Tag Archives: strip club

Judge: Nuns can pursue suit to close neighboring strip club

(CHICAGO) A group of suburban Chicago nuns can continue their lawsuit aimed at permanently shutting down a strip club that opened next to their convent several years ago.

Owners of Club Allure in Stone Park wanted the case dismissed. Cook County Judge Peter Flynn ruled Tuesday it can continue, but he won’t take further action until questions over the club’s liquor license are answered.

The club closed last month when liquor commissioner and Mayor Beniamino Mazzulla revoked the license. He says the club violates an ordinance prohibiting the sale of liquor near churches and schools.

Club lawyer Amy Hansen tells The Chicago Sun-Times Allure may not reopen without a liquor license.

The Missionary Sisters of St. Charles Borromeo revised their lawsuit recently to include allegations of prostitution, which club owners deny.

Scott Bergthold is an attorney representing a Stone Park convent against a neighboring strip club. He joined the John and Ray morning show to talk about a new ruling that allows the case to move forward.

Story from the AP. Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Nuns get holiday reprieve from nearby strip club; lawsuit goes on

(CHICAGO) A Cook County judge on Tuesday said a sisterhood of nuns in Melrose Park can press on with their lawsuit aimed at shutting down a strip club that opened next door to their convent six years ago, the Chicago Sun-Times is reporting.

The Missionary Sisters of St. Charles Borromeo have been enjoying a quiet holiday season since the mayor of neighboring Stone Park last month revoked the liquor license of Club Allure, a move that apparently prompted the owners to shut down and stopped the late night sounds of music, motorcycles and fighting the nuns say the club attracts. At a hearing Tuesday, Judge Peter A. Flynn ruled that they can continue a legal battle aimed at shutting Allure down for good, though he said he will take no further action on the lawsuit until after the status of the club’s liquor license is resolved.

Flynn this spring turned back the nuns, claiming their complaints about noise and disturbances at the club were too vague to support a lawsuit, prompting lawyers for the Sisters to send forth private investigators into Allure to gather evidence.

In October, the Sisters filed a 57-page complaint including sordid details of doings inside the club, alleging that over the course of a dozen visits between 2014 and the spring of 2016, dancers treated the nuns’ investigators to full-contact lap dances and “simulated sex,” and outright offers of paid sex.

“Paid sexual contact, that was rampant on every occasion that our investigator visited the premises,” Scott Bergthold, attorney for the nuns, said outside the courtroom. “People were being paid to stimulate their sexual organs and engage in other paid sexual contact.”

Amy Hansen, lawyer for the club, said that there have been no arrests for prostitution or other criminal activity alleged by the nuns, and also noted that without a liquor license, Allure may never reopen.

“It’s obvious that a liquor license is vital to operators of this club,” Hansen said.

Robert Itzkow, an attorney who had been an investor in the club, said club owners would appeal a November decision by Stone Park Mayor Beniamino Mazzulla, who also is the town’s liquor commissioner, revoking Allure’s liquor license. Mazzulla ruled that the club, which had a license to serve booze since it opened in 2010, was within 100 feet of a “church” — the chapels on the nuns’ compound.

Hansen declined comment as she left the courthouse, and Itzkow, who did not attend the hearing, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Tom Murphy, a lawyer monitoring the liquor license dispute for the nuns, said Tuesday that Allure had appealed Mazzulla’s ruling to the state Liquor Control Commission. Itzkow said if the appeal fails in front of the state commission, Allure would challenge the ruling in circuit court.

Flynn pointed out that most of the case law the nuns’ lawyers used to build their case against the club was based on court rulings of “lewdness” and nuisance laws that dated back to the Prohibition era, when, Flynn said “blue noses” in the legislature passed sweeping and prudish laws on decency. Flynn said the case could proceed under state nuisance laws solely because the nuns alleged prostitution was taking place at Allure.

But for the past few weeks at least, the music has stopped for Club Allure, and for the nuns, there is peace on Earth, Bergthold said.

“I’m sure they’re enjoying the Advent season without the loud thumping noise and revving Harleys at 3 a.m. and all the nuisance-type activities that they’ve complained of,” Bergthold said. “I’m certain that it’s a better circumstance now.”

— Chicago Sun-Times

It’s Round Two of nuns versus strippers in western suburbs

(MELROSE PARK) Warning: This story contains a reference to “high-friction bodily interactions for money.”

Or as the not-gonna-take-anymore nuns of Melrose Park also call it in their latest legal assault on Club Allure, their next-door strip club neighbors: Prostitution.

Whether they are called “lap dances,” “hump dances,” or “bed dances” is irrelevant, said Tom Brejcha, president and chief counsel of the Thomas More Society, which is representing the Sisters of St. Charles Borromeo. “We have irrefutable evidence that there is, regularly occurring . . . acts that qualify as the crime of prostitution.”

Plus, he added: the term “lap dance” is a “vague phrase; it covers a lot of sins.”The nuns want Club Allure shuttered. In June, nuns in full habits marched to the Stone Park club to publicize what they say is the club’s violation of Illinois’ zoning law, mandating a 1,000-foot buffer zone between adult entertainment facilities and any place of worship and school, the Sun-Times is reporting.

But now the nuns have gone further, saying what goes on inside the strip club is more than simply degrading — it’s illegal.

How can that be so?

Brejcha wouldn’t go into details on Thursday about what specifically has occurred at the club that amounts to prostitution.

“We’re in a convent and that’s part of the problem,” Brejcha said. “I don’t want to be graphic with you here. Believe me we could.”

An amended lawsuit filed this week in Cook County court on behalf of the nuns, neighbors and the village of neighboring Melrose Park adds a little more context:

“Plaintiffs have determined that Club Allure’s dancers or entertainers engage in direct and immediate physical, high-friction full contact with customers’ or patrons’ bodies, and specifically the genital or other sexually sensitive areas thereof . . .” the complaint states.

The lawsuit also details some of the strip club’s ill effects: “wanton drunkenness,” “flashing neon and strobe lights . . . that give the illusion of daylight” and fights, including over a dozen people brawling in the parking lot.

One morning, a female employee was beaten in the parking lot by one of the owners, the court filing alleges. If the woman reported the beating, the owner told her it would be “the last thing she would do,” according to the complaint.

Then in December, bartender Zaira Lugo left the club one Sunday morning after a night of partying, according to the lawsuit. She died after crashing her car just blocks away.On a private Facebook page for Club Allure employees, managing partner Sean O’Brien told employees not to talk publicly about Lugo’s death or he would “tape your mouth shut and staple your face to the carpet,” the complaint states.

Representatives for Club Allure, the defendant in the suit, didn’t respond to calls seeking comment.

Since the nuns first drew attention to the strip club, it has quieted down, Sister Noemia Silva said.

She added: “It’s not a matter of winning or losing. It’s a matter of doing what is right and just.”

But if the nuns wind up losing in court, even bigger changes are in store for the convent and neighborhood, Silva predicted.

“This place will be very, very different because they won’t hold back,” she said.

— Sun-Times

© Copyright 2015 Sun-Times Media, LLC