Cops surfing the internet looking for old men to have sex with!
by Cop posing as an imaginary 15 year old girl
Thursday, Feb. 11, 2010 at 6:09 PM
Phoenix and Tempe have several full time cops who surf the internet pretending to be a horny underage girls who wants to have sex with older men! Wonder how much this is costing us in tax dollars?
Don't these cops have any real criminals to hunt down? This is a huge waste of tax dollars. If Tempe and Phoenix are having huge budget problems the first people that should be fired are these cops who surf the internet all day pretending to be underage children who want to have sex with adults!
Perhaps we should do a public records request to get copies of the pick up lines Phoenix cops use to pick up old men when they are surfing the internet pretending to be horny underage girls who want to have sex with older men! I bet that would be some interesting reading!
Nude photos sent on Internet leads to arrest
A man arrested on suspicion of sending nude photos of himself to an undercover detective posing as a teen on the Internet admitted that he worked in public relations and attended ASU, according to court records released Tuesday.
Blake Glovitz, 26, who has worked for one of the Valley's top public relations firms since 2006, faces felony charges of luring a minor for sexual exploitation and furnishing obscene material to a minor. He was arrested at his northeast Phoenix home on Thursday.
Glovitz managed information technology at Gordon C. James Public Relations and assisted in event management for a youth soccer tournament, the White House Easter Egg Roll, the Pat Tillman Foundation and other clients, according to his professional biography.
Phoenix sex-crimes investigators said they began following Glovitz after identifying him in an online chat room where detectives have identified sexual predators in the past.
Investigators said Glovitz sought a child under the age of 15, attempted to lure the child for sex and exposed himself via a Web camera, according to court records.
"(Glovitz) told the minor that he had another pic but it's a nude," detectives wrote in a probable cause statement for Glovitz's arrest.
"He asked the minor if they had ever had sex," the report said, later going into more graphic detail.
Police seized a computer and other evidence through a search warrant served at the home in the 6200 block of East Cortez Drive.
Gordon James, founder of the company where Glovitz was employed, said Glovitz took a leave of absence following his arrest. The executive said Glovitz worked part time as an information technology employee.
Anyone with further information about Glovitz should contact the Phoenix Police Internet Crimes Against Children Detail at 602-650-3179.
Nude photos sent on Internet leads to arrest
A man arrested on suspicion of sending nude photos of himself to an undercover detective posing as a teen on the Internet admitted that he worked in public relations and attended ASU, according to court records released Tuesday.
Blake Glovitz, 26, who has worked for one of the Valley's top public relations firms since 2006, faces felony charges of luring a minor for sexual exploitation and furnishing obscene material to a minor. He was arrested at his northeast Phoenix home on Thursday.
Glovitz managed information technology at Gordon C. James Public Relations and assisted in event management for a youth soccer tournament, the White House Easter Egg Roll, the Pat Tillman Foundation and other clients, according to his professional biography.
Phoenix sex-crimes investigators said they began following Glovitz after identifying him in an online chat room where detectives have identified sexual predators in the past.
Investigators said Glovitz sought a child under the age of 15, attempted to lure the child for sex and exposed himself via a Web camera, according to court records.
"(Glovitz) told the minor that he had another pic but it's a nude," detectives wrote in a probable cause statement for Glovitz's arrest.
"He asked the minor if they had ever had sex," the report said, later going into more graphic detail.
Police seized a computer and other evidence through a search warrant served at the home in the 6200 block of East Cortez Drive.
Gordon James, founder of the company where Glovitz was employed, said Glovitz took a leave of absence following his arrest. The executive said Glovitz worked part time as an information technology employee.
Anyone with further information about Glovitz should contact the Phoenix Police Internet Crimes Against Children Detail at 602-650-3179.