Alleged adult entertainment shuttered in raid
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Dave Brooks
Tucked away in the back of Chet Allan Ringwood’s suburban Huntington
Beach home is an all-black studio decorated with vinyl and leather
sofas, black lighting and a pole that runs from the ceiling to a
small dancing platform with mirrored tiles.
“You should have seen this place a few nights ago,” said the
38-year-old Ringwood. His crossed arms displayed shamrock tattoos
running down his forearms. “It was pimp to the hilt.”
Ringwood is the owner of Clover Enterprises, a small Surf
City-based adult entertainment company that employs roommates
20-year-old Rachel Rudolph and 41-year-old Catherine Ringwood in a
popular bachelor party act.
Until recently, Ringwood said he hadn’t had any problems operating
in Huntington Beach. He usually takes his show on the road, but about
six times a year, he hosts elaborate bachelor parties at his house. A
homeowner on Marken Lane for 15 years, Ringwood said he had no idea
what he was doing was illegal.
That all changed May 21 when about eight to 10 armed officers from
the Huntington Beach Police Department sent a battering ram through
his rear gate and stormed into his home, arresting him, his two
roommates, a body guard and two other strippers working a bachelor
party for about 25 clients.
“They didn’t have to send armed guys with riot gear through my
yard,” he said. “I think that was a bit overkill. I wish someone
would have just come and told me.”
Huntington Beach police say Ringwood had been charging about $50 a
person to get into the party, as well as taking money for shots of
alcohol.
“Once the undercover operatives were inside, they alerted officers
outside that there were performers taking their clothes off on stage
and a bar where people could buy drinks,” Huntington Beach Lt. Craig
Juniger said.
Ringwood was charged with operating an escort establishment,
running a business and selling alcohol without a permit. The girls
were charged with not having a stripper’s permit.
Ringwood contends he was just throwing a party that, when
performed on the road for his clients, is legal.
He added that he tries to go by the book, displaying his film
permit to shoot adult movies in his home.
The scale of the raid, he said, sent him a message that he wasn’t
welcome in Huntington Beach. He said he doesn’t want to relocate
elsewhere.
“Everybody in the adult film industry works in the (San Fernando)
Valley and lives in Orange County,” he said. “I want to live and work
here.”
There are currently no strip clubs in Huntington Beach. For years,
the city of Huntington Beach battled with Harry Tatarian, who opened
the first and only nude juice bar on Beach Blvd. in July 2000. Just a
few months after opening, the city passed an ordinance prohibiting
any contact between dancers and customers, and required dancers to
maintain a six-foot distance when performing.
Tatarian sued in federal court and both sides spent two years
battling over the case. Tatarian dropped the lawsuit in 2002 after
his Flamingo Adult Theater went belly up.
Juniger said the recent raid wasn’t tied to Huntington Beach’s
position on strip clubs but to concerns that Ringwood was operating
an illegal business in a residential neighborhood without the proper
permits.
“This is really an isolated incident,” he said. “We haven’t had
anything like this before in Huntington Beach.”
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