A D V E R T I S E M E N T
Jim Clark / Pamplin Media Group
Chandler Cook and Elizabeth Dorsch made a deposit for a lease-to-own house they found through Craigslist. But the seller vanished with their money.
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In Tigard, a man allegedly invites women to his house and sexually assaults them.
In Portland, newlyweds discover that their minister stole their wedding gifts.
In Beaverton, police find a prostitution ring operating in a local motel.
And in Gresham, a couple steals and resells utility trailers for years.
All of these accused or convicted criminals have one thing in common – they committed their crimes with the help of Craigslist (www.craigslist.org), the wildly popular Web site for buying and selling property and services, as well as finding a job, a roommate or a date.
Portland police recently busted a theft ring using Craigslist to sell thousands of dollars worth of stolen property. Following up on a tip that a stolen laptop computer was sold on Craigslist, police served a search warrant on a house in the 9600 block of Southeast Holgate Boulevard and recovered an estimated $30,000 worth of stolen electronic goods, power tools, LCD TV screen, iPods, car stereos and other consumer products.
“The occupants of the house told us they were using Craigslist to sell the stolen property every day,” said Portland Police officer Jim DeFrain, who participated in the Nov. 15 raid. “It happens all the time.”
Craigslist CEO and programmer Jim Buckmaster says the vast majority of the transactions over his Web sites are legal, and that his organization works with law enforcement agencies to curtail any criminal activities.
“Misuse of Craigslist for the facilitation of illegal activity is absolutely unacceptable,” Buckmaster said in an e-mail response to questions from the Pamplin Media Group.
Local law enforcement officers say that crimes on Craigslist are a major problem, however.
“Craigslist, unfortunately, is about much more than just buying and selling things. There have also been issues with prostitution, child exploitation, stolen property, ID theft, any number of things,” said Multnomah County sheriff’s office spokesman Travis Gullberg, whose agency has arrested many people in recent years for Craigslist-related crimes.
Substantially reducing Craigslist-related crimes may not be possible, however. Federal courts have so far ruled that Web site operators are not liable for what people post on them. And local law enforcement officials say they do not have the resources to constantly monitor Craigslist.
Portland’s a big user
Founded in San Francisco in 1995, Craigslist claims to operate more than 300 sites in 50 states and more than 50 countries. According to organization statistics, Craigslist is now the seventh-most popular English language Web site in the world, hosting more than 12 million ads viewed by more than 15 million people a month.
Craigslist also says that 700,000 new classified ads are posted on the Portland Web site every month, generating 275 million page views – making Portland the organization’s No. 5 city in terms of overall use and No. 2 city in terms of per capita use, trailing only San Francisco.
Buckmaster insists that Craigslist reflects society at large.
“It was recently pointed out to us that with literally billions of positive human interactions facilitated by Craigslist, it is quite remarkable how little crime is associated with the site, given the much higher crime rates that exist in the world at large – which is a testament to the good intentions of the vast majority of Craigslist users,” he wrote in an e-mail.
That’s small consolation to Elizabeth Dorsch and her boyfriend, who were scammed out of $2,400 by a woman they met through Criagslist in September. Lynne Sisto, 33, offered to sell them a house on a lease-to-own basis. Sisto told the couple she needed the money to finishing buying the house. When the couple showed up to move in, they discovered the house was still for sale and Sisto had vanished.
Portland police arrested Sisto in October for scamming several people out of at least $20,000 through similar schemes.
“It was horrible feeling. You think you’ve got a place to live, and then you’re nearly homeless,” said Dorsch, who was forced to move into a low-rent apartment with her boyfriend in Vancouver.
Reports spawn a Web site
Craigslist-related crimes are becoming so well known that several Web sites and blogs have been established to track them.
One – www.craigscrimelist.org – is operated by a true-crime buff who uses the name Trench Reynolds to avoid retaliation, he says. After starting his first blog on school shootings in 2000, Reynolds said he began noticing news stories about crimes related to the Internet, including many connected to Craigslist and such social Web sites as MySpace.
After starting a Web site dedicated to such crimes, he soon realized that the majority were connected to just one site – Craigslist – and started the Web site dedicated to it.
“I’m probably posting 30 to 40 stories a month just on crimes connected to Craigslist,” Reynolds said.
Reynolds believes that a major reason why criminals are attracted to Craigslist is its anonymous nature. People posting ads do not have to report any identifying information to anyone.
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