29th Oct 2012 9:54am | By Editor
The Australian director of a documentary which staged the auctioning of two people's virginities last week could face sex trafficking charges.
Brazil's attorney general, Joao Pedro de Saboia Bandeira, ordered an investigation in Justin Sisely's documentary Virgins Wanted claiming that Sisley could face charges of 'people trafficking'.
Brazilian, Catarina Migliorini, 20, is set to make £487,000 from the sale of her virginity to an unknown Japanese man following an online auction.
Sisley, whose documentary also auctioned a man's virginity, had planned to sidestep legal problems by having the couples consummate their agreements on board a plane between Australia and the United States.
Bandeira has called on the Australian authorities to revoke Migliorini's visa and send her back to Brazil.
Rugby League/AFL convert Israel Folau will make his Wallabies debut on the wing as one of three...
Serial sex attacker Adrian Bayley will spend at least 35 years in prison for the brutal rape and...
Can the Lions keep up their 100 per cent record?
AFL player Stephen Milne has been charged with four counts of rape dating back to an alleged...
Language confusion abounds in Rachel Taylor’s Lost In Translation short video about the mix-ups...
Chief of Australian Army Lieutenant-General David Morrison has become an unlikely hero for...
Aussie prime minister Juila Gillard has called for LNP candidate Mal Brough to be disendorsed over...
It’s too soon for Christian to be boasting he’s ‘top of his game’
Five naughty kids at a Melbourne high school have been suspended after they laced cookie batter with...
Champion Aussie goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer is leaving west London – he announced his intention to...
Talkback