious act. Hurley placed Scavone's bond at $10,000 and ordered him to relinquish his Brazilian passport.

He was being held at the Broward County Main Jail on Wednesday pending an immigration hold.

The second defendant was charged with lewd and lascivious battery and taken to Broward's Juvenile Assessment Center, according to the probable cause affidavit.

Cynthia Martinez, the manager of Global Corporate Communications for Royal Caribbean, said the ship reported the incident immediately to the FBI and BSO, and allowed them aboard at the port to investigate.

"Royal Caribbean's guest care team offered the female guest a variety of assistance, including medical care and counseling,'' Martinez said in a written statement. She said Royal Caribbean "will continue to support law enforcement agencies during their investigation."

November 28, 2011

Carnival Cruise Waiter Arrested for Onboard Sex with a 14-yr-old Passenger

November 23, 2011 – Miami, FL

Another cruise ship rape involving an underage passenger has been reported in the news this week.

Kert Clyde Jordan, hired by Carnival Cruise Lines as a waiter on the Liberty cruise ship, has been charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old female passenger. Our Miami-based maritime law firm, Lipcon, Margulies, Alsina & Winkleman, P.A., has been retained to represent the young plaintiff.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Jordan (35) of Grenada, has remained in federal lockup since he was arrested last Saturday for “engaging in a sexual act with a person under the age of 16”. Vacationing with her family at the time of the incident, the alleged 14-yr-old victim didn’t mention the assault to her parents until they returned home. She later identified Jordan as the man who lured her into a Lido deck bathroom for sex while the Liberty was in international waters earlier this month.

Miami-based Carnival Cruise Lines is cooperating with the investigation. “Carnival has a zero tolerance policy for crime and we take any allegations of crime extremely seriously,” the company said in a statement.

“Serial rapist” sentenced following sexual assault on a Carnival Cruise

Mobile, AL—Nov. 17, 2011

Declared by his judge to be a serial rapist, 19-year-old Dylan Cole Bloodsworth of Gautier, Mississippi has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl on a Carnival cruise ship in March of this year.

Bloodsworth has been implicated in two sexual assault cases against two different 13-year-old girls. In the case aboard the Carnival cruise ship Elation, Bloodsworth plead guilty to federal charges after allegedly tricking the girl into returning to his cabin to pick up a coat and then forcing her to have sex. He also faces charges in Mississippi for forcing the other 13-yr.old girl to have sex with him, after threatening to kill her and her family if she didn’t comply.

After hearing this federal case, U.S. District Judge William Steele categorized the accused as "a serial rapist who preys on underage girls”. The judge also ordered that Bloodsworth spend the rest of his life under the supervision of the U.S. Probation Office.

Statistics about the number of cruise ship sexual assaults vary widely since many incidents are not reported. CruiseRape.com notes that one large cruise line has reported an average of 2 rapes / sexual assaults per month on each of its ships.

November 22, 2011

Carnival employee accused of sexual acts with a minor

A Carnival Cruise Lines employee has been charged with engaging in sexual acts with a minor, the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern United States said in a release Tuesday.

According to the criminal complaint filed, Kert Clyde Jordan, 35 of Grenada engaged in a sexual acts with a 14-year old while she was on vacation with her family aboard the Carnival Liberty.

Jordan – a waiter on the ship – allegedly engaged in sexual acts with the victim while the ship was sailing in international waters on November 4 and 5, according to the release.

The victim reported the incident to her family on her return home.

Carnival Liberty, CARNIVAL.COM/COURTESY
In a statement Wednesday a Carnival spokesman said the line has been actively cooperating with law enforcement authorities after learning of a sexual assault allegation. The crew member was arrested on Nov. 19 after the allegation was reported to the FBI.

“Carnival has a zero tolerance policy for crime and we take any allegations of crime extremely seriously. We continue to provide our full cooperation and support to federal law enforcement authorities. Our Care Team has reached out to offer support and express our utmost concern for our guest and her family during this difficult time,” the spokesman said.

A pre-trial detention hearing is set for Dec. 1 at 10 a.m. in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida in Miami.

Carnival Liberty sails from the Port of Miami on Western and Eastern Caribbean itineraries.

September 22, 2011

Sex-assault risk greater on liners than on land: study

People thinking of getting away for a relaxing holiday at sea are being warned to take extra care following revelations hundreds of women have been sexually assaulted on cruise ships.

The new research, jointly conducted by Canadian Professor Ross Klein and AUT head of hospitality Dr Jill Poulston, has been passed to the Herald as several luxury cruise ships are due to arrive in New Zealand for the Rugby World Cup.

Dr Poulston described the findings as "chilling", with one well-known cruise line, Royal Caribbean International, receiving more than 450 sexual abuse complaints during an eight year period.

The research, which analyzed data from FBI reports and three major cruise lines, found there was an unusually high incidence of sexual assaults and unwanted sexual contact on cruise ships.

Attackers were largely members of the crew, while the victims were predominantly female and of varying ages.

More than a third of the assaults occurred in passengers' own cabins - often after crew forced their way into the rooms.

Dr Poulston said the data used mostly involved American and Canadian incidents but warned the lessons learnt were just as relevant to New Zealanders.

"While cruise vacations are often sold as voyages of romance and adventure a significant number of passengers have very different and very unpleasant experiences," she said.

Based on data from Royal Caribbean International (RCI) and Carnival Cruise Lines, the research found "the rate of sex-related incidents on cruise ships is almost 50 per cent higher than the rate of sexual assault on land in Canada".

RCI - which has a ship arriving in New Zealand for the Rugby World Cup - did, however, show a considerable improvement, dropping its rate of alleged incidents from nearly 112 per 100,000 passengers in 2003 to 45 in 2005.

Dr Poulston believes one reason assaults are so high on cruise ships is the fact passengers arrive on board and let their guard down.

Examples of sexual assaults given in the research varied from a 14-year-old girl who had been kissed and inappropriately touched by a second officer through to a woman who was raped in her cabin by a steward.

A spokeswoman for Royal Caribbean International, which also owns Celebrity Cruises, said the company's highest priority was to ensure the safety and security of all its guests and crew members.

"This is always the case - whether it is a regular cruise or a chartered cruise like Rhapsody of the Seas' sailings during the Rugby World Cup in NZ."

She said the company carried more than 4.5 million guests and crew members in 2010 and reported 13 allegations of rape and 11 of sexual assault - not all of which were upheld.

A spokeswoman for Carnival Australia, which operates P&O Cruises Australia and New Zealand, said claims of sexual assault on board its ships were extremely rare and there was no data to suggest assaults of any kind occurred at a higher rate on its ships than on land.

"Our responsibility is to create an environment on board our ships where we do all we can to make sure people are safe, that behaviour is appropriate and our passengers enjoy their holiday."

OCEAN PREDATORS

Cruise ship attacks:

* New Year's Eve 2007: A 46-year-old Aucklander claimed she was raped on the Pacific Star by a man she had been drinking with. No charges laid.

* Australian mother Dianne Brimble died on a P&O cruise in 2002. Her naked body was found in the cabin of four men. She had overdosed on the date-rape drug Fantasy.

The research:

* Royal Caribbean International - 18 ships and 451 complaints of sexual assault and harassment between 1998 and 2005.

* Celebrity Cruises - 9 ships and an average of 16 complaints each year between 1998 and 2002.

* Carnival Cruise Lines - 92 sex-related incidents in the year to September 2008, including 48 of sexual contact, 40 of sexual assault and three of sexual harassment.

August 16, 2011

Mississippi man admits sexually abusing teen on cruise ship, trying to entice 2nd girl

By Brendan Kirby, Press-Register

MOBILE, Alabama — A Gautier man pleaded guilty here this afternoon to sexually abusing a teenage girl during a Carnival cruise ship in March and trying to solicit a different girl for sex the previous month.

Dylan Cole Bloodsworth, 19, pleaded guilty to sexual abuse of a child and enticement. The latter count carries a 10-year mandatory-minimum prison sentence.

Bloodsworth wore a jail uniform as he stood before Chief U.S. District Judge William Steele, a reflection of his home since his arrest in April. He answered, “Yes, sir,” when the judge asked if prosecutors could prove the allegations against him.

Bloodsworth’s plea was “blind,” meaning that he admitted guilt without a sentencing recommendation from the U.S. Attorney’s Office. But he will have broader rights to appeal the sentence.

“There’s not a real advantage to giving up rights to appeal,” defense attorney Benjamin Bowden said. “He’ll get treatment in the federal system.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Maria Murphy laid out the facts of both offenses. She said a 13-year-old girl was taking a cruise to Mexico in March with her friend and her friend’s mother. She met Bloodsworth on March 6 near the elevators onboard the Carnival Elation and agreed to meet him on the top deck after dinner.

The girl later agreed to go with Bloodsworth to get a jacket from his cabin, where he had sex with her, Murphy said.

An affidavit filed by the FBI stated that the girl told investigators that she did not want to have sex with Bloodsworth and that he hurt her. Bowden disputed that in an interview outside the courtroom.

“I don’t think there was force or coercion involved,” he said.

Either way, it was against the law because the girl was too young to legally consent to sex.

Investigators later seized Bloodsworth’s phone and discovered he had been in contact with a different 13-year-old girl between Feb. 13 and Feb. 28.

Murphy said Bloodsworth met the girl in Mobile at a Christian music concert, which the Grove Hill girl had attended with her church group. Bloodsworth “friended” the girl on Facebook and sent threatening texts, including questions about her virginity.

Bloodsworth tried to set up a meeting, Murphy said.

Bloodsworth still faces a sexual battery charge in Mississippi related to his alleged sexual assault of a different 13-year-old girl. Bowden said that to the best of his knowledge, prosecutors have not yet presented the case to a grand jury.

“Obviously, the goal is to get the state to agree to a concurrent sentence,” he said. “I feel that’s an adequate sentence.”

The Jackson County Sheriff’s Department arrested Bloodsworth on the sexual battery charge at his home March 7 as he was on the phone with an FBI agent regarding the Carnival incident.

August 1, 2011

The Sexual Assault Rate on Cruise Ships

According to a recent study by Ross Klein, a professor at Memorial University in Canada, FBI records show that the chance of becoming a sexual assault victim is 50% higher on a cruise ship than on land. While the study is based on Canadian cruise ship data, it is worth mentioning that cruise lines across the globe suffer from sexual assault and rape occurrences. The cases are not isolated either; sexual assault can occur between a crew member and a passenger, a passenger and a fellow passenger, or a crew member and another crew member.

To an extent, the danger lies in passengers who go on a cruise simply with the intention of drinking excessively and leaving their worries & responsibilities back on dry land. However, cruise ships have an undeniable responsibility to offer safety to their passengers. According to the Cruise Lines International Association, cruise ships are equipped with sexual assault evidence collection kits and thoroughly train medical staff on how to use them properly.

It's important that as a passenger you cruise with it "all in balance." Yes, indulge and enjoy yourself, but keep your wits about you as well. Utilize the buddy system and don't wander around alone--especially after alcohol consumption. While cruises are a great place to vacation with loved ones and have fun with friends, you want to avoid becoming the next victim of a cruise ship rape or sexual assault.

April 19, 2011

20 Ways to Lessen Your Risk of Sexual Assault

Sexual assault and rape victimizes every one of every demographic in every country. Two-thirds of the men, women and children who fall victim to such horrors have some sort of relationship with their attackers, who use everything from violence to coercion to get the power they want. Many myths about both rape and sexual assault unfairly persist to this day, making the lives of its many victims just that much harder. Though April is Sexual Assault Prevention Month, every day of the year should be dedicated to chipping away at the roots of this serious issue. Taking the time to understand how to minimize the risk makes a great start, however.

There will always be situations when even the most cautious of individuals will find themselves victimized. Just because viable precautions exist does not mean anyone traumatized by rape or sexual assault "had it coming," as extenuating circumstances or mistaken trust can override awareness and preparedness. The only guilty parties here are the men and women who think it perfect acceptable to violate another’s body, either through violent or emotionally manipulative means.

1.) Enroll in self-defense classes: Nearly every major city — and plenty of suburbs — hosts at least a few different self-defense and martial arts schools, as do many colleges and universities. Try to find one within a viable price range and workable schedule and put forth the effort to take regular classes. Make sure to also thoroughly research both the businesses and the different strategies they teach before making any commitment. Even if participants never have to put their newfound skills to use (and here’s hoping they don’t!), self-defense is one of the most valuable investments individuals make for their own safety and peace of mind.

2.) Carry a weapon: Consider supplementing those self-defense classes by keeping a weapon concealed somewhere, like a purse or underneath a jacket. For those uncomfortable with the thought of owning a gun, options such as pepper spray, mace, stun guns or batons and plenty more provide a satisfactory level of protection as well. No matter which one proves best, however, anyone owning such devices must absolutely familiarize themselves with proper care, use, maintenance and (of course) legalities. Particularly when looking into gun ownership.

3.) Travel in packs: It’s not always possible to step out with a few friends in tow, but take advantage of any situations where it is. Predators feed on vulnerability, as assault and rape have everything to do with power and almost nothing to do with sex. A small group, particularly one with a little self-defense training and/or weapons in the ranks, will certainly make each member feel far safer than if they were to travel alone. This strategy works well for parties, too, as a throng of trusted pals can look out for one another and intervene when it looks like something ugly might happen.

4.) Never leave a drink alone: When navigating a party or bar, always keep drinks close at hand. Never set them down before going to the bathroom or (when applicable) heading outside for a smoke. Assailants may take advantage of the situation by slipping in drugs meant to disorient and disengage. Either drain a drink before heading off or leave it in the hands of a trusted friend who will reliably babysit it.

5.) Never accept drinks from strangers: As tempting as free drinks inevitably sound, taking them from unfamiliar individuals puts one at risk for drugging and sexual assault, rape or something even worse. When out with new friends, make sure to watch them, the bartender or the waitron pour the beverage in question to make sure it doesn’t end up spiked. There’s no need to be vocal or otherwise obvious about it, as doing so might offend genuinely good people, but one should always pay close attention to the situation at hand. A sharp eye could mean the difference between safety and violence.

6.) Don’t give in to pressure: Sometimes, individuals one finds attractive and romantically appealing enough to try and date commit sexual assault. They take advantage of interest to try to pressure potential partners into scenarios they may not necessarily find comfortable or safe. Stay strong and speak up whenever he or she starts attempting to initiate unwanted sexual or romantic acts; most importantly, remember that engaging anything that falls within the personal comfort zone should never be considered permission to ramp up the activity. It is not the victim’s fault if the criminal takes things too far, regardless of their physical connectivity up to that point.

7.) Be confident: As mentioned earlier, sexual assailants and rapists tend to pick their victims based on perceived (though not necessarily true) weakness and inferiority over any other factor. Whether out alone or amongst friends, projecting an air of confidence and purpose will dissuade them from perpetuating violence and a complete disrespect of body autonomy. Even without a definitive destination or goal in mind, make sure to step outside with escape and contingency plans just in case. Doing so will only contribute further to displaying a self-assured carriage.

8.) Always remain aware of surroundings: It doesn’t matter if a location is as familiar as a home apartment complex or as foreign as a brand new city — anyone hoping to lessen his or her chances of victimization by sexual assault or rape must always stay alert. Only leaving in one ear bud when listening to music makes one particularly effective strategy. Pay close attention to all stimuli and peace out or call the authorities when things start looking suspicious. There’s no reason to stick around when anyone’s safety gets called into question.

9.) Try to avoid remote locations whenever possible: There may be times when hanging around an isolated location is unavoidable, and when these do arise it’s best to keep most of the other tips here in mind. But sticking to busier areas, even when alone, puts help and emergency assistance at a much closer range. Likewise, try not to spend time with strangers or unfamiliar individuals in such areas as well, even if wanting to make friends. It’s much safer to grow acquainted with people in more crowded businesses first, before moving on to homes and obscure spots.

10.) Don’t accept rides from strangers: Conversely, don’t give rides to strangers, either. The risk of sexual assault, rape, murder or theft increases exponentially in such situations. When embarking on jaunts that could potentially end in stranding, such as hikes, make sure to bring along a small emergency preparedness kit. Also alert family and friends of the intended path or itinerary before embarking, taking the time to map out the details of what to do and whom to send in the event of a crisis. Always keep cash on hand in case a taxi or public transportation proves necessary.

11.) Don’t get weighed down: When traveling alone, make sure to not get bogged down with packages or equipment that might hinder movement. Assailants, acquaintances or strangers, may try to take advantage of this precarious situation. Such things prevent victims from not only bolting as quickly as they need to, but accessing any weapons on their person as well. Try to coordinate heavy shopping or moving with trusted friends and family whenever possible, saving the lighter, easier-to-ditch stuff for solo jaunts.

12.) Keep the phone charged: Invest in an emergency charger if necessary, as a full battery provides peace of mind for the weary traveler. Enough juice to call for help could make all the difference in the world when suspicious situations arise. Keep phones plugged in at work or home whenever possible, or at least top them off a little bit before heading out. Some people may even like the idea of keeping extra batteries on hand just in case.

12.) Never feel obligated or guilty: Going on a date does not oblige either party to kiss. Kissing does not oblige either party to grope. Groping does not oblige either party to more foreplay. And so forth. Nobody should ever make anyone feel as if they must push everything to the next level, and potential victims should never think they have to go through if something doesn’t seem comfortable or right. If the perpetrators retaliate somehow, at no point should their victims ever, for any reason, blame themselves for what happened. It isn’t their fault the one they’re with doesn’t respect their boundaries and personal decisions.

14.) Go with a buddy system at parties: Groups of friends hitting up crowded or unfamiliar parties might want to streamline their check-ins by using the buddy system. Rather than keeping an eye out for everyone, individuals partner up and focus on keeping each other safe. Some may like the idea of setting up regular times to meet and make sure everything’s going alright. But no matter what arrangement proves most comfortable, the paired up at least have someone trustworthy to monitor their drinks during bathroom runs.

15.) Moderate alcohol consumption: There’s no shame in drinking, nor is there any shame in occasional tipsiness. But too much alcohol or other intoxicants may cloud judgment and make it easier for sexual predators to take advantage of the situation. Before going out drinking, set a personal limit and do not budge from exceeding it, no matter the amount of pressure friends may place. Taking such precautions will help maintain alertness, awareness and keep judgment as sharp as possible without compromising a good time.

16.) Go on group dates: Dating is one of the most stressful and potentially dehumanizing experiences any human will ever encounter, and the potential for sexual assault only makes it all the more anxiety-inducing. One way to gauge a prospective partner is to arrange a group date with some friends as opposed to going out alone. Not only will it alleviate some of the tension, such an arrangement also serves as a great way to get some outside opinions. Trusted friends see things the besotted won’t and will hopefully catch some red flags before they become a problem.

17.) Report suspicious figures: Some, but not all, rapists or sexual assailants size up their potential victims through verbal taunts. Others prefer following, leering or other means of intimidation. If possible, call or try to find a nearby security guard or law enforcement official and report the threatening individual. Problems in the workplace should be reported to the HR department. Their intervention and cooperation will help prevent a crime before it occurs.

18.) Don’t go home if followed: The staggering majority of sexual assaults and rapes are committed by someone the victim knows, but that doesn’t mean precautions should not be taken when dealing with strangers. When being followed by a stranger either on foot or in a car, don’t let her or him know where home is. Instead, head for the nearest safe area and phone for help. Even if it seems as if the individual has been shaken off, make sure to find a more secure route home — or stay with a trusted friend, partner or family member instead.

19.) Bystander intervention: Most people in the world aren’t horrible, and there’s times when even the most cautious, aware individuals find themselves threatened by violence, sexual or otherwise. Don’t allow problematic situations to escalate by refusing to ask, scream or call for assistance. Good Samaritans may very well intervene and help bring the assailant to justice. Or at least call in some people who will.

20.) Educate the world: Sexual assault and rape are unfortunately present in every nation of the world, no matter how "civilized" they think themselves. Education remains the most effective method to preventing both atrocities from occurring. Volunteer with an organization such as Take Back the Night or a local shelter, or donate money to their efforts. Organize programs and events meant to spread awareness of prevention strategies. There’s plenty of things one can do to address the root causes of these serious issues, and even the smallest of contributions still helps improve society.

Originally Posted at: www.nursingdegree.net

April 16, 2011

Man accused of cruise ship crime to remain jailed

A federal judge has ruled that a Mississippi man accused of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl on a Carnival cruise ship must remain jailed until the case is resolved.

The Mobile Press-Register reports that Chief U.S. District Judge William Steele overturned a lower court's decision to allow 19-year-old Dylan Cole Bloodsworth of Gautier, Miss., to be on house arrest with electronic monitoring.

Steele said that Bloodsworth should be incarcerated to ensure the public's safety.

Bloodsworth's lawyer, Benjamin Bowden, said they are disappointed, but have to abide by the judge's decision.

Steele wrote that the suspect and the girl did not know each other until they met on the cruise ship. An FBI affidavit states that they met March 6, the day before the Carnival Elation cruise ship returned to Mobile.

Originally Posted at: www.miamiherald.com

Teen accused in cruise ship sex assault to remain jailed

A federal judge has ruled a Mississippi man accused of sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl on a Carnival cruise ship must remain jailed until the case is resolved.

Chief U.S. District Judge William Steele overturned a lower court’s decision to allow Dylan Cole Bloodsworth, 19, of Gautier, to be under house arrest with electronic monitoring.

Steele said Bloodsworth should be incarcerated to ensure the public’s safety.

Bloodsworth's lawyer, Benjamin Bowden, said they are disappointed, but have to abide by the judge’s decision.

Steele wrote Bloodsworth and the girl did not know each other until they met on the cruise ship. An FBI affidavit states they met March 6, the day before the Carnival Elation cruise ship returned to Mobile.

Originally Posted at: www.sunherald.com

April 13, 2011

Gautier man accused of cruise ship sexual assault called 'serial child predator' by prosecutor

Prosecutors today asked a U.S. district judge to overturn a magistrate judge's decision to grant pretrial release to Gautier man accused of sexually assaulting a cruise ship passenger.

In her court filing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Maria Murphy called defendant Dylan Cole Bloodsworth, 19, a "dangerous serial child predator" who confessed to having sex with a 13-year-old girl in March aboard the Mobile-based Carnival Elation. He also admitted to having sex with two other minors and forcing a fourth girl to have sex, according to the filing.

Benjamin Bowden, Bloodsworth's attorney, said that U.S. Magistrate Judge Katherine "Kit" Nelson laid down strict conditions that will ensure that the public will be protected while the case proceeds.

"It was clear that he was not going to be left alone," he said. "He's got good family support. His mother will make sure, his stepfather will make sure, that he follows the letter of the judge's order. It is not going to be a problem."

Nelson unsealed the criminal complaint today, giving the public its first detailed look at the allegations that led to Bloodsworth’s arrest last week.

According to an affidavit filed by the FBI, a 13-year-old girl met Bloodsworth on March 6 — the day before the ship returned to Mobile — when she was on her way to dinner and made plans to spend time with him later that evening. He asked how old she was, and she told him 13, according to the affidavit.

According to the FBI's account, other passengers told authorities that Bloodsworth spent a great deal of time in a section of the ship called Circle C, which is reserved for children between the ages of 12 and 14. The affidavit alleges that he admitted to having sex with the girl after inviting her back to a cabin he shared with his sister and stepbrother, although neither sibling was present at the time.

Although Bloodsworth told investigators that the sex was consensual, the girl told the FBI that she did not want to have sex and that he hurt her, according to Murphy’s motion.

Bloodsworth also faces a sexual battery charge in Mississippi involving a different 13-year-old girl that he met through the online social networking site Facebook.

According to the prosecution’s motion in the federal case, Bloodsworth "friended" the girl even though he did not know her. He then began to send text messages to her and showed up at her house when she was playing with a soccer ball.

Murphy wrote that the girl rebuffed his efforts to kiss her and go inside her house, but that he returned around Feb. 13 and sent her a text message threatening to harm her and her family if she did not leave the house to meet him.

Bloodsworth then drove the girl to a nearby location and raped her, according to the motion.

Bloodsworth admitted to the FBI that he coerced the girl into having sex with him and also confessed to having sex with another girl, who is in seventh grade. He also confessed to forcing a former girlfriend to have sex with after he became angry with her, according to the motion.

Murphy indicated that Mississippi authorities are investigating the other two cases and expect to file additional criminal charges. Bowden noted that his client had not yet been charged in those cases, however.

"As I told the judge, an investigation is just that — an investigation," he said.

Murphy wrote that investigators found from Bloodsworth's phone that he had sent text messages to dozens of other girls, following the "same manipulative pattern," although authorities have not determined how many of them are minors.

"In short, Bloodsworth should not be given another opportunity to harm another child," Murphy wrote.

Originally Posted at: blog.al.com

September 30, 2010

Cruise bartender sentenced to prison for teen's rape

A cruise ship bartender charged with having sex with a 14-year-old girl who was vacationing with her parents was sentenced to just over three years in federal prison Thursday.

Hery Krispiyanto, 30, was sentenced in Orlando federal court for the one count of sexual abuse of a minor he pleaded guilty to in June.

In addition to the prison time, Krispiyanto was ordered to pay about $4,360 in restitution.

Court records said the teenager, identified as "T.W.," was aboard the Carnival Freedom, which left from the Port of Fort Lauderdale in April 2009.

While on the cruise, T.W. and her parents became acquainted with Krispiyanto.

T.W. told investigators she was alone on the upper deck of the ship one night when Krispiyanto walked up behind her, grabbed her arm and pulled her into a nearby employee-only room and closed the door, court records said.

Krispiyanto had sex with the girl, and then told her to leave, his plea agreement said.

T.W. reported the incident to her mother in August, and it was then reported to the FBI. He was indicted in Orlando federal court in May.

Originally Posted at: www.orlandosentinel.com

September 28, 2010

Passenger admits to sexually assaulting young girl on Disney ship

A New York man has admitted to sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl while aboard a Disney cruise ship.

USA TODAY sister paper the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle today reports Lucas Wickes, 25, of Rochester, pleaded guilty in federal court to abusive sexual contact on the high seas, a felony that carries a penalty of up to 10 years in prison.

The guilty plea, before U.S. District Judge David Larimer, comes nearly four years after the incident, which occurred on the 1,750-passenger Disney Wonder on Jan. 1, 2007 soon after it left Port Canaveral, Fla.

The Democrat & Chronicle says a criminal complaint alleged that Wickes encountered the girl as she left the Wonder's teen club and ordered her to accompany him. The girl, who said she believed he was a security officer, followed him to the rear of the ship, where she was assaulted, the news outlet says.

The Democrat & Chronicle says Wickes admitted to federal agents that he had sexual contact with the girl but had said it was consensual. He also said he believed the girl was 17, the news outlet says.

Originally Posted at: www.travel.usatoday.com

August 19, 2010

Miami FBI Investigates Alleged Rape Case on Cruise Ship

RIVIERA BEACH, FL --- Miami FBI is investigating an alleged rape on the Celebration Cruise Line.

Investigators responded to the ship when it docked Monday morning.

Reports say passengers were delayed upon arrival at the port until the FBI was able to gather a list of names for everyone onboard.

At this moment no arrests have been made.

Originally Posted at: www.cbs12.com

FBI investigates rape aboard Bahamas Celebration cruise ship

FBI officials are investigating allegations of a rape aboard the Bahamas Celebration cruise ship, FBI Miami spokeswoman Judy Orihuela confirmed Thursday.

A 52-year-old woman reported she was forced to have sex with a male passenger on a ping-pong table on the ship’s deck at about 4 a.m. Monday, according to a Palm Beach Post report.

Celebration Cruise Line sails from the Port of Palm Beach to Grand Bahamas, offering frugal travelers two-night cruises or four-night cruise-and-stay packages.

No arrests have been made, Orihuela said.

Glenn Ryerson, spokesman for Celebration Cruise Line, said the cruise line reported the incident and cooperated with investigators at the Port of Palm Beach Monday morning. “We have not heard back from them [FBI officials] at this point,” Ryerson said Thursday.

Passengers disembarking the ship Monday morning were delayed a couple of hours as FBI officials boarded the ship and conducted their investigation, Ryerson said.

News of the alleged incident comes on the heels of a new law, signed by President Obama late last month, aiming to increase safety on cruise ships and requiring cruise lines to report allegations of serious crime to the FBI. (For more information, visit my previous blog item on this.) Prior to the new law, cruise lines voluntarily reported deaths, assaults, thefts and other incidents to the FBI.

The Sun Sentinel obtained copies of these cruise line incident reports filed from December 2007 through October 2008 and created a searchable database that makes this information available to the public for the first time.


Originally Posted at: www.sun-sentinel.com

August 11, 2010

Long-sought suspect in sexual assault case found working on cruise ship

A man accused of sexual assault who has been on a "most wanted" list in California for nearly a decade has been found working on a Carnival cruise ship operating out of the state -- an incident likely to raise questions about hiring procedures at cruise lines.

The Oakland Tribune reports Bulgarian Kaloyan Kaloyanov, 36, was taken into custody last week on the 3,006-passenger Carnival Splendor on suspicion of sexually assaulting a gymnastics student in 2000, when he worked as a gymnastics instructor.

Police in Fremont, Calif., have been seeking Kaloyanov for eight years, and he has been on the department's "most wanted" list longer than any other person, according to the Tribune.

The Carnival Splendor sails voyages to Mexico out of Long Beach, Calif.

According to the Tribune, police say Kaloyanov abandoned his wife and daughter and fled the country in 2002 after being questioned during the department's initial investigation into a rape case. Police say Kaloyanov admitted to having sexual relations with the 15-year-old female gymnast during the questioning but was not arrested at the time, according to the news outlet.

The Tribune quotes police as saying the girl, now 25, told authorities that Kaloyanov sexually assaulted her twice while training for competitions.

The Tribune says a Google search during a review of cold cases led police to a Facebook page maintained by Kaloyanov, which in turn tipped them off to his new home on the cruise ship. The news outlet says he has worked on Carnival ships both as a fitness instructor and, most recently, as a manager of an onboard hair salon.

A spokesman for Carnival tells USA TODAY that while Kaloyanov worked on the Carnival Splendor, he wasn't an employee of the cruise line. As a staffer in the ship's spa, Kaloyanov worked for Steiner, the outside company that runs spas for a number of cruise lines including Carnival.

"He was employed by Steiner, which is responsible for background checks on (its) employees," Carnival spokesman Tim Gallagher says. "We are told he worked on several other cruise lines before his Carnival assignment."

Gallagher says Kaloyanov briefly worked on a Carnival ship in 2006 and then returned for longer stints on Carnival ships in 2009 and 2010.

Gallagher says Carnival has cooperated fully with authorities on the matter.

"When law enforcement contacted our shore side security department about this individual, we confirmed his identity, then shipboard security took him into custody and held him under guard until the Carnival Splendor returned to Long Beach where he was turned over to local authorities."

A spokesperson for Steiner could not be reached for comment.

Cruise Loggers, share your thoughts below.

UPDATE, Thursday, 2:45 PM ET: AOL Travel News is reporting that spa company Steiner says it performed a background check on Kaloyanov before hiring him six years ago in Bulgaria, and the background check did not turn up evidence of his presence on a 'most wanted' list in California.

"We have a very clean background check on him," Steiner chief operating officer Glenn Fusfield tells the news outlet.

AOL Travel also reports Kaloyanov has worked on a Disney cruise ship in recent years in addition to Carnival ships.


Originally Posted at:www.travel.usatoday.com

Long-sought suspect in sexual assault case found working on cruise ship

A man accused of sexual assault who has been on a "most wanted" list in California for nearly a decade has been found working on a Carnival cruise ship operating out of the state -- an incident likely to raise questions about hiring procedures at cruise lines.

The Oakland Tribune reports Bulgarian Kaloyan Kaloyanov, 36, was taken into custody last week on the 3,006-passenger Carnival Splendor on suspicion of sexually assaulting a gymnastics student in 2000, when he worked as a gymnastics instructor.

Police in Fremont, Calif., have been seeking Kaloyanov for eight years, and he has been on the department's "most wanted" list longer than any other person, according to the Tribune.

The Carnival Splendor sails voyages to Mexico out of Long Beach, Calif.

According to the Tribune, police say Kaloyanov abandoned his wife and daughter and fled the country in 2002 after being questioned during the department's initial investigation into a rape case. Police say Kaloyanov admitted to having sexual relations with the 15-year-old female gymnast during the questioning but was not arrested at the time, according to the news outlet.

The Tribune quotes police as saying the girl, now 25, told authorities that Kaloyanov sexually assaulted her twice while training for competitions.

The Tribune says a Google search during a review of cold cases led police to a Facebook page maintained by Kaloyanov, which in turn tipped them off to his new home on the cruise ship. The news outlet says he has worked on Carnival ships both as a fitness instructor and, most recently, as a manager of an onboard hair salon.

A spokesman for Carnival tells USA TODAY that while Kaloyanov worked on the Carnival Splendor, he wasn't an employee of the cruise line. As a staffer in the ship's spa, Kaloyanov worked for Steiner, the outside company that runs spas for a number of cruise lines including Carnival.

"He was employed by Steiner, which is responsible for background checks on (its) employees," Carnival spokesman Tim Gallagher says. "We are told he worked on several other cruise lines before his Carnival assignment."

Gallagher says Kaloyanov briefly worked on a Carnival ship in 2006 and then returned for longer stints on Carnival ships in 2009 and 2010.

Gallagher says Carnival has cooperated fully with authorities on the matter.

"When law enforcement contacted our shore side security department about this individual, we confirmed his identity, then shipboard security took him into custody and held him under guard until the Carnival Splendor returned to Long Beach where he was turned over to local authorities."

A spokesperson for Steiner could not be reached for comment.

UPDATE, Thursday, 2:45 PM ET: AOL Travel News is reporting that spa company Steiner says it performed a background check on Kaloyanov before hiring him six years ago in Bulgaria, and the background check did not turn up evidence of his presence on a 'most wanted' list in California.

"We have a very clean background check on him," Steiner chief operating officer Glenn Fusfield tells the news outlet.

AOL Travel also reports Kaloyanov has worked on a Disney cruise ship in recent years in addition to Carnival ships.

Originally Posted at: www.travel.usatoday.com

July 18, 2010

SA woman hires US firm to pursue rape case

A South African beauty therapist who was allegedly raped while working on a cruise liner in the Caribbean has engaged a US law firm to fight her case.

Port Elizabeth-born Taryn, 30, who requested that her surname not be used, said she was forced to leave the industry after her ordeal aboard the liner owned by Royal Caribbean International.

She now works for an airline in the United Arab Emirates.

This week she hired Lipcon, Margulies, Alsina & Winkelman, which specialises in maritime law and cases involving passengers and crew injured on ships worldwide.

Taryn said she was raped by a fellow South African, a fitness instructor, and sent home after reporting the incident.

"I believe they sent me home to hide the case and protect their reputation - they didn't care about my wellbeing.

"The easy part was to get over the physical rape, the hard part was, and still is, trying to convince myself that I did the right thing by reporting the incident, despite being made to feel like I was in the wrong, despite still feeling like no justice was done and despite having no one but my family and friends to support me emotionally."

Taryn said after she reported the matter, the cruise captain told her: "There are two stories, his and yours, but his sounds more believable, because you had been drinking."

She said she was advised to drop the matter or face an FBI investigation into the incident since the alleged rape had taken place on a US-registered vessel. After she decided to drop the matter, "I was given two hours to pack my bags and say goodbye."

Speaking from Miami, Florida, lawyer Charles Lipcon said he had handled several cases involving South Africans.

"Some crew members, especially the captains and other senior officials, have been blackmailing female cadets and crew members to have sex with them or face a miserable life at sea."

June 29, 2010

New York man fined $5,000 for sexual assault on cruise ship

A New York man yesterday admitted sexually assaulting a teenage girl on the cruise ship the Norwegian Dawn while he was at dinner with his wife and son.

James Arismends, a 53-year-old insurance salesman, was fined $5,000 after he was accused of inappropriately touching the 18-year-old with his foot under a dinner table.

The father-of-two pleaded guilty to sexual assault when he appeared at Magistrates' Court, but insisted he was only resting his foot on the girl's knee and had no idea it was making her uncomfortable.

Crown counsel Robert Welling said that Arismends met the victim and her family at Tobacco Bay on June 23 and after returning to the cruise ship, the families agreed to have dinner together. During the meal, Arismends foot started to touch the victim's leg.

Mr. Welling said: "At that point, she thought it was an accident. When it happened again, she apologised. It happened again, and so she said she gave him a look.

"The defendant then slid down his chair, and began to feel her legs with his foot. She crossed her legs to discourage him, but he tried to use his feet to pry open her legs." Mr. Welling said Arismends had his arms around his wife and son.

The victim left the table during dessert and told Police that she returned to her room feeling violated and cried.

Mr. Welling said Arismends later called the victim in her room to apologise, saying, "that was crazy," and giggling.

Kenneth Savoury, representing Arismends, said that his client was remorseful and had no idea that the victim was feeling uncomfortable.

"He rested his foot on her knee," he said. "Perhaps he left it there a bit long, but he was under the impression she was comfortable with it at the time. It is very uncharacteristic of him, and he wants to put it behind him."

Senior Magistrate Archibald Warner fined Arismends $5,000, saying: "It can't be put down to just an accidental rubbing of the foot. It was not just resting, it was deliberate and prolonged."

June 25, 2010

Man charged with fondling boy during cruise

PITTSBURGH -- Federal investigators say a western Pennsylvania man charged with molesting a boy on a cruise ship admitted he took the trip so he could have a sexual encounter with a child.

A federal judge in Pittsburgh ordered 71-year-old Sherwood Stevenson, of Clinton, to remain in custody Wednesday until trial. He's charged with traveling with intent to engage in illegal sexual conduct.

Authorities say Stevenson went into the children's area during a December cruise and fondled a 6-year-old boy in a hot tub. The FBI says surveillance footage shows Stevenson putting his arm around the boy and pulling him onto his lap.

Defense attorney Marketa Sims says her client's statement isn't reliable because he described a much older boy to police. She says Stevenson takes antidepressant and anti-psychotic medication.

A trial date has not been set.

June 24, 2010

Royal Caribbean statement on alleged fondling incident on cruise ship

Royal Caribbean released the following statement today about the alleged fondling incident in December on the line's Liberty of the Seas:

"Royal Caribbean maintains a zero tolerance policy regarding any criminal activity onboard our ships. Any allegation of a crime is treated seriously and reported to law enforcement.

On December 18, a guest onboard Liberty of the Seas brought Mr. Stevenson's alleged inappropriate behavior to the attention of a crew member. Royal Caribbean's onboard security immediately responded and preserved information and potential evidence that could be helpful to law enforcement. The incident was immediately reported to the FBI and the Miami-Dade police department, and Mr. Stevenson was confined to his stateroom.

On December 20, the ship was met at the Port of Miami by the FBI and Miami-Dade Police Department officers who conducted an investigation onboard. We will continue to support law enforcement agencies during their prosecution of this allegation."

Man Sexually Abused Boy In Cruise Ship Jacuzzi

A Beaver County man is accused of sexually abusing a young boy in a cruise ship Jacuzzi.

Federal prosecutors used surveillance video of the suspect to hold Sherwood Stevenson, 71, of Clinton for trial.

Investigators said Stevenson booked a cruise on the Liberty of the Seas in December. They said the ship was about 30 nautical miles off of Cuba when he was caught on camera sliding into a children’s Jacuzzi in the ship's soak zone.

Police said Stevenson admitted to fondling a 6-year-old boy and attempted to fondle a second child in an adjoining Jacuzzi.

Federal prosecutors said Stevenson has a criminal past with other child sexual abuse charges.

During a hearing Wednesday, prosecutors outlined a number of local incidents involving Stevenson and children.

Police said he was charged for sneaking into a boy’s locker room at Hopewell High School and taking a shower. Police said Stevenson also snuck into another locker room in Marco Island, Fla.

Stevenson's defense attorney asked for electronic monitoring, claiming her client has a long history of mental issues.

But the federal magistrate ordered Stevenson to stay in jail until his trial.

June 3, 2010

Cruise ship bartender accused of raping teenage girl

ORLANDO - A cruise ship bartender is accused of sexually abusing a 14-year-old passenger in April 2009.

According to court documents, the teenage girl said 30-year-old Hery Krispiyanto pulled her into a room aboard a Carnival ship, touched her inappropriately and raped her. The girl told her mother in August and the alleged incident was reported to the FBI.

Krispiyanto is being held without bond in Seminole County jail. His attorney, Peter Warren Kenny, noted the case is in its early stages.

Carnival said in an e-mail its top priority is guest safety and security, and it has fully cooperated in the investigation. Carnival said the alleged incident occurred aboard the Carnival Freedom in April 2009 and it was not reported to the cruise line by the girl or her family.

June 1, 2010

Bartender Accused Of Abuse Aboard Cruise Ship

A cruise ship bartender is accused of sexually abusing a 14-year-old passenger last April.

According to court documents, the teenage girl said 30-year-old Hery Krispiyanto pulled her into a room aboard a Carnival ship, touched her inappropriately and raped her. The girl told her mother in August and the alleged incident was reported to the FBI.

Krispiyanto is being held without bond in Seminole County jail. His attorney, Peter Warren Kenny, noted the case is in its early stages.

Carnival said in an e-mail it's top priority is guest safety and security, and it has fully cooperated in the investigation. Carnival said the alleged incident occurred aboard the Carnival Freedom in April 2009 and it was not reported to the cruise line by the girl or her family.

May 31, 2010

Carnival cruise ship bartender accused of raping teen to make Orlando court appearance

A bartender on a Carnival Cruise Line ship accused of raping a 14-year-old girl who was vacationing with her parents will make an appearance in Orlando federal court this week.

Hery Krispiyanto, 30, will be arraigned Wednesday on a count of sex abuse of a minor. He was indicted last week.

Court records said the teenager, identified as "T.W.," was aboard Carnival's Freedom ship, which left from the Port of Fort Lauderdale in April 2009.

While on the cruise, T.W. and her parents became acquainted with Krispiyanto. T.W. said Krispiyanto was nice to her and commented that she did not look 14.

T.W. told investigators she was alone on the upper deck of the ship one night when Krispiyanto walked up behind her, grabbed her arm and pulled her into a nearby employee-only room and closed the door, records said.

Krispiyanto began to touch T.W. inappropriately, and she repeatedly told him to stop, court records said. T.W. said she tried to fight him, but Krispiyanto raped her, the criminal complaint said.

T.W. reported the incident to her mother in August, and it was then reported to the FBI.

When an FBI agent questioned Krispiyanto in April, he first denied the incident, records said. But after a polygraph exam indicated Krispiyanto was being deceptive, he confessed to having sex with T.W. aboard the cruise ship in a pantry area, court records said.

Krispiyanto is being held at the Seminole County Jail.

November 11, 2009

Woman 'buzzed' night of alleged cruise ship attack

A Kansas City woman who claims a headwaiter for a Princess Cruise Lines ship sexually assaulted her when she was a passenger told jurors today in Los Angeles federal court she was "buzzed" the night of the alleged attack.

Portuguese national Jorge Manuel Teixeira, 39, is charged in U.S. District Court in downtown Los Angeles with aggravated sexual assault. Federal law allows for the prosecution of those accused of attacking U.S. citizens on the high seas.

In court today, the alleged victim told jurors she was traveling last March with her grandmother on a 14-day Princess cruise between Fort Lauderdale and Los Angeles.

During the trip, she said, Teixeira asked to meet her for "a date" in one of the ship's restaurants at 11 p.m., after diners had left.

The 42-year-old woman said she agreed to meet Teixeira in a dimly lit corner of the dining room for late-night drinks.

"He looked striking and was in good shape," she testified today.

The two split a bottle of white wine, she told the federal jury.

"I am sure I was buzzed but I did not feel out of control," she said today.

At some point, the headwaiter forced her to perform a sex act and attacked her, she said.

"This was aggravated sexual abuse," Assistant U.S. Attorney Reema M. El-Amamy said at a previous hearing. "This was a crew member who met a passenger on the ship and proceeded to sexually assault her."

Teixeira, who had worked on cruise ships for 18 years, denies attacking the woman, but admitted that after meeting with her, he touched her leg and "another part" of her body as they left the table, according to court papers.

Assistant Federal Public Defender Stephen D. Demik said the passenger's account of the night only raises questions, describing Teixeira as a "family man" with two children in Portugal and no history of violence.

After the alleged attack, the woman said she did not know who to turn to.

"I was scared -- and I did not know who to trust at this point," she said. "I didn't want to go to another (ship) employee."

If convicted, Teixeira faces a potential life prison sentence, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

At a bail hearing in March, the headwaiter was deemed a flight risk and ordered held until trial.

Prosecutors said that while the alleged attack took place in waters far from U.S. shores, federal authorities have jurisdiction to investigate and prosecute crimes on the high seas involving American citizens.

Testimony is scheduled to resume Thursday.

October 18, 2009

Sex claim clouds cruise

Kiwi cruisegoers have been warned to watch their backs after an alleged sexual assault on "New Zealand's favourite cruise ship".

A young woman claims she was assaulted on P&O's Pacific Sun 12 days ago while it was cruising near Noumea. Police boarded the ship when it docked in Brisbane last Saturday and spoke to a number of passengers.

A Queensland police spokeswoman confirmed that the alleged victim was a "juvenile" and no charges had been laid. The alleged victim is not a New Zealander.

The Pacific Sun was hailed as "New Zealand's favourite cruise ship" in March when P&O launched an extended 2010 sailing season featuring more destinations for Kiwi travellers.

P&O is among five cruise brands managed by Carnival Australia. The company brings an estimated 52,000 passengers to New Zealand each year.

The alleged assault happened four days into a seven-day cruise around Vanuatu and Noumea. About 1900 people were onboard at the time.

The allegation comes less than two years after a 46-year-old Auckland woman claimed she was raped on P&O's Pacific Star. The woman said she was attacked in her cabin by a 37-year-old Australian early on New Year's Eve in 2007.

After investigating, police decided not to lay charges.

P&O spokeswoman Sandy Olsen said allegations of crime aboard its fleet were "extremely rare. I am aware of only one court case arising from an incident aboard our ships in the past five years.

"We would be the first to agree that one case is one too many. But when you compare the number of complaints arising from incidents aboard our ships with the rates of offending in the community, P&O Cruises' ships are demonstrably safe places to be."

Detective Sergeant Andy King, who heads Auckland's adult sexual assault team, said cruise ship passengers needed to watch out for themselves.

"The same rules apply as if they were going out drinking. Look after each other, take care of your drinks," he said.

"Quite often cabins close by make it more convenient for people to get into situations that might be compromising. People should use their common sense. Where people are socialising and drinking, issues will always arise."

King had heard of only two cruise ship sex attacks involving Kiwis in the past three years. But US-based International Cruise Victims' Association spokesman Ken Carver said sexual assaults had always been a problem.

"One of their businesses is to sell alcohol," he said. "There needs to be independent security on cruise ships. Frankly, going on a cruise ship that has no independent police and serves alcohol is risky."

P&O's website said "significant" changes were made to its cruises after Australian mother Dianne Brimble died in a cabin after taking a mix of alcohol and the drug Fantasy.

Changes included increased security staff, installing between 300 and 500 CCTV cameras in public areas and changing the way alcohol was served to avoid excessive intoxication.

October 13, 2009

Police investigate P&O sexual assault allegations

Police have been asked to investigate an alleged sexual assault on board a P&O Cruise ship which docked in Brisbane on Saturday morning.

The P&O liner Pacific Sun docked in Brisbane after a seven day cruise.

Police say they are investigating allegations of a sexual assault when the ship was off Noumea earlier this week.

Officers boarded the Pacific Sun and spoke with people allegedly involved in the incident.

A P&O spokeswoman says staff on board the liner reported the allegation as soon as it was made.

In 2002 Brisbane woman Dianne Brimble died on board the P&O liner Pacific Sky.

Passenger Mark Wilhelm is standing trial for manslaughter and supplying Ms Brimble with a prohibited drug.

Wilhelm has pleaded not guilty.

September 18, 2009

Rochester man charged with sexually abusing teen on cruise ship

A Rochester man is at the center of a cruise ship nightmare after federal authorities say he sexually abused a young girl.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Tiffany Lee said that according to a criminal complaint on December 31, 2006, a 13-year-old female boarded a cruise ship in Florida to embark upon a cruise with her family. In the early morning hours of January 1, 2007, the teen was walking around the decks of the ship with friends when they were approached by 24-year-old Lucas George Wickes.

According to the complaint, Wickes told the teen and her friends that they should return to their cabin. The girl followed Wickes who took her to another deck where the sexual assault allegedly took place. The complaint states that she was told if she screamed, she would be thrown overboard.

Wickes has been released but he is on home detention with GPS monitoring. He is due in court on October 16.

August 12, 2009

Rape Suspect Arrested On Carnival Cruise Ship

According to reports a Canadian rape suspect was arrested on the Carnival cruise ship Inspiration in Tampa Bay.

It has been reported that the U.S. Marshalls met the Inspiration when it docked in Tampa Bay after the U.S. Department of Homeland Security found the name of the alleged rapist on the ships manifest.

The man has been identified as Steven Mark Anthony Requena age 28, and has been a fugitive after fleeing Canada after the alleged rape that took place in 2007.

The alleged rape took place at Fort Erie, Ontario and it is reported Requena is suspected of raping a woman while holding a scalpel to her throat.

According to a U.S. Marshall spokesperson, Requena now lives in Buffalo, New York and was traveling with a group and accompanied by a female that has not been identified. Officials also state that Requena did not put up a struggle when U.S. Marshals arrested him in his cabin on the ship after it had docked, and was arrested on a Canadian warrant.

Requena who will be extradited to Canada is facing several charges including sexual assault on a cruise ship, and officials from the U.S. Marshall's service and Homeland security have stated as a fugitive a cruise ship is no place to hide, and the arrest of Steven Mark Anthony Requena should be an example.

June 29, 2009

Sexual assaults on cruise passengers increase

As millions of vacationers head out on exotic cruises during the busy summer season, few give a thought to becoming a victim of assault while on board a cruise ship.

According to the FBI, in recent years the leading crimes reported on cruises have been physical and sexual assaults. In March of this year, a 42-year-old female passenger on the Coral Princess claimed that a Portuguese man, who was a member of the ship's crew, sexually assaulted her, the FBI noted. Coral Princess is owned by Princess Cruises.

The woman allegedly met the 38-year-old man for drinks in a ship dining room, and according to her statement, the encounter turned into a terrifying one when the man blocked the doors, trapped her inside the room and forced her into performing oral sex.

Charles Lipcon, a Miami-based maritime lawyer, noted: "Travelers have this idea they are in a special cocoon where nothing bad can happen," adding: "That’s just not true." Lipcon is currently representing the Coral Princess passengers and has previously handled over one hundred cruise assault cases.

As the $22 billion cruise industry continues to grow, addressing the issue of on board assaults has become increasing important to lawmakers.

June 23, 2009

Cruise Ships Top Spot For Sexual Assaults

Now that the cruising season is in hot demand, millions of travelers are very eager to embark on their one of a kind vacations. However, little do many of these people know that they could very easily fall victim to sexual crimes at sea.

The FBI says that sexual assaults are the leading crimes that are committed on cruise ships in the past few years. Just in March, a 42-year-old female on a Coral Princess says that a Portuguese crew member had sexually assaulted her during the cruise. The woman says that she had met the 38-year-old crew member for drinks in a dining room on the boat. However, the nice encounter quickly turned into something terrifying as the crew member blocked the doors and forced her into performing oral sex on him.

A Miami, Florida lawyer, Charles Lipcon, said that travelers on these ships think that they are in a special cocoon that nothing bad can happen to them. Thus, they leave themselves wide open to attacks. On these ships, many women are walking around in swim suits and fancy dresses, and they do not know what other passengers or crew members may be thinking about. Charles has represented over one hundred cruise assaults in the last decade.

Many of these cruise line crimes have made headline news over the past few years. One such story was of the Connecticut newlywed who had went missing in 2005 during her honeymoon cruise on board a Royal Caribbean cruise.

Although cruise companies will not report any kind of crimes like these to the public, they are required to report all crimes to the FBI. Between 2002 and 2007, the FBI had over 184 cases opened on crimes that happened on cruise ships. However, the cruise lines point out that these numbers are small when compared to how many passengers sailed during that time span.

June 22, 2009

Sexual assaults on the high seas come under scrutiny

It's the midst of peak cruising season, and millions of travelers are eagerly embarking on exotic vacations without thinking they could ever fall victim to a crime at sea.

But sexual and physical assaults were the leading crimes committed onboard cruise ships in recent years, the FBI says. In March, a 42-year-old female passenger aboard the Coral Princess says a Portuguese crew member sexually assaulted her during a cruise, according to an FBI affidavit.

The woman met the 38-year-old crew member for drinks in a dining room on the cruise ship operated by Princess Cruises, which did not respond to CNN's request for comment. The friendly encounter turned terrifying, the woman told the FBI, after her assailant blocked the doors to the room, trapping her inside, and forced her to perform oral sex.

"Travelers have this idea they are in a special cocoon where nothing bad can happen," says Charles Lipcon, a leading maritime lawyer in Miami, Florida, who is representing the alleged victim from the Coral Princess and has handled more than a hundred cruise assault cases in the last decade. "That's just not true."

Addressing cruise ship violence has become an important issue for lawmakers as the $22 billion cruise industry proliferates. About 12 million North Americans will set sail on a cruise this year, according to the Cruise Lines International Association, a trade organization representing the industry.

Cruise crimes have made headlines in recent years, like the Connecticut newlywed who vanished from his Royal Caribbean honeymoon cruise in 2005. Last Tuesday, the U.S. Coast Guard began searching for a passenger who went missing on a Carnival cruise ship.

Though cruise companies don't display crime statistics to the public, they are required to report serious incidents involving Americans to the FBI and U.S. Coast Guard. Salvador Hernandez, deputy assistant director at the FBI in 2007, told lawmakers that the FBI opened 184 cases on crimes that occurred aboard cruise ships between 2002 and early 2007.

The cruise industry points out that those numbers are small when compared with the number of passengers served by the industry -- about 64 million in that same five-year period.

Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts and Rep. Doris Matsui of California have introduced the 2009 Cruise Vessel Security and Safety Act, which requires the cruise industry to publicly report crimes and improve safety on board. It mandates peepholes and security latches in cabins. This week, several victims of cruise crimes will meet with senators to discuss the issue.

The cruise industry says that it is "working closely" with lawmakers on the bill and that passenger safety is a top priority.

Royal Caribbean International, the second-largest cruise vacation company, has closed-circuit television cameras in hundreds of public locations on its ships, according to the company's Web site. Cunard Lines, which operates luxury cruises, wouldn't share security details with CNN but said its ships carry kits that investigators need to gather evidence of rape.

The number of attacks on ships is probably higher than reported, sexual assault experts say, because rape victims are afraid to come forward on an isolated ship with perpetrators in close quarters.

They also say cruise travelers are at a higher risk for attack because of readily available alcohol and a partying mentality on the vessels, which haul an average of 2,000 passengers each from across the globe. Of the attacks investigated by the FBI, a majority involved the use of alcohol.

Cruise lines disagree, saying people are safer on the ships than they are in their own communities. The companies provide 24-hour security and screen passengers' belongings.

"The cruise ship is a closed community," said Michael Crye, executive vice president of the Cruise Lines International Association. Security officers "have absolute access to everyone onboard," he said, because each person has been documented before boarding the ship.

Authorities say passengers should report crimes immediately to a cruise line security officer or staff member on board. There are no U.S.-mandated "cruise police," nor are FBI agents assigned to cruise ships.

"It's unclear what you should do when you're on a ship," says Evelyn Fortier, vice president of policy at the Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network. "1-800 numbers don't always work when you're at sea."

Some attorneys say the security and medical authorities aboard the ships may be biased in their investigations.

"The cruise workers are paid by the cruise lines. Do you honestly think the cruise ship doctor will be favorable toward the victim?" says Michael Ehline, a maritime attorney in Los Angeles, California.

Vessels need independent, third-party security officers and cruise doctors, critics say. They point out that even the airline industry has federal air marshals on planes with international itineraries.

Attorneys for the victims also point out that FBI statistics on cruise crime show that in nearly half of the incidents, a crew member is the suspect, which may deter victims from coming forward because they don't know which employees to trust.

The Cruise Lines International Association says on its Web site that the industry's work force is prescreened by the U.S. State Department, which is responsible for issuing work visas to foreigners working on ships that stop in U.S. ports.

Many passengers are unaware that being on a cruise ship is equivalent to being in a foreign country. Vessels are typically foreign-flagged from countries like Liberia and Panama.

Cruise lines aren't obligated to follow the crime investigation and reporting guidelines that law enforcement would follow on U.S. soil, attorneys say. Filing lawsuits can also be difficult when the crime occurs in foreign waters because the trials can sometimes take place in courts abroad.

"They [cruise lines] will commit to nothing," says Ken Carver, president of International Cruise Victims, a nonprofit group. "They will sell you the tickets," he says, "and then fail to take responsibility."

Carver's daughter disappeared on a Celebrity cruise ship in 2004. He filed a lawsuit in 2005 accusing the cruise company of hiding information about her disappearance. The suit was settled a year later.

Some attorneys question the training of private cruise ship security officers.

Laurie Dishman, 38, testified before Congress that she was raped aboard a Royal Caribbean ship three years ago. She said cruise staff instructed her to gather evidence, so she and a friend went to the cabin where the assault occurred and piled her clothes and bed sheets into plastic bags they were given.

"We didn't know what we were doing," says Dishman. She said she was later told by authorities there wasn't enough evidence to prosecute a criminal case. "It makes me frustrated looking back that the cruise lines didn't handle evidence properly."

Dishman's suit against Royal Caribbean was settled in early 2008. She says she can't disclose the amount.

Cruise industry officials say their security officers are trained in how to preserve evidence. Carnival Cruise Lines, the largest cruise company in the world, says its security personnel must have previous security, military or law enforcement experience.

Even if evidence is gathered properly by cruise security, the time that elapses between the crime and FBI involvement may threaten the integrity of an investigation. In the Coral Princess case in March, three days passed before the ship docked in California and FBI agents could step aboard.

That incident, however, was handled in exemplary fashion, say attorneys and even some cruise line critics. The evidence was sufficient enough for the U.S. District Attorney's Office in the Central District of California to charge the alleged offender, Jorge Manuel Teixeira, with aggravated sexual abuse.

Teixeira is pleading not guilty to the federal offense, which carries a possible life sentence. Teixeira says the encounter was consensual, according to his attorney.

Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. District Attorney's Office prosecuting Teixeira, said charging offenders with cruise-related crimes can also be complicated by challenges such as tracking key witnesses abroad. The biggest threat, though, is the time lag, when valuable evidence can disappear or be tampered with, he said.

"When we can bring the case, we'll bring the case," he said. "Teixeira is a good example."

April 13, 2009

Local and World News Cruise ship assault charges

NEW ORLEANS, LA - JOSEPH BRUSSEL, 26, a resident of St. Louis, Missouri, pled guilty in federal court yesterday before U.S. District Judge Eldon E. Fallon to one count of assault within the special maritime jurisdiction of the United States, announced U. S. Attorney Jim Letten.

According to court documents, BRUSSEL was a passenger on board the Carnival Cruise Ship Fantasy, which had set sail April 5, 2008 on a cruise from New Orleans to the western Carribean. BRUSSEL had joined family members and friends as members of a wedding party on the cruise. On the second day of the cruise, BRUSSEL was in the disco lounge aboard the ship drinking wine from a glass while on the dance floor, and appeared to be intoxicated. A ship security officer advised BRUSSEL that alcohol was not allowed on the dance floor, as was stated on the posted rules in the disco. BRUSSEL became argumentative and as the officer escorted him off the dance floor, BRUSSEL struck him in the face with the wine glass, which shattered, cutting the officer in several places. As BRUSSEL attempted to flee the disco, he was arrested by other security officers in a nearby hallway.

Upon sentencing, which is scheduled for July 15, 2009, BRUSSEL faces a maximum term of imprisonment of ten (10) years and is subject to a $250,0000 fine.

The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and is being prosecuted by Assistant U. S. Attorney Peter M. Thomson.

March 31, 2009

Cruise ship waiter pleads not guilty

A cruise ship waiter accused of sexually assaulting a passenger pleaded not guilty on Monday.

Jorge Teixeira, 38 of Portugal, was arrested earlier this month when the Princess Cruise Lines ship docked in San Pedro.

During his arraignment hearing on Monday, Teixeira pleaded not guilty to aggravated sexual assault. His trial has been set for May 5, and he remains in jail without bond.

At a bail hearing earlier this month, Teixeira was deemed a flight risk and ordered held until trial.

The incident began when a female passenger said she agreed to meet Teixeira for a drink one night at sea on March 5.

At some point, she said the headwaiter forced her to perform a sex act and attacked her, according to an FBI agent's 17-page affidavit.

Teixeira, who has worked on cruise ships for 18 years, denied attacking the woman, but admitted that after meeting with her, he touched her leg and "another part" of her body as they left the table.

Assistant Federal Public Defender Stephen D. Demik said the passenger's statements only raise questions, describing Teixeira as a "family man" with two children in Portugal and no history of violence.

Teixeira could face life in prison if he's convicted.

June 21, 2008

Woman Brings Suit Against Carnival Cruise Line Over Rape

According to reports a woman that was drugged and raped on a cruise that left from Miami on February 1st has now filed suit against the Carnival Cruise Line.

It is reported that the woman identified as Morgan Black a mother and piano teacher from Jacksonville who went on the Sixthman Music Cruise on the ship Carnival Victory.

Morgan’s suit claims she was drugged and raped by a fellow passenger the last night of the cruise, which was February 4th.

In her suit that is being presented by her attorneys Charles Lipcon of Miami, a cruise ship litigation attorney and Gloria Allred the attorney from California who has taken part in victims rights cases. The Carnival Cruise Line is being held responsible for neglecting to have security cameras in all of the common areas of the ship.

Lipcon, Morgan’s attorney has a published book that discusses these type of incidences that he states happens often and he estimated that he files approximately one suit a week for victims of cruise ships. [The books is called Unsafe on the High Seas and can be purchased here].

It is reported that the cruise line has made a statement that they would not comment on this case, as they have not seen the suit, however their priority is to keep passengers and the crew safe on their ships. They have security officers who are not in uniform on their cruises and many are retired police officers and other law professionals on board their ships.

This case was filed in the U.S. District Court in Miami on Thursday June 19th as a U.S. Senate subcommittee in Washington D.C. was hearing evidence as to the safety for passengers aboard cruise ships. Among those who testified was Kendall Carver whose daughter disappeared approximately three years ago from a cruise ship and is the president of International Cruise Victims.

While Carver stated he was pleased with the way this committee meeting went, part of the reason that these meetings are necessary are because of what advocates say is a non-existence of government involvement, vague jurisdictions and their corporate policies.

This was the first hearing held to discuss the safety of American passengers on cruise ships although there have been meetings on this issue by House Committee.

by Otto Smyth
cruiseshiplawsuits.blogspot.com

March 26, 2007

Cruise ship crime 'low priority'

By Kimi Yoshino
Times Staff Writer

The handling of a rape allegation reflects lines' laxness and the FBI's limits, critics say.

After Laurie Dishman reported to Royal Caribbean crew members that she had been raped by a security guard, she recalled, the purser and the head security officer sat on her bed - the alleged crime scene - and suggested that she learn to "control her drinking."

The ship's doctor, she said, handed her two gray garbage bags and told her to "collect the evidence" in her cabin herself. [Learn what our maritime firm recommends you do if you have been raped on a cruise ship].

"In no way while I was on the ship did I feel like they were taking care of what happened," Dishman said in an interview, recounting that night 13 months ago as Royal Caribbean's Vision of the Seas cruised the Pacific en route to Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. "Nothing was professional."

The 36-year-old Sacramento resident - who is suing Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd., alleging negligence - is expected to be one of the key witnesses Tuesday in Washington before a House subcommittee examining crimes on cruise ships.

Accounts such as hers have put cruise operators and the FBI on the defensive.

Royal Caribbean, which disputes Dishman's contentions, says millions of Americans vacation on cruises without incident each year, giving the industry an enviable safety record. And the FBI, which investigates some crimes involving Americans on cruise ships, cites insufficient evidence or resources as impediments to pursuing certain cases.

But passenger safety advocates, led by the group International Cruise Victims and by Dishman's congresswoman, Rep. Doris Matsui (D-Sacramento), say her case highlights concerns that the $32-billion industry takes a lax approach to crime.

Critics accuse the industry of having downplayed the number of sexual assaults in testimony at a previous congressional hearing. Further, they say that investigations can be shoddy or incomplete and that few crimes aboard cruise ships lead to arrest or prosecution.

"It's a very low priority," Charles Lipcon, a Miami-based maritime attorney who represents plaintiffs in lawsuits against the cruise industry, said of the FBI's approach to cruise crimes. "I call them 'pretend investigations.' They pretend to investigate and nothing happens."

FBI officials declined to comment in detail until after Tuesday's hearing, the first called by the House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation.

But they reiterated the bureau's commitment to "addressing piracy and serious criminal acts of violence" and working with the cruise industry and other law enforcement agencies to investigate and prosecute crimes.

Representatives of Miami-based Royal Caribbean told The Times that evidence collection in Dishman's case was "inconsistent" with company policy.

They said Royal Caribbean cooperated with the FBI and later terminated the suspect, who told authorities it was a case of consensual sex.

Sex crimes - regardless of where they take place - are difficult to prosecute. Cases often rest on one person's word against the other's. Witnesses are rare.

On cruise ships, alcohol frequently plays a role. In addition, foreign crew members can be difficult to locate for questioning if they are terminated for violating company policies or reach the end of their contracts before inquiries are completed.

Even when cases might have sufficient evidence, the FBI and federal prosecutors are more likely to devote resources to fighting terrorism, bank robberies and political corruption.

"You have limited resources and you put those in your highest priority," said Laurie Levenson, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles and a former federal prosecutor.

"If you're in California, at the top of the list is going to be immigration, terrorism, political corruption and narcotics... Sometimes there's also the mentality that the victim can sue in civil court. It doesn't leave the victim without remedies," Levenson said.

Lawrence Kaye, an attorney who represents the cruise industry, said the companies "very much" wanted the FBI involved in investigating crimes because employees lack expertise in forensic investigation.

In Dishman's case, a cruise security guard - who she said had harassed her in the ship's bar that night and asked for her cabin number - allegedly forced his way into her room after she answered the door on the first night of the cruise, pushed her back onto her bed and raped her. Dishman said she told him no and tried to push him away.

Dishman said she had five drinks over several hours, including a glass of wine at dinner, but did not believe she was drunk. When she woke up the next morning, her pants were off and she had bruise marks around her neck, she said.

The suspect, who told his employer and law enforcement authorities that the sex was consensual, was fired for violating the company's policy on fraternizing with guests. He continued to do his job for a week after the incident.

Dishman and her attorney say authorities failed to devote sufficient time to investigating her claims.

The FBI interviewed the accused crew member Feb. 26, 2006, the day the ship returned to port in San Pedro. A letter from the bureau to Dishman indicates that the U.S. attorney's office decided not to prosecute the case the same day FBI agents boarded the ship. An FBI spokeswoman in Los Angeles cited insufficient evidence in the case.

The bureau did decide to give the suspect a lie detector test a few days later, but by then he had been fired and sent home to Trinidad and Tobago, according to court records.

Dishman said she met, at her request, with officials at the FBI and the U.S. attorney's office to try to persuade them to file charges. They advised her to write to members of Congress and to pursue civil action against the cruise line.

"I know we have terrorism and we have all these things going on in the world," Dishman said. "But I'm the victim here and I'm an American, and they're telling me there is nothing they can do for me. I don't understand."

February 19, 2007

Port Elizabeth Woman Tells of Rape Ordeal on Luxury Liner

By Nicky Willemse

A Port Elizabeth woman‘s dream job working on a cruise liner in the Caribbean was transformed into a nightmare experience when she was allegedly raped by a fellow crew member.

And 18 months later, she is still haunted by the experience and waiting for some semblance of justice to be done.

After having been repeatedly fobbed off by the company which had contracted her to work in the liner‘s spa, she now fears the matter has been “swept under the carpet”.

From the outset her case was dealt with with scepticism by both Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd and Steiner Transocean, which operated the spa on the liner Explorer of the Seas.

Days after reports of the incident came to light, Taryn, 26, (who asked that her surname be withheld) was told by the ship‘s management that, because she had had a few drinks on the night of the attack, her side of the story was “not as believable” as her alleged assailant‘s – and she had “no right to accuse him (of rape)”.

She was then told to get off the ship and sent back to South Africa and to this day the company refuses to tell her if any action was ever taken against her assailant – who hails from East London – saying the matter is “confidential”.

But Taryn‘s story is not unusual and each year thousands of young South Africans apply for jobs on international cruise ships. Cruise Alternatives, one of several SA recruitment agencies specialising in cruise ship jobs, places up to 500 South Africans on luxury ships a year.

However, the jobs are not always as attractive as the recruitment marketing portrays them.

US-based maritime law firm Lipcon Margulies and Alsina, which specialises in cases against cruise lines, says it has obtained a list of sexual assaults from Royal Caribbean amounting to 173 over three-and-a-half years. Of these, not one person has been prosecuted.

Sexual assault on cruise ships is common,” lawyer Charles Lipcon told Weekend Post this week.

He said the fact that the ships were in international waters made it easier for perpetrators to get away with their crime.

“I refer to it as ‘open season on the high seas‘. I believe sexual predators are learning that nothing happens to them, so assaults are increasing.

“In my opinion, they (cruise ships) go out of their way to cover up these crimes to avoid bad publicity or their own liability.”

Taryn, a beauty therapist, worked in the slimming and detox section of the liner‘s spa, while her alleged rapist, a fitness instructor, worked in the ship‘s fitness centre.

“We were friends. The ship community is very close-knit – everyone becomes like family.”

The night of the assault, in August 2005, Taryn was in the crew bar when the fitness instructor laughingly removed from her jeans‘ back pocket the key-card to open her room.

“I got up to go and get it, but he ran away. I didn‘t think much of it – I thought I‘d just spend the night in a friend‘s room.”

But, checking her own room later that night, she saw her door was unlocked. “I thought it was my room mate, but then I saw he was sleeping in my bed.”

She lay down on the bed next to him and fell asleep. “I know I shouldn‘t have walked into the room, but I trusted him because we were like family.”

Speaking through tears, she said: “I woke up in the early hours of the morning . . . he was on top of me. He got aggro when I told him to stop, and I started shouting. I was too scared to move – I just lay there.”

She stayed in her room for the whole of the next day, trying to make sense of what had happened. She even phoned him to talk about it, but he brushed her off. It was only later that night, speaking to her room mate, that she admitted to herself that she had been raped.

After that, she ignored him, but wasn‘t sure how to handle the matter. “I felt scared and guilty.”

A month later, the deep change in her countenance was picked up by her spa manager, who had just returned after a holiday. After some probing questions, she asked Taryn if she had been raped. “I just burst into tears.”

The spa manager encouraged Taryn to report the matter to the ship‘s human resources department. She was then called to a meeting with top management from both the ship and the spa. “They told me there were two stories, his and mine, but his sounded more believable, because I had been drinking.

“I wasn‘t plastered, and I know he had been drinking too. The fact remains that I told him to get out of my room, but he didn‘t.”

She was then given two options: to drop the matter, or take it further, but she was told that would mean the CIA and the FBI getting involved.

Feeling intimidated, she said she did not want “the whole of the US involved”, but she wasn‘t prepared to drop it either. She then agreed to management‘s suggestion that the matter be passed to Steiner Transocean.

The spa manager got in touch with Steiner Transocean‘s head office in Miami, which operates spas on a number of cruise ships – and Taryn was given an hour to leave the ship, which was in dry dock at the time. Before she left, Steiner Transocean agreed to pay for any counselling and medical expenses.

Once back in South Africa, she tried to find out from Steiner Transocean whether any steps had been taken against her attacker, but was told that the matter was confidential.

This was the same response given to Weekend Post this week. “No employee can know whether any action was taken against another employee,” said Steiner Transocean spokesman Bob Boehm. “The allegations were taken very seriously, and we took steps that were deemed appropriate.” He would not provide further details.

The company‘s head of claims and risk management Elizabeth Junco later said the FBI investigated all incidents in international waters.

She said they had conducted interviews with crew members who worked with Taryn and the fitness instructor and “concluded that the allegations could not be substantiated”. She said Taryn was sent home “for her own safety”.

Royal Caribbean did not respond to several emails or phone messages.

PE woman tells of rape ordeal on luxury liner

By Nicky Willemse
Weekend Post

A PORT Elizabeth woman's dream job working on a cruise liner in the Caribbean was transformed into a nightmare experience when she was allegedly raped by a fellow crew member.

And 18 months later, she is still haunted by the experience and waiting for some semblance of justice to be done.

After having been repeatedly fobbed off by the company which had contracted her to work in the liner's spa, she now fears the matter has been "swept under the carpet".

From the outset her case was dealt with with scepticism by both Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd and Steiner Transocean, which operated the spa on the liner Explorer of the Seas.

Days after reports of the incident came to light, Taryn, 26, (who asked that her surname be withheld) was told by the ship's management that, because she had had a few drinks on the night of the attack, her side of the story was "not as believable" as her alleged assailant's Ð and she had "no right to accuse him (of rape)".

She was then told to get off the ship and sent back to South Africa and to this day the company refuses to tell her if any action was ever taken against her assailant Ð who hails from East London Ð saying the matter is "confidential".

But Taryn's story is not unusual and each year thousands of young South Africans apply for jobs on international cruise ships. Cruise Alternatives, one of several SA recruitment agencies specialising in cruise ship jobs, places up to 500 South Africans on luxury ships a year.

However, the jobs are not always as attractive as the recruitment marketing portrays them.

US-based maritime law firm Lipcon Margulies and Alsina, which specialises in cases against cruise lines, says it has obtained a list of sexual assaults from Royal Caribbean amounting to 173 over three-and-a-half years. Of these, not one person has been prosecuted.

"Sexual assault on cruise ships is common," lawyer Charles Lipcon told Weekend Post this week.

He said the fact that the ships were in international waters made it easier for perpetrators to get away with their crime.

"I refer to it as 'open season on the high seas'. I believe sexual predators are learning that nothing happens to them, so assaults are increasing.

"In my opinion, they (cruise ships) go out of their way to cover up these crimes to avoid bad publicity or their own liability."

Taryn, a beauty therapist, worked in the slimming and detox section of the liner's spa, while her alleged rapist, a fitness instructor, worked in the ship's fitness centre.

"We were friends. The ship community is very close-knit Ð everyone becomes like family."

The night of the assault, in August 2005, Taryn was in the crew bar when the fitness instructor laughingly removed from her jeans' back pocket the key-card to open her room.

"I got up to go and get it, but he ran away. I didn't think much of it Ð I thought I'd just spend the night in a friend's room."

But, checking her own room later that night, she saw her door was unlocked. "I thought it was my room mate, but then I saw he was sleeping in my bed."

She lay down on the bed next to him and fell asleep. "I know I shouldn't have walked into the room, but I trusted him because we were like family."

Speaking through tears, she said: "I woke up in the early hours of the morning . . . he was on top of me. He got aggro when I told him to stop, and I started shouting. I was too scared to move Ð I just lay there."

She stayed in her room for the whole of the next day, trying to make sense of what had happened. She even phoned him to talk about it, but he brushed her off. It was only later that night, speaking to her room mate, that she admitted to herself that she had been raped.

After that, she ignored him, but wasn't sure how to handle the matter. "I felt scared and guilty."

A month later, the deep change in her countenance was picked up by her spa manager, who had just returned after a holiday. After some probing questions, she asked Taryn if she had been raped. "I just burst into tears."

The spa manager encouraged Taryn to report the matter to the ship's human resources department. She was then called to a meeting with top management from both the ship and the spa. "They told me there were two stories, his and mine, but his sounded more believable, because I had been drinking.

"I wasn't plastered, and I know he had been drinking too. The fact remains that I told him to get out of my room, but he didn't."

She was then given two options: to drop the matter, or take it further, but she was told that would mean the CIA and the FBI getting involved.

Feeling intimidated, she said she did not want "the whole of the US involved", but she wasn't prepared to drop it either. She then agreed to management's suggestion that the matter be passed to Steiner Transocean.

The spa manager got in touch with Steiner Transocean's head office in Miami, which operates spas on a number of cruise ships Ð and Taryn was given an hour to leave the ship, which was in dry dock at the time. Before she left, Steiner Transocean agreed to pay for any counselling and medical expenses.

Once back in South Africa, she tried to find out from Steiner Transocean whether any steps had been taken against her attacker, but was told that the matter was confidential.

This was the same response given to Weekend Post this week. "No employee can know whether any action was taken against another employee," said Steiner Transocean spokesman Bob Boehm. "The allegations were taken very seriously, and we took steps that were deemed appropriate." He would not provide further details.

The company's head of claims and risk management Elizabeth Junco later said the FBI investigated all incidents in international waters.

She said they had conducted interviews with crew members who worked with Taryn and the fitness instructor and "concluded that the allegations could not be substantiated". She said Taryn was sent home "for her own safety".

Royal Caribbean did not respond to several emails or phone messages.

October 15, 2006

Deam Trips Turn Tragic on Montel Williams

Montel Williams is airing a show on Monday (10/16/063) called Dream Trips Turn Tragic. The show will include an interview with one of our maritime law firm's cruise ship sexual assault clients. The show will also interview familty members of passengers that have disappeared on cruise ships.

We will try to get a copy of the show to post on this blog after it has aired. Check your local listings to see what time Montel Williams is on in your area and watch it on Monday.

Here's the summary on the show about cruise ship vacations turning tragic:

When most people get ready to take their dream vacation, they plan what to pack, what to do and where to go, but they rarely plan on how to stay safe. We’ll meet people who say they were on their dream trips when tragedy struck…and their lives will never be the same. We’ll meet Laurie, who says she was raped on a cruise ship while on vacation. We’ll also meet Melinda and Duane, whose relaxing holiday turned into a terrifying adventure when they were targeted by thieves. They were on vacation driving down the coast in Costa Rica, when they ran into a gang of gun-toting bandits on the highway. They were shot at until they were able to finally find safety in a small town restaurant. We’ll talk to Sue, Ron, and Katie, a family left with many unanswered questions after their son (Katie's brother) Daniel went missing from a cruise ship. Daniel was on his first week-long vacation with his friends when he became sick one night while alone on the ship's deck. He was leaning over the railing of the cruise ship and suddenly fell overboard. Kimberly Dean-Edwards, a legislative board member for International Cruise Victims will also join us to talk about her work with Congress to try and get a bill passed that will hold cruise lines more accountable for crimes and missing person cases at sea. We’ll also meet Sandee and her two children, Ryan and Krysta. While on a family vacation in Florida, Sandee’s then 13-year-old son Ryan, got caught up in rough water in the Gulf of Mexico. Her husband Larry and another man on the beach raced into the water to save him. Ryan managed to get to shore safely but Larry was still caught in the riptide. Sandee arrived at the water’s edge to find beachgoers attempting to drag Larry to safety. Unfortunately, Larry drowned trying to save his son’s life.
August 30, 2006

Our Client, a Cruise Crime Victim Speaks Out

The Charleston Gazzette published a story covering the cruise ship sexual assault of one of our maritime law firm's clients. Read the article below:


CRUISEV2.jpg
Kimberly Dean Edwards recounts how a fellow passenger sexually assaulted her in 2004. Now, with the help of some West Virginia lawmakers, she and the International Cruise Victims organization are battling for legislation to make cruise lines accountable.

Continue reading "Our Client, a Cruise Crime Victim Speaks Out" »

Letter from Governor Manchin on Cruise Ship Crimes

Here's another letter received by one of our maritime law firm's cruise ship sexual assault clients.


TIP: Click on the image below for a pop-up view of the letter which is larger. .


Letter from Congressman Mollohan on Cruise Ship Crime

Some cruise ship rape victims have been very active with lawmakers in getting new legislation passed to better protect cruise passengers from crimes at sea and make cruising safer. Here is one of our client's letters she received from Congressman Mollohan regarding her attack and what he promisses to do regarding cruise ship crime.

TIP: You can click on the letter below to see a larger image (must allow pop-ups).



Lipcon, Margulies & Alsina, P.A. represents this client with respect to her cruise ship sexual assault case. If you would like a confidential consultation regarding a cruise ship crime or sexual assault please contact us.


January 24, 2006

Free Advice discussion thread recommends LMA

Free Advice.com, a leading legal advice forum, yields discussion thread on crewmember rape and Charles R. Lipcon's experience in handling these types of cases. Here's an excerpt from the discussion thread:

BelizeBreeze
You might consider having her contact the attorneys at the following site as they are very experienced in cruise line liability cases. http://www.lipcon.com/index.shtml
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
bhughes2621
Thank you everyone. I contacted Charles Lipcon yesterday, and he has been a termendous help. He is now guiding my daughter through this difficult process.

Read the entire thread on Free Advice.

December 14, 2005

Congress Eyes Cruise Ship Dangers

ABC News brings cruise passenger disappearances to mainstream news. The word is finally getting out that something needs to be done to make cruise ships safer for passengers and crew. Finally a major news station is also catching on to this story bringing into the mainstream.

At LMA we have created a new blog section dedicated to Cruise Passenger Disappearances, as well as a new practice area on our web site dedicated to this area. We will be adding more info to the web site including a listing of people that have gone overboard. Regarding the cruise passenger disappearances blog, check back or sign up for the feed for regular updates on this evolving hot topic. Hopefully within the next year or two we can be dedicating this section to the reforms that the cruise lines will have been forced to make.

Read ABC's story below:

About a dozen people have gone missing on cruises in the last 2 years

Lawmakers are set this morning to investigate the potential dangers to vacationers cruising the high seas.

Two congressional committees will hold a joint hearing focusing on cruise-ship disappearances and crimes. The hearing comes on the heels of another cruise-ship disappearance in recent months, this one aboard Royal Caribbean's Jewel of the Sea, which returned to Florida on Sunday with one less passenger than when it departed.

Source: ABC News

November 12, 2005

Rape & Sexual Assault on Cruise Ships

Rapes are much more common that you would think on cruise ships. On one news show covering this topic (I think it was A Current Affair), stated that cruise ships are just big parties/ drink-fests which is partly to blame for so many rapes occuring on ships. Things like "ruffies" (a.k.a. the date rape drug) are put into girls drinks to get them wasted, something you wouldn't really think to have to worry about when departing on your dream cruise.

Most people depart with family or friends on their cruise vacation not even giving safety a though. There's a false sense of security when you are on a cruise, you think nothing can happen because the perpetrator would have no where to run. Actually, its really the opposite....crimes aboard cruise ships are hardly, if ever, prosecuted. Lipcon, Margulies & Alsina, P.A. discovered that one cruise line had 173 incidents of sexual assault or rape in a 5 year period, and not a single one resulted in a prosecution.

So the questions that come to mind are:
- What can the cruising industry do to make cruise ships safer?
- What can you do while on board a ship to ensure the safety of yourself, your family and/or your friends?
- When these horrible incidents do happen, how come nothing is done about it?

More information on cruise ship rapes can be found on the following sites:

CruiseRape.com: web site created by a cruise ship rape victim named April. There's her whole story as well as a video of her interview on A Current Affair.

http://www.lipcon.com/news_tv.shtml: several clips from Television shows including A Current Affair, CourtTV, MSNBC, Fox News, the O'Reilley Factor and more

We are interested in hearing all of your comments and experiences, if any, on cruise ship crimes and safety so let us know what you think and if you're going on a cruise STAY SAFE!

November 10, 2005

Congressional Investigation Ordered on Missing Cruise Passenger George Smith

We all remember hearing about missing cruise passenger George Smith, who went on a cruise for his honeymoon, never to be seen again. George Smith was never found and his family it seems may never know what really happened to him. Finally, last month, Congress ordered an investigation into his disappearance and MSNBC has been airing specials on this as well as on other cruise ship crimes.

View the most recent clip from MSNBC's Scarborough Country, which features maritime attorney Charles R. Lipcon discussing the congressional investigations ordered on missing cruise passenger George Smith.

August 20, 2005

Charles Lipcon on A Current Affair

Charles Lipcon has been featured on 6 episodes of A Current Affair. The episodes aired between July 16 and August 19, 2005.

The disappearance of cruise passenger George Smith & cruise ship crimes including rape and sexual assaults on cruise ships were covered. Charles Lipcon believes that it's "open season on the high seas" and has his own ideas about what might have happened to George Smith. Lipcon has handled similar cases, so listen to the clips from A Current Affair to learn more.