Thursday, January 15, 2009

Help Wanted @ Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good?

From the Columbus Dispatch (tip, Jonah Goldberg at The Corner):
Ex-state official charged in online-prostitution case
Wednesday, January 14, 2009 10:52 PM
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Columbus vice detectives monitoring online discussions among clients of prostitutes for years have noticed a man posting under the names "Sullivant Guy," "Broad Street Guy," "Toby" and "God O Thunder."

The man, like many others on the sites, would trade information about street hookers and online escorts. He would recommend some prostitutes, issue warnings about others and give advice on ways to avoid law enforcement.

Detectives said today that they arrested the "go-to guy" behind those posts.

Robert Eric McFadden, who was the director of Gov. Ted Strickland's Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives until his transfer to another state job in fall 2007, was arrested in Dublin.

McFadden, 46, of 6290 Hyland Dr. in Dublin, was taken into custody on seven prostitution-related counts, including charges that he promoted a 17-year-old prostitute online.

The charges include compelling prostitution involving a minor, promoting prostitution and pandering. He is being held in the Franklin County jail pending an appearance in Municipal Court this morning.

Police said they have seized a computer and two vehicles. One was his wife's car, which detectives said was the setting for photos of the 17-year-old girl that McFadden then posted online.

Police have identified the girl, who is cooperating with the investigation.

Detectives said McFadden was one of the men involved in a hooker-review Web site that spawned what police called a raffle for sex last fall and the creation of a Brewery District brothel.

Police had arrested an academic adviser at Ohio State University, a sex-abuse caseworker at Franklin County Children Services and a real-estate agent in connection with the brothel.

Through that investigation they learned that McFadden had been promoting the girl, who already had been advertising her sex services online, Sgt. Stan Latta said.

It is unclear how McFadden was compensated, if at all, for furthering the girl's business, police said.

Vice detective Jeff Ackley, stressing that he was speaking only generally, said johns have been known to promote prostitutes in return for sexual favors.

Before joining the Strickland administration, McFadden served as field director for Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good.

He was hired in February 2007 to lead the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. He was paid $36 an hour but was transferred to the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction in late October that year, Strickland spokesman Keith Dailey said.

The Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives is charged with making it easier for such organizations to compete for public funding, encouraging partnerships among the groups and measuring the impact those partnerships have on needy Ohioans.

"It had become clear that he wasn't a good fit for the office," Dailey said. "It wasn't working out. The position was a leadership position. He wasn't the right person to lead such an important office."

McFadden, who told police today that he is unemployed, was laid off by the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction in March because of budget cuts.

Dispatch reporters Mark Niquette and Alan Johnson contributed to this story.
In addition to Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good (are pro-lifers and conservatives against the common good?), McFadden was past president of Catholics for Faithful Citizenship; worked for Catholics for Kerry in 2004; and was the State Faith & Values Outreach Director for Hillary Clinton in 2008.

It is widely held that many pro-life and conservative voters stayed home because of apathy, or voted Obama because of economy. The next time it's difficult for you to be inspired by the candidate your well-formed conscience should vote for, remember what positions this guy might have aspired to in a President Hilary Clinton administration.

No comments: