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Sex, lies & a Ph.D.
Luke Broadwater, The Examiner
Oct 23, 2006 5:00 AM (14 days ago)
Current rank: # 2,489 of 7,366 articles
Howard County - Brandy
Britton doesn’t speak much on her home phone. Not since the
incident.
In fact, she’s careful about talking anywhere in her house.
“I don’t want to talk in the living room,” she says,
her voice hushed. “I think it’s bugged.”
Still, despite her fears of wiretaps and the adamant
instructions of her attorney, Brandy Britton, the former
University of Maryland, Baltimore County assistant professor
accused of prostitution, can’t resist the urge that’s been
with her since childhood — the urge to speak out.
She first contacted a reporter by phone about two weeks ago.
Then she meets up at the courthouse and, last week, at a nearby
Starbucks. Her car has broken down, and she asks the reporter to
accompany her to visit her attorney Christopher Flohr in Severna
Park, who breaks up the interview, postponing the conversation
indefinitely.
He urges her not to talk.
She doesn’t care.
Then a few hours later there’s the 9:14 p.m. text message.
“just got home and ready 2 meet. give me a call if u still
have the energy.”
At her $400,000 cul-de-sac home in Ellicott City at midnight,
Britton, 43, spoke in an exclusive interview with The Examiner
about her childhood, her “sexist” former employer, her
abusive ex-husband, an “illegal” foreclosure on her home and
the “false” criminal charges against her.
She’s careful not to come across as pushy or aggressive.
“Do you mind if I sit next to you?” she asks, before
taking a seat on the couch.
Dressed in black knee-length high-heeled boots and a short
black skirt, Britton most importantly wants to talk about police
harassment. She even keeps a book of local newspaper clippings
about police misconduct.
She says the authorities have unfairly singled her out, made
up lies, mistreated, stalked and harassed her since Jan. 17,
when a team of Howard County officers burst into her quiet
suburban home and ransacked the place, breaking her belongings,
upsetting her pets and arresting Britton on prostitution
charges.
“It sounds paranoid, but they did really serious criminal
stuff,” Britton says. “They’ve broken into my house 10 or
15 times. They’ve tapped my phones. They put a tail on me and
follow me everywhere.”
Most egregious, Britton said, is a fictionalized statement by
one officer saying Britton offered to sleep with him for money.
(For the record, Howard County police deny harassing Britton.
“We have no record of any contact with Ms. Britton since her
prostitution arrest,” Howard County police spokeswoman Sherry
Llewellyn said. “We also have no record of any complaints
filed by Ms. Britton.”)
But officers don’t deny they raided Britton’s home in
January, confiscating 150 condoms, nine bottles of lubricating
substances and business records in Britton’s name that tied
her to a Web site — www.alexisangel.com — that police say
solicited prostitution. According to the Web site, “Alexis”
charged a minimum of $300 an hour for modeling and
companionship, and her clientele included “high-level, visible
executive or public-service positions.” Fees could go as high
as $400 an hour if Alexis had to make an outcall.
The site said Alexis was “a sexy, sophisticated &
educated escort in Howard County” with “long blonde hair,
seductive green eyes and a toned yet curvaceous 38D-24-36
physique.”
A former women’s studies teacher, Britton views her case in
large, philosophical terms: She’s the lone woman struggling
against the odds, the feminist fighting a male-dominated world.
But to believe Britton, one must also see the police officers
who arrested her as — at best — overzealous bumblers, or —
at worst — corrupt villains.
Which leads anyone trying to understand the situation to ask
one fundamental question: Is Brandy Britton the criminal or the
victim?
To that question, Britton wants to make one point very clear.
She is not, and was not, a prostitute, she says.
“I don’t trade sex for money,” she said.
She’s so confident of her innocence that she even passed on
State’s Attorney Timothy McCrone’s plea deal that would have
allowed her to avoid a conviction and jail time as long as she
admitted to prostitution.
But what about all the condoms police found?
“I always have fishbowls of condoms around. My studies were
about HIV.”
How about the Web site?
“There’s nothing illegal on there.”
The lubricant?
“What? You’ve never had good sex?”
‘I USUALLY DON’T LET MEN IN THE HOUSE’
Britton lives with all women: Two pot-bellied pigs, Penelope
and Stella; two cats, Ebony and Ivory; and a dog, Jasmine.
“I usually don’t let men in the house,” she says as a
reporter enters her home.
She shows the reporter what she is most proud of — her
curriculum vitae, which is impressive — a Ph.D., two
bachelor’s degrees, founder of a women’s health institute,
securer of million-dollar research grants.
One of the things she’s most proud of is a left-wing
opinion column she wrote for her high school newspaper. The
title? “Brandy Bears It.”
Her children went to Centennial High School, perhaps the best
school in the best public-school district in the state, and
everything seemed well for the academic, who was gaining
national recognition in her field.
But then, somehow, things began to fall apart.
In 1999, she resigned amid controversy from UMBC. Howard
County police began to rack up visits to Britton’s residence
— 27 in all — for complaints for assaults, domestic
disputes, disorderly conduct and “animal complaints.”
Britton knows who she blames for the turmoil in her life: Her
second husband, Isamu Tubyangye.
They met online in 2002, were quickly married and quickly
filed for divorce.
The early bliss of their relationship turned to domestic
horror. Britton alleges he beat her repeatedly. She filed 10
different charges of domestic violence against him. Most were
dropped, but two stuck.
Tubyangye pleaded guilty on Aug. 30, 2004, and again Aug. 31,
2005, to second-degree assault against Britton. In the second
case, he was sentenced to three months in jail and 18 months
probation and ordered to have no contact with Britton. A judge
even banned him from the state of Maryland. He did not return
repeated calls from his Florida home.
Through it all, her strength has impressed her civil
attorney, Robert Grossbart.
“She’s had quite a lot going on in her world,” he said.
“She’s a strong woman. She’s doing the best she can.”
But with Tubyangye’s income gone and Britton without a
full-time job, the former professor was faced with a dilemma.
The bank was foreclosing on her home. She needed more money than
her freelance academic work could provide to support her two
children and to make up her mortgage payments. But how?
THE RAID
Britton remembers the police raid of Jan. 17 in great detail.
That day, she became a Howard County celebrity with television
crews following her every move and camping out at her house.
Camera men even tried to jump over her fence to catch a glimpse
of the former professor.
“I counted 11 officers at one point,” Britton says.
“They were armed. Their faces were covered. They had automatic
weapons, and they were shouting, ‘Down! Clear!’ They dumped
out every drawer, everywhere. I was visibly shaken because there
were 10 guys with machine guns.
“They started taking dishes and just throwing them on the
floor and destroying them. They said, ‘Are you going to tell
us that you’re a prostitute?’ I said, ‘I’m not, and I
want an attorney.’ ”
Indeed, www.alexisangel.com made that point emphatically in a
disclaimer at the bottom of its home page.
“Money exchanged in legal adult personal services for
modeling is simply for my time and companionship. ... This is
not an offer of prostitution.”
Her next-door neighbor Bonnie Sorak recalls seeing expensive
cars pulling up to Britton’s house frequently before her
arrest. What about those cars — the BMWs and the Jaguars? Who
were these men? Doctors? Judges? Politicians?
Britton declines to name names. “I don’t want to ruin
people’s lives,” she says, but claims her companions were
all of the above.
Beverly Hills attorney Darren Kavinoky, who provides legal
commentary on high-profile celebrity cases on such shows as
“Larry King Live” and “Today,” says the details of
Britton’s case should make for a strong legal defense.
“She has a compelling argument and a compelling defense,”
he said. “She’s a competent escort. She’s a good
conversationalist. There are certainly a lot of people out there
who pay for companionship, for good conversation. And if sex
between two consenting adults happens, it’s certainly legal
and permissible.”
As Britton prepares for her defense, she returns to her
Ellicott City home and sits amid a clutter of court documents
and newspaper articles, her blond hair dropping to one side.
She has no car. She has no job. Soon, she very well may have
no home.
Is she the criminal or the victim?
Britton knows how she answers the question. She’s hoping a
jury will see the case the same way.
In court
» Britton is scheduled to go to trial on four counts of
prostitution Tuesday in Howard County Circuit Court. Each count
carries a maximum penalty of year in jail and a $500 fine.
» In a different civil matter, a judge is expected to ratify
a bank’s sale of Britton’s home on Wednesday.
Brandy Britton’s resume
» Bachelors in sociology, biology from Oregon State
University. Minor in women’s studies. 1988.
» Doctorate in sociology from the University of California,
San Francisco. 1993.
» Sociology instructor, University of California, Berkeley.
1992.
» Assistant professor of sociology, anthropology and
women’s studies and principal investigator, Maryland Institute
for Policy Analysis and Research, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County.
lbroadwater@baltimoreexaminer.com
Original link: http://www.examiner.com/a-357815~Sex__lies___a_Ph_D_.html
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