Feds Will Try Backpage Co-Founder Michael Lacey for a Third Time
It's a frightening reminder of how far the government will go to get their way—and to warn tech companies against platforming speech it doesn't like.

Third time's a charm? Let's hope not. More than five and a half years after journalist and Backpage co-founder Michael Lacey was arrested, federal prosecutors have indicated that they will try him for a third time on the same charges.
It's a frightening reminder of how far authorities will go to get their way—and to warn tech companies and publishers against platforming speech the government doesn't like.
When you zoom out a bit, it's clear Lacey's case could have implications for anyone who posts or consumes content online.
You are reading Sex & Tech, from Elizabeth Nolan Brown. Get more of Elizabeth's sex, tech, bodily autonomy, law, and online culture coverage.
How We Got Here
Doesn't the Constitution bar being tried twice on the same criminal charges? Generally, yes—in cases involving an acquittal or conviction, that is. But Lacey's two previous trials resulted in mistrials, meaning the government can take another shot if it likes. And in a motion filed yesterday, prosecutors announced that indeed they would like a do over, again.
The first trial, back in 2021, was declared a mistrial after prosecutors and their witnesses couldn't stop suggesting that Lacey and his co-defendants were charged with child sex trafficking. They were not, and efforts to suggest as much could have seriously prejudiced a jury.
In actuality, Lacey, his longtime (and now deceased) publishing partner James Larkin, and several other former Backpage staffers and executives were charged with violating the federal Travel Act by facilitating prostitution. They were also accused of conspiracy to facilitate prostitution and money laundering in service of this.
The second trial, held last fall, saw a jury totally acquit two of the defendants while two others—Scott Spear and John "Jed" Brunst—were acquitted on multiple charges and found guilty on multiple charges.
Lacey's outcome was also mixed but with far fewer guilty or not guilty verdicts. He was ultimately found guilty on just one count and not guilty on just one count; the jury was hung on the remaining 84 counts. So, federal judge Diane Humetewa declared a mistrial with respect to these 84 counts, allowing (but not requiring) the government to try again.
About That Guilty Verdict…
The 2023 jury found Lacey innocent of one count of international promotion of money laundering but guilty of one count of international concealment of money laundering. It was a weird verdict, considering that the conduct in question was very much not concealed. Lacey moved some money to a foreign bank after U.S. banks were pressured into dropping him. Lacey's lawyers informed the IRS of this action and made all required declarations and disclosures.
Being found guilty of concealing activity that one informs the federal government of doesn't make any sense—and there's a strong chance that a court would reverse Lacey's concealment conviction on appeal.
The possibility of an overturned conviction could be one reason why the Department of Justice has decided to try again.
But it's certainly only part of the explanation.
Public Safety or Retribution?
The decision to retry makes little sense from a public safety perspective. Lacey is 75 years old and could get a sentence of up to 20 years if the concealment conviction stands. He's already an old man and would be a really old man by the time he got out in that case. Even a sentence of a quarter of the max would put him at age 80 or above upon release.
Of course, Lacey could successfully appeal his conviction or Judge Humetewa could choose a much lighter sentence. But the idea that Lacey is a danger to society if not locked up is absurd—even if you accept the government's allegations against him. Lacey isn't accused of being directly involved in sex work or sex crimes at all, but merely of running a website where some people may have been advertised in coded terms. He's been out awaiting trial for nearly six years, with no incident. And his "crimes" involved very particular circumstances: running an alt-newspaper empire that needed to compete with Craigslist or go broke and thus launched an online classifieds platform that became a popular hub for adult advertising. Does anyone believe he has the impetus, desire, funds, or right cultural moment to do that again?
Clearly, this is more about punishment than public safety. And perhaps some folks in the Department of Justice (DOJ) really do believe that Lacey got away with heinous crimes and should have to pay. (They would have to overlook so much evidence and torture theories of culpability to reach this conclusion, but that's not inconceivable.)
But the aggression with which this case has been pursued also lends itself to a darker interpretation: Lacey is being punished for failing to respect authority, failing to cave and give the government what it thought would be easy to get.
Unlike former Backpage CEO Carl Ferrer, Lacey and the other defendants refused to negotiate a plea deal and denied the government a quick victory lap about stopping "sex trafficking" back when public attention to this case was still strong. They fought hard against various dirty tricks the prosecution attempted and sometimes succeeded, including during the first trial when prosecutors thought they could win by just throwing around sensational and baseless sex-trafficking claims. And for decades before this trial, Lacey fought back against government overreach—and published stories very unflattering to a lot of public figures—as the co-head of alt-weeklies like the Phoenix New Times and the Village Voice.
It's hard not to suspect the retrial is at least partially about retribution—and also butt-covering. The feds put a lot of time, effort, and public relations into this case, only to have two defendants walk entirely and one of their two main targets (Lacey and Larkin were always the big fish here) avoid conviction on 85 of 86 charges they brought.
That's got to be embarrassing. No wonder they want another chance.
Michael Piccarreta, a one-time lawyer on Lacey's case, said he wasn't surprised about the government's decision. "The government has been as aggressive on this case as any that I can remember and has put unlimited resources into the case, and they believe the initial verdict was insufficient and unsuccessful," he told Front Page Confidential. "They also know that with their superior resources, they can wear down, financially and emotionally, any citizen."
A Warning to Others
Ultimately, trying Lacey three times on the same charges is such an utter waste of public resources and government time and an astonishing display of how power can trump justice. Remember, this all boils down to Lacey and Larkin daring to allow users to post First Amendment-protected speech that the government told it not to allow.
Of all the potential reasons why the DOJ might be pursuing this so relentlessly, I think the one that makes the most sense is that they've been trying to use Lacey and company as a deterrent.
The treatment of Backpage—from Congress and federal prosecutors—has proved an apt playbook for going after other tech companies in the years since (especially when it comes to companies that run social media platforms). It's served as a sort of instruction manual for threatening entities that allow all sorts of disfavored speech, be it about guns or politics or public health or sex or anything else.
Lacey is meant to serve as a warning to other tech honchos who dare to allow unfettered legal speech. They want to make an example of him, to put him through so much that other publishers and tech executives will just give in.
But how can Backpage serve as a serious warning against other tech platforms defying government demands if the government doesn't actually succeed at getting their pound of flesh? For this to work, they need to win—or at least show that they're willing to run defendants into the ground trying.
There's also a financial component here. The feds seized a lot of cash and other assets from Lacey using civil asset forfeiture.
"The government … confiscated millions of dollars of assets and proceeds not only from [Backpage], but also from defendants' numerous other publishing venues—ventures completely unrelated to the alleged criminality of the site and indisputably protected by the First Amendment," noted a 2019 amicus brief filed by the Cato Institute, DKT Liberty Project, and the Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes Reason magazine).
Civil asset forfeiture doesn't require a conviction to be valid. But it could be harder for the feds to justify keeping Lacey's assets if he's not guilty.
No End in Sight
Sentencing for Brunst, Spear, and Lacey won't take place until after the judge rules on two outstanding motions from the last trial. (Sentencing for Lacey on the concealment charge may also be postponed until after the new trial.)
One is a rule 29 motion, in which the defense argues that the evidence used to convict was insufficient and thus the conviction must be dismissed.
"The government has not provided this Court with a single case that affirms a concealment money laundering conviction (domestic or international) with facts like this case," write Lacey's lawyers in a January 18 court filing. They note that Lacey "repeatedly stated his intent to file all disclosure forms with the federal government related to the funds, pay taxes on the funds at issue, and avoid tax shelters of any kind; that he "timely filed the required disclosure forms, which identified the attributes of the funds at issue (his relationship to the funds, their location, the amount, etc.)," and that he had "documentation of the purposes of forming the trust that have nothing to do with concealment," among other things.
The other outstanding motion is a motion for a new trial for Lacey, Spear, and Brunst on the charges on which they were found guilty. Their argument is based in part on the government's failure to make timely disclosures before the last trial. This includes "the government's failure to timely disclose Carl Ferrer's emails with its case agent, Lyndon Versoza, which the government disclosed to the defense only after the jury in this case was deliberating," they argue in the December 4 motion. It also includes "the government's failure to disclose the factual information the government developed during its investigation of Backpage.com in the Western District of Washington in 2012-2013…which, among other things, undermines, if not contradicts, the government's trial positions that 'anyone could tell' from looking at the adult ads that ran on Backpage.com that those ads were associated with illegal conduct and that Backpage's moderation practices showed criminal Intent." (More on that Washington investigation here.)
The Damage Done
However this ultimately ends up, the prosecution of Lacey and his co-defendants has already had some major impacts.
Obviously, it's been devastating for the Backpage defendants, who have had to spend more than half a decade so far (and all the money and emotional toil that entails) fighting this.
Spear, Brunst, and Lacey are now facing serious prison time.
Larkin took his own life a few days before the trial started last year.
The prosecution also led to the shutdown of Backpage.com, which reverberated negatively through the sex worker and law enforcement communities.
Many sex workers say the shutdown made their work less lucrative and less safe. Police and other law enforcement—including the FBI—say it made fighting sexual violence and exploitation more difficult.
And an untold number of tech leaders and publishers (or potential tech leaders and publishers) saw what happens when you won't moderate speech to politicians' liking.
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Feds Will Try Backpage Co-Founder Michael Lacey for a Third Time
It’s a frightening reminder of how far the government will go to get their way—and to warn tech companies against platforming speech it doesn’t like.
C’mon, Reason, now you’re making it too easy.
I… I… *hands trembling over keyboard*… FUCK!
You know who else…
Donald Trump, and his DoJ, led by Jeff Sessions, who initially charged Larkin and Lacey in April 2018?
You will never hear another name other than Kamala Harris if you talk to Trumpers about this, but nearly every one of the persons named on the DOJ press release relating to the indictment of the Backpage.com founder were appointed by none other than Donald Trump.
Humm, Trump was out of office January of 2021, Sessions was out in 2018. The first trial was in 21 and the second in 23- So that blows your "it's Trumps's fault" right out of the water.
The indictment, which was the initial decision to prosecute, was entirely a Trump deal. Trump did it. Own it.
Sure, Biden carries the shame of re-trying them (and Harris for what she tried to do in California in 2016), but arguably there would have been no second (or third) trial if Trump had not authorized a first one.
MAGA people blame Biden for bad things Trump did.
You’re assuming Trump and Sessions were aware and involved in the case. Yet we know hundreds of government employees in the executive branch were out to get Trump, and likely not informing him, but misinforming him. How much time did Sessions and Trump have to oversee and supervise the 94 federal DAs out there?
Blaming Trump and Sessions is ignoring the deep state and their corrupt resistance to serving the country, rather than serving themselves. Might as well blame them for Kevin Clinesmith (FBI lawyer) who committed perjury (and was convicted after pleading guilty) so the Russia Hoax investigation and FISA spying on Trump and his associates could continue, yet the DC Bar didn’t discipline him until 5 months later after it was reported in the press, unlike normal procedure where they are immediately disciplined (usually losing their license to practice law) and now he’s back in good standing with the DC Bar and can practice law. He’s a member of the deep state club, that we and Trump are not.
Don’t you find it strange that the FBI which reported to Trump, essentially participated in a fraudulent attempt to take out a president via fake information? That’s treason in my book. Imagine you had an employee attempting to set you up to get you fired. That's our government today. And Biden was involved as well.
*Woosh*
Awww, the snarky one-word reply to disguise his/her error.
That worked well.
My $0.02: The government should not be allowed to retry a case where a mistrial results not from a hung jury, but from prosecutorial misconduct. And since Lacy's first trial was declared a mistrial for prosecutorial misconduct, that should have been the end of it.
That might be a step too far. It would allow (and arguably encourage) even more corruption of prosecutors than we already have.
I would prefer a different control - mistrial for prosecutorial misconduct = lose your job as a prosecutor. I originally thought disbarment but an incompetent prosecutor might be a capable contracts or divorce attorney. No need to overreact.
"It would allow (and arguably encourage) even more corruption of prosecutors than we already have."
I consider this claim to be absurd.
““It would allow (and arguably encourage) even more corruption of prosecutors than we already have.” … I consider this claim to be absurd.”
You fail to imagine a prosecutor committing misconduct, such as withholding exculpatory evidence from the accused, so the accused who paid him a bribe or some powerful/rich person offered a job/bribe to the corrupt prosecutor, so the criminal gets a get out of jail and no conviction card. A nice opportunity for the corrupt to engage in a quid pro quo. Especially in political corruption cases or where big money is involved.
You seem like a nice person, who believes everyone is honest and civil, or at least those in authority positions. That can be a fatal mistake, and many have died from such an assumption. You have to think like a corrupt prosecutor and corrupt criminal and assume people won’t follow the law before you see how absurd your statement is. Many people lie, cheat, steal and worse.
Consider how many priests, in an authority position, abused children under their care. I’m wondering how doctors got the OK to medically alter children based on another “authority” who said the child wants to switch their sex, and the government is even taking away children from their parents who don’t want that to happen while some school counselor says the child should undergo hormone treatments and surgery because they want to. Without informing the parents!!! This, when we don’t even allow them to vote, serve in the military, drive a car, or drink alcohol, because allegedly they’re too young to make such decisions or (such as in the case of alcohol, hormone treatments, or surgery) permanently alter and often harm their bodies and growth.
How would prosecutorial misconduct leading to an unappealable acquital lead to more corruption? The onus thus becomes on the accuser to not absolutely shit the bed.
Consider a criminal who can buy a prosecutor. Normal misconduct results in a mistrial which can be retried. An unappealable acquittal is a permanent free pass. How much more would you be willing to pay for a guaranteed permanent free pass than for one that's just a good chance?
If exposed, the prosecutor would have to be punished.
Almost all local prosecutors are elected by voters. And voters love local prosecutors who lock people up whether they deserve it or not.
And then there is Donald Trump, who has called for the execution of people who have been exonerated from the crimes that they were charged with.
This is no longer about sex traffickers. The government wants to keep the $500 million they seized and is obviously willing to spend a billion dollars of our taxpaying dollars to do that.
I am wondering if this prosecution relies on creative interpretations of criminal law.
You may as well wonder if seemingly tenacious prosecution isn't actually something invented just for Donald Trump.
But you won't!
I suyspect it predates the prosecution of Rick Perry.
This is bullshit. And while I accept the general argument that retrying on an honest mistrial isn't double jeopardy, retrying after two mistrials, regardless of how honest, is invidious and should be considered double jeopardy or, at any rate, unjust.
The real problem is that the first mistrial wasn't honest, it was the direct result of prosecutorial misconduct.
Yup - it gives the prosecution a way of getting a retrial if the first trial isn't going the way they want it to.
I like your idea SRG2. Perhaps a better idea is to fire a prosecutor who tries someone twice without reaching a guilty verdict. There should be a penalty for a government prosecutor wasting money because they're incompetent or are engaging in lawfare for the government to send a message you'll be treated the same for not doing as they want, when your actions are legal.
Nobody should have sex unless they're married and bored with their partner. It's the only decent way to have sex.
More than these insidious retrials, we need to ELIMINATE Civil Asset Forfeiture, period. It has been misused more than it has been properly used. It is absolutely not consistent with any founder's idea of the Constitution.
Oh, quit your whining about free speech all the time.
If the US had free speech, we wouldn't be achieving the glorious results of Marxist oppression we all secretly covet.
Besides, who in their right mind wants capitalism, freedom and civil rights anyway?
Not Donald Trump, that's for sure!
IMHO, Trump wants "capitalism, freedom and civil rights" more so than any president in the past 70 years. In fact, he's the most libertarian president since long before my time.
You do have to separate his rhetoric (which is often over the top - similar to many marketing presentations I've seen) from his actions. Just look at his economic results which were achieved almost entirely via Executive Order (which Biden undid on his day 1) and compare it to Biden's economic results which he continues to gas light about. Biden says the economy is great (which it is for the political class) but we all know everyone is less prosperous thanks to Bidenflation, and spending hundreds of billions through NGOs to support illegals.
Exactly why Section 230 must persist. It's simply unjust to prosecute the messenger service. Justice is about putting the crime on the criminals not prosecuting bystanders. If aiding and embedding cannot be accomplished beyond a reasonable doubt cases like these turn into witch-hunts.
There needs to be a separate branch of government (“meta”-goverment) charged with prosecuting members and employees of the government for official actions that violate individual rights, even if those actions are legal. It would have the power to nullify any law that infringes individual rights and that imposes fines, imprisonment or forfeiture of assets. One could vote either for government officials and policies or “meta”-government officials and policies, but not both. If one is dissatisfied with the government, then vote in the meta-government elections for officials who and policies that will crack down on the government. Either that or vote in officials who will prosecute prosecutors for violation of civil rigjts under color of authority. The prosecutors need to be prosecuted.
Or give voters the power to convict sitting politicians. That's a democracy thing, right?
Too late. IMHO, most people in government are corrupt; thus, abhor any government official being prosecuted and that goes for DoJ and AG. Honest people have seen what happens when someone goes against the deep state - as in Trump's case. And honest people have seen what Democrats do to oppose nominations or effective conservative/libertarian politicians: the Democrats seek to destroy them via the politics of personal destruction, via debanking them, and pressuring their customers (or advertisers for newspapers/social media) to not do business with them, or else.
We've become a banana republic with a corrupt government, we need to take back.
At some point prosecutors should be held liable for their corruption and abuse of the legal system. Far too often prosecutors are the thugs. Either because they are attempting to climb a latter and simply don't care about the people the step on to move up, don't care about actual truth and justice and are willing to do pretty much anything to secure a victory, or because they are bought and paid for by a political party or some other group and simply a sock puppet for them.
Spot on!
Government should never be able to try anyone twice. You either get a conviction or you do not, and it is OVER.