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Gay D.C. gym owner charged with distribution of child porn

FBI sting leads to arrest of Michael Everts of FIT Personal Training

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Michael Everts was arrested this week. (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

The gay owner of FIT Personal Training, a popular Dupont Circle area gym, was arrested on Nov. 28 on a single charge of Distribution of Child Pornography following a four-month joint FBI-D.C. police investigation triggered by information provided by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), according to an arrest affidavit filed in the U.S. District Court for D.C.

The six-page “Statement of Facts” affidavit alleges that Michael Everts, 48, a resident of an apartment in the same building where FIT Personal Training gym is located at 1633 Q St., N.W., sent by email photos and video images of prepubescent and post pubescent boys engaging in sex with adult men to an undercover FBI “employee” who had befriended Everts through the gay online hookup site Sniffies.

The affidavit says an employee of Sniffies alerted NCMEC on July 25, 2023, that a Sniffies user was exchanging messages with other Sniffies users displaying an interest in images of underage boys for sexual gratification. NCMEC alerted the FBI about these messages and the FBI obtained transcripts of the messages from Sniffies, which provided the FBI with online information that enabled the FBI to trace the messages to Everts.

The undercover employee then reached out to Everts through a social media messaging address of @ethaneffex that was obtained through information obtained from Sniffies, the affidavit states, and the two began an exchange of messages that lasted from Sept. 26 to Nov. 28.

In response to the undercover employee’s claims to be interested in juveniles, Everts allegedly sent the undercover employee multiple photo and video images of both nude and clothed underage boys and some images of pre- and post-pubescent boys engaging in sex with each other or with adult men, according to the affidavit.

The affidavit refers to the undercover employee as the “online covert employee” or “OCE.” It says that on Nov. 27, the OCE invited Everts to join him for coffee the next day, “just to meet, say hi.” It says Everts replied by saying, “I sent kiddie porn to you, so I’m already outed as a pedophile, so for me there’s a bit of risk. Got to think it through.”

But on the next day, Nov. 28, at about 10:49 a.m., Everts agreed to meet with who he thought was his online friend outside the Apple Store at 801 K St., N.W. at approximately 12:30 p.m. Both men showed up for that meet up, the affidavit says.

“The OCE and Everts walked in front of 801 K Street Northwest and discussed Everts’ fitness business, and they discussed their level of interest in pedophilia,” the affidavit states. “During the course of this conversation the OCE provided a hand signal to an arrest team and Everts was subsequently taken into custody by members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force,” the affidavit concludes.

Court records show Everts appeared before U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Moxila A. Upadhyaya the next day on Nov. 29, and was ordered held without bond until at least Dec. 4, when a detention hearing was scheduled to take place.

Maria Jacob, an attorney with the Office of the Federal Public Defender, who is listed in court records as Everts’s lead attorney, could not immediately be reached to comment on the case.

The undercover officer or OCE identified himself and signed his name on the affidavit as “Thomas J. Sullivan, Detective, D1-1232, Federal Bureau of Investigation-Metropolitan Police Department – District of Columbia.”

The Washington Blade couldn’t immediately reach spokespersons for  the FBI and D.C. police to confirm whether Sullivan works for one or both of those law enforcement agencies.

The FIT Personal Training website says Everts opened the facility in 2002 and has continued as its owner and lead trainer since that time at the Q Street location. 

In a March 2014 interview with the Blade, Everts said he resided in the same building as the gym with his domestic partner and the couple’s two children.

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District of Columbia

D.C. Mayor’s Office of LGBTQ Affairs moving to new location

LGBTQ community center also set to leave Reeves Center

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There are plans to demolish the Reeves Center and replace it with a redevelopment project. (Washington Blade photo by Lou Chibbaro, Jr.)

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser’s Office of LGBTQ Affairs, which is currently located at the city’s Reeves Center municipal building at 14th and U Street, N.W., was scheduled to move during the week of Dec. 9 to a new location at 899 North Capitol St., N.E., according to Japer Bowles, the office’s director.

Bowles said the LGBTQ Affairs office will be located on the seventh floor of the privately owned office building in which the city has rented space for several other city agencies, including the D.C. Department of Health.

The move comes about amid longstanding plans to demolish the Reeves Center and replace it with a redevelopment project that will include a mix of housing, office space, a hotel, and retail stores along with a public plaza and a 200-seat amphitheater.

The D.C. LGBTQ+ Community Center, which has been located in the Reeves Center for about 10 years, also expects to be moving out of the building in the spring of 2025, said Kimberley Bush, the LGBTQ center’s executive director.

Bush said the LGBTQ center looks forward to moving into its new, larger space in a building at 1827 Wiltberger St., N.W. in the city’s Shaw neighborhood, which is located one block away from the Shaw-Howard University Metro station.

The LGBTQ center entered a joint lease to rent space in the Wiltberger Street building with the Capital Pride Alliance, the group that organizes most of D.C.’s LGBTQ Pride events, including the upcoming World Pride 2025 events set to take place in D.C. May 17-June 8.

In response to a request by Bowser, the D.C. Council earlier this year approved $1 million in funding for fiscal year 2025 to support the build-out and construction of the LGBTQ Center’s space in the Wiltberger Street’s converted warehouse building.

But shortly after the Council approved that funding, the D.C. Center and Capital Pride Alliance announced the launch of a fundraising campaign called “Welcome Home – Building Together, Thriving Together” to raise an additional $1.5 million needed to complete the renovation of the new building.

“This endeavor is more than just the construction of a building; it represents a commitment to carve out a generous 7,000 square feet of space devoted to nurturing unity, empowerment, and support across the LGBTQ+ spectrum,” a statement announcing the fundraising campaign says.

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District of Columbia

D.C. LGBTQ community to gather for post-election dialogue

Dec. 12 event to address federal workers’ rights, immigration, more

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More than 80,000 people joined the 2017 Equality March for Unity & Pride following Donald Trump’s 2016 victory. As Trump prepares to return to power, the local community is gathering to talk resistance and resilience. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Several leading LGBTQ organizations in D.C. are coming together to make sense of the recent election and to discuss the future of advocacy and resilience as President-elect Donald Trump prepares to take office. 

With Republicans in firm control of the federal government after winning majorities in the House and Senate, many are concerned about attacks on the LGBTQ community, including Trump’s pledge to ban trans people from serving in the military. In addition, many LGBTQ federal workers have expressed concerns about being targeted for reassignment or termination, as outlined in Project 2025, a right-wing blueprint for Trump’s second term.

In response, D.C.’s LGBTQ community is coming together for an event on Thursday, Dec. 12, 6:30-8 p.m. at the Eaton Hotel (1201 K. St., N.W.) featuring an array of speakers who will address issues, including: anticipated policy shifts; community resilience strategies; legal rights; immigration advocacy; and federal workers’ rights. 

The event, titled, “Charting Our Future: LGBTQ+ Advocacy & Resilience in a Changing Landscape” is free; visit washingtonblade.com/future to RSVP.

The event is being hosted by the Washington Blade and includes community partners: the DC LGBTQ+ Budget Coalition, HME Consulting & Advocacy, Eaton DC, DC LGBTQ+ Community Center, Capital Pride Alliance, and the Mayor’s Office of LGBTQ+ Affairs. Heidi Ellis of the DC LGBTQ+ Budget Coalition will moderate. A list of speakers will be released later this week.

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District of Columbia

Casa Ruby receiver files for bankruptcy

Jan. 21 deadline set for creditors, former employees to apply for reimbursement

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Ruby Corado is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 10. (Blade file photo)

In a little-noticed development, the Wanda Alston Foundation, which assumed control over the operations of the D.C. LGBTQ community services group Casa Ruby in August 2022 under a court-appointed receivership role, filed a petition on Aug. 27 of this year to place Casa Ruby in bankruptcy.

The petition, filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Columbia, says Casa Ruby has estimated liabilities to at least 50 creditors of more than $1 million and estimated assets of between $0 and $50,000.

Nick Harrison, an attorney representing the Wanda Alston Foundation, which provides housing services to homeless LGBTQ youth, said Casa Ruby currently has no known financial assets, including cash.

He said the bankruptcy petition’s estimated assets of up to $50,000 are based on a pending lawsuit that the Alston Foundation filed against eight former Casa Ruby board members and Casa Ruby’s founder and former executive director Ruby Corado in December 2022. The lawsuit accuses the board of violating D.C.’s nonprofit corporation law by failing to exercise oversight over Casa Ruby’s operations that led to its financial collapse and shutdown in 2022.

The lawsuit calls on the court to require Corado and the former board members to pay “restitution, compensatory damages, punitive damages, receivership fees and expenses, court costs, attorneys’ fees, and expenses, and any other relief the court deems necessary and proper.”

A D.C. Superior Court judge on May 1, 2023, dismissed the lawsuit filed by the Alston Foundation against all but one of the former Casa Ruby board members but did not dismiss the case against Corado.

The Alston Foundation has appealed the ruling dismissing the lawsuit, and the case is now pending before the D.C. Court of Appeals.

The lawsuit also alleges that the board failed to adequately oversee the actions of Corado, who pleaded guilty in July of this year to a charge of wire fraud as part of a plea bargain deal offered by prosecutors.

The charge to which Corado pleaded guilty in the U.S. District Court for D.C. says she allegedly diverted at least $150,000 “in taxpayer-backed emergency COVID relief funds” awarded to Casa Ruby to “private offshore bank accounts for her personal use,” according to a statement released by the U.S. Attorney’s office.

Corado, who initially denied the allegations against her, is currently staying with a family member in Rockville, Md., in a home detention arrangement following her arrest by the FBI on March 5 of this year. She is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 10.

D.C. Superior Court Judge Danya A. Dayson stated that her decision to dismiss the lawsuit against seven of the eight former board members was based on her interpretation of D.C. law. She said she believes the law holds that members of an organization’s board of directors can only be held liable for harming an organization like Casa Ruby if they “intentionally, rather than negligently, inflicted harm on Casa Ruby.”

The judge said she did not dismiss the case against one of the board members because the lawsuit presents evidence that the board member received some financial benefits from Corado.

In a legal brief filed with the appeals court, the Alston Foundation attorneys state that evidence shows the Casa Ruby board members “were deliberately indifferent or ‘willfully blind’ to the alleged wrongful conduct of the nonprofit’s executive director amounting to actual knowledge on their part that inaction would harm the nonprofit, ultimately and forcibly leading to its financial inability to continue operation.”

The former board members have declined requests for comment on the lawsuit.

Harrison, the attorney representing the Alston Foundation in the bankruptcy filing, said anyone who is owed money by Casa Ruby has until Jan. 21 to file a “proof of claim” form with the bankruptcy court to be eligible to be compensated if funds become available.

At the time of Casa Ruby’s shutdown, the organization’s employees were among those who said they were not paid in the months or weeks prior to the shutdown.

Asked what prompted the Alston Foundation to file the bankruptcy petition on behalf of Casa Ruby, Harris said, “Filing the bankruptcy petition ensures that a trustee with the appropriate expertise can wrap up the remaining issues while allowing the Wanda Alston Foundation to stay focused on its core mission.” 

U.S. Bankruptcy Court records show that one of the officials in charge of collecting proof of claim forms for those owed money is Mark E. Albert, a court appointed Trustee for the bankruptcy filing. Court records show he can be reached at 202-728-3020.

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