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Men of D.C., you may now exhale

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From the Associated Press

A woman accused of running a Washington-area prostitution ring detailed her business in a TV interview Friday night but identified no new high-profile clients.

Deborah Jeane Palfrey supplied the ABC newsmagazine “20/20” with 46 pounds of phone records from her escort service, Pamela Martin & Associates, in hopes that its investigation would ferret out clients who would testify that they did not have sex with the women Palfrey employed.

Some of the phone records could be tracked to prominent business executives, NASA officials, military officers and exclusive-neighborhood mansions, according to the ABC report. But there were no members of Congress or White House officials traced through Palfrey’s records, the network reported.

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Palfrey, 51, of Vallejo, Calif., is charged in federal court with racketeering and money laundering associated with prostitution.

She said that she ran Pamela Martin & Associates from her laundry room and that the women who worked for her signed contracts in which they promised not to have sex with clients.

“These were not cheap women. These were very nice women who just needed to make a few extra dollars,” Palfrey said.

Palfrey said the business was legitimate.

“I was selling fantasy sex,” Palfrey said.

The most prominent client of Palfrey’s business was senior State Department official Randall L. Tobias, who resigned last week after ABC confronted him about his use of the service.

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