Girls Gone Wild Videos in Federal Custody
'Girls Gone Wild' Founder Joe Francis in Federal Custody
The founder of the "Girls Gone Wild" video empire was taken into custody by federal marshals early Tuesday to face a contempt of court citation after initially defying a federal judge.
Joe Francis was booked into the Bay County Jail, said Ruth Sasser, a spokeswoman for the sheriff's office. "His attorneys continue to work toward a settlement," Ronn Torossian, a Francis spokesman, said in a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press.
Francis, 34, makes an estimated $29 million a year from videos of young women baring their breasts and in other sexually provocative situations.
He drew the contempt citation during negotiations in a civil lawsuit brought by seven women who were underage when they were filmed by his company on Panama City Beach during spring break in 2003.
Lawyers for the women told U.S. District Judge Richard Smoak that Francis became enraged during the settlement talks, shouting obscenities at the lawyers and threatening to "bury them." Smoak ordered Francis to settle the case or go to jail for his behavior.
Negotiations continued with the help of a mediator, but broke down Thursday, and Smoak issued a contempt of court warrant.
Francis initially refused to surrender and called Smoak "a judge gone wild."
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