Hiring sex workers can be risky business. (Or: Why we think some male Logan victims keep quiet.)

With all our recent talk about 5Time’s admitted sex work, we thought this article would be entertaining and relevant. It’s about a ring of strippers/prostitutes who were drugging and fleecing their male clients.

It’s relevant, because we’re here because of Five-time Financial Felon Sharon Logan’s extensive history of theft convictions, and her exploiting Southern California men financially in other ways, as well as her false accusations, and her harassment of men and women alike.

And, we wonder if Sharon Logan’s admitted sex work, coupled with her demonstrated willingness to harass, accuse, and lie, may help explain why more people haven’t called her out publicly for her thefts and dishonesty.

For example: Why won’t the owner of Meridian Systems Supply in Orange respond to our questions about Logan’s apparently false claims on her resume about his company? (He has acknowledged our messages, he just hasn’t responded to our questions.)

If someone told us that a five-time financial felon had gained employment handling a law firm’s money by falsely claiming they’d been our company’s controller for six years, managing our employees and finances, we’d want to set the record straight about that.

If the felon wasn’t lying about her employment with us, but instead had lied to the unemployment department that she’d been unemployed since January 2020, and lied on her 2022 bankruptcy petition about it, we’d be mad about that, too.

What might intimidate us into keeping our mouth shut? Well, even if we hadn’t paid for Logan’s intimate services, we might worry she would falsely claim we had. And who knows what other stories she might make up.

Another example: Why didn’t that Mission Viejo attorney, who claimed in 2013 on Facebook she stole from him, ever prosecute Logan? (We wish we’d screenshot his post before we put that frowny-face on it.)

Brady Price did sue Logan and got a judgment for other money.

Price was trying to spread the word about Logan, but then he stopped. Logan went on to steal from at least three others shortly afterward, including the two companies discussed in this post:

We can’t ask Price why, because he died tragically in 2015, several months before the statute of limitations was up on grand theft. His elderly parents and his post-Logan girlfriend (who appears well-employed, and generally non-Loganian) broke down his door and found his body on September 9, two weeks after the Orange County Animal Care settlement Logan has been milking for publicity for the past seven years. Logan was at large on a warrant at the time, but still doing media interviews.

We suspect a connection between Price’s backdown on the theft charge, and the fact he began lending Logan money a mere four days after his arrest on December 10, 2012 for crashing with a BAC of 3.5 times the legal limit, plus an unspecified drug in his system. (No one was injured.) He lent her more on Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve, according to his lawsuit. (That was separate from the $7,500 he claimed she stole. He didn’t say how she stole it.)

Price had a longstanding alcohol problem. But the business attorney had managed to stay out of trouble with the law until a couple months after he apparently took up with Logan. (We’d love to be wrong about the taking-up part.) Records indicate Price struggled in completing his court-ordered substance abuse program, although he eventually finished, and, unlike Logan in her many criminal cases, paid all his fines.

Now, we personally wouldn’t have an issue with a 40-something, child-free bachelor paying for intimate services. But not everyone feels the same way. And we see where that could give Logan leverage. Especially over someone already dealing with an addiction.

Just our speculation. You might have a different theory.

If you want to run it by us (or have any other thoughts to share), you can reach us at trujillotinamarie@gmail.com.

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