Brazil News

RIO DE JANEIRO – Brazil has rejected the visa application for Australian filmmaker Justin Sisely, director of the ‘Virgins Wanted’ documentary, reported Brazilian online media. “This may be because, apparently, I’m a sex trafficker,” Sisely told a reporter in Sydney, Australia.
‘Virgins Wanted’ Director Justin Sisely Denied Visa
Sisely is the creator of the online auction in which Brazilian Ingrid Migliorini, 20, better known as Catarina Migliorini, sold her first sexual experience to a 53-year-old Japanese man, known only as Natsu, for $780 thousand dollars.
After Brazil had banned Sisely from entering the country, Catarina decided to stay in Australia rather than return to Brazil without him. A Brazilian promoter hired Migliorini to appear at a fashion show Tuesday. “The company that hired us is not happy because the tickets sold out and clothing had already been paid for,” she said.
To accommodate the show, Sisely changed the date of Catarina’s deflowerment, originally scheduled for Sunday, Nov. 4. Now, he says, he will have to change the plans again. “Basically, we changed the film schedule because of this show, but the documentary continues,” he explained. Catarina should lose her virginity later this month in Sydney. “Anyway, there will be other opportunities (to visit Brazil),” said Sisely.
Sisely runs the risk of arrest if he ever makes it to Brazil. Although prostitution is legal in Brazil, sexual exploitation of a prostitute, as well as human trafficking are both illegal. Exploitation can bring a sentence of up to eight years in prison.
The Brazilian Attorney General ordered an investigation into the case. He also sent a letter to the foreign ministry asking them to ask the Australians to revoke Catarina’s visa and deport her to Brazil.
The virginity of a young Russian man sold at the same Virgins Wanted auction for $3 thousand dollars to a Sao Paulo man.