Brothel owner Lance Gilman inside the World Famous Mustang Ranch near Patrick, Nev., in 2007.(Photo: Andy Barron, AP)
RENO, Nev. -- Lance Gilman is a thriving businessman with dozens
of employees. That those workers include a good many prostitutes didn't
faze the people of a rural Nevada county who recently elected him as a
Storey County commissioner by a wide margin.
The Mustang Ranch
brothel owner is the first such owner to win election to public office
in Nevada since prostitution was legalized here in 1971, Nevada
historian Guy Rocha said. And he's believed to be the first to do so in
the state's 148-year history
"He's in rare company," Rocha said.
"Of course, it's going to be rare because the business of selling sex
for money is illegal in every jurisdiction in the United States except
in rural Nevada."
Some two dozen brothels legally operate in 10 of
Nevada's 17 counties. Prostitution is illegal in the counties that
include Las Vegas and Reno, the state's population centers.
Gilman,
68, a self-described "dye-in-the-wool Republican who loves American
values," said he encountered few objections to his Mustang Ranch
ownership during his campaign in the county of 4,000. He won with 62
percent of the vote on Nov. 6.
His claims that his bordello,
located along Interstate 80 some 10 miles east of Reno, has contributed
more than $5 million to the county's budget over the past decade. It has
44 full-time employees, and 30 to 80 working girls, depending on the
season.
"To 99 percent of the voters, they view it as just a
business," Gilman told The Associated Press. "It's a prosperous business
that's helped the county."
Gilman attributes his victory to his
entrepreneurial experience. Mustang Ranch is only a small part of his
business empire, which includes business parks, a Harley-Davidson
dealership and master planned communities in California and Nevada.
"People
want to focus on the brothel issue ... (but) I've had a wonderful
43-year record of business success that I bring to the commission,"
Gilman said.
Mustang Ranch became the state's first legal brothel -
and most infamous - under former owner Joe Conforte. Heavyweight boxer
Oscar Bonavena was slain there in 1976.
The cathouse operated
until 1999 when the federal government seized it after guilty verdicts
against its parent companies and manager in a federal fraud and
racketeering trial. Conforte is now a fugitive in Brazil.
Gilman
bought the gaudy pink stucco buildings that once housed the bordello in
2003 and moved them a short distance next to his Wild Horse brothel. He
assumed ownership of the Mustang Ranch trademark when he bought the
buildings from the government.
His current operation, which
includes the two houses of prostitution, two restaurants and a
nightclub, now operates under the Mustang Ranch name.
"His
election speaks to the acceptance of prostitution in rural Nevada, where
it's just understood," Rocha said. "It goes back to a longstanding
libertarian tradition, and laws reflect that. It's different in urban
Nevada, where prostitution is a mixed, controversial bag."
Last
year, Senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., took aim at the
world's oldest profession, telling state lawmakers the time has come to
have an adult conversation about Nevada's legal sex trade if the state
hopes to succeed in the 21st century.
When the nation thinks about
Nevada, Reid said, "it should think about the world's newest ideas and
newest careers - not about its oldest profession."
Gilman
maintains illegal prostitution is rampant across the country, and it
makes more sense to legalize and regulate it. He said bordellos pay
significant taxes to rural counties and the women are regularly checked
by doctors.
"I use the term caregivers for our industry," Gilman
said. "The public has no idea, but so many of the men we deal with are
damaged or widowed or in need of kindness. The industry is so much more
about providing care and human nurturing than anything else."
Associated Press