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Friday, July 04
6:22 PM


Spitzer call girl drops Girls Gone Wild lawsuit

Associated Press

MIAMI — The call girl involved in a scandal that brought down New York's former governor has dropped a lawsuit claiming Girls Gone Wild founder Joe Francis exploited her image and name on the Internet.

Ashley Dupre voluntarily dismissed the $10-million federal lawsuit, according to court documents filed Thursday. She said she was only 17 when she signed a binding contract giving permission to appear in the Girls Gone Wild video.

Telephone calls and e-mails to Ms. Dupre's lawyer and publicist were not immediately returned Friday. Mr. Francis's publicist did not immediately comment.

In her lawsuit, Ms. Dupre said she was on spring break in Miami Beach in 2003 when she was approached by Girls Gone Wild producers, was given alcoholic drinks and then signed a release agreeing to appear. The series depicts women in provocative poses or topless, often in such party locations as Mardi Gras festivities or spring break beach towns.

Mr. Francis has said Ms. Dupre was on the Girls Gone Wild bus for a week and made seven full-length videos.

Shortly after the lawsuit was filed, Mr. Francis released a video in which Ms. Dupre appears covered by a terry cloth towel and gives her name as Amber Arpaio. An unseen questioner asks whether she is 18 and whether the footage can be used on Girls Gone Wild. She says yes to both questions.

The video also displays a New Jersey driver's license with the Amber Arpaio name and a birth date that would have made her appear to be in her 20s.

Ms. Dupre rocketed to fame in March when she surfaced as a high-priced call girl in the Emperors Club VIP prostitution ring linked to then-New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, who resigned soon after the scandal broke. Ms. Dupre, going by the name “Kristen,” met a man dubbed “Client 9” at least once at a swanky Washington hotel, according to court documents. He was later identified as Mr. Spitzer.

After the Spitzer scandal, Mr. Francis made a public $1-million offer for Ms. Dupre to appear in one of his videos and go on a promotional tour. But he rescinded the offer after realizing he already had footage of her.

Mr. Francis has other legal problems, including federal tax evasion charges pending in California and lawsuits by filed by women in Panama City, Fla., claiming they were victims of underage exploitation. Mr. Francis spent a year in jail and was released in March after pleading no contest to child abuse and prostitution charges for filming underage girls in that Panhandle beach town.


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