Teacher ARRESTED – Ran Secret Prostitution Ring Where!

Officer escorting handcuffed person down hallway.

A trusted middle school teacher ran a secret prostitution ring from his suburban home for over four years, evading every background check while shaping young minds—what hidden vulnerabilities lurk in our schools?

Story Snapshot

  • Eric Simpson, 66, indicted federally for managing a prostitution enterprise at his Macedon, NY home from 2021 to 2025.
  • Worked simultaneously in Gananda, North Rose-Wolcott, and Rochester school districts as computer science and technology teacher.
  • Passed all state background checks, fingerprinting, and sex offender registry screenings despite ongoing illegal activities.
  • Organized prostitution parties and individual transactions using emails and online ads; faces up to five years in prison.
  • Released on conditions after arraignment; multi-agency probe exposes cracks in educator vetting.

Teacher’s Double Life Unravels

Eric Simpson started as a substitute teacher at Gananda Central School District in September 2020. He advanced to full-time middle school computer science teacher in September 2022. That same year, federal charges claim he launched a prostitution operation from his Canandaigua Road residence in Macedon, New York. Simpson controlled pricing, scheduled workers, managed venue access, and directed customer parking to avoid detection. His home became the hub for both group parties and one-on-one commercial sex acts. This dual existence persisted undetected for years.

Simpson left Gananda in August 2024 and immediately joined North Rose-Wolcott Central School District as a probationary technology teacher. He resigned there in January 2026. Rochester Public Schools also employed him recently. Throughout, he used interstate emails and internet ads to promote services and coordinate clients. The operation’s sophistication—spanning four years and eight months—relied on his educator’s stable income and community standing for cover. Common sense demands better safeguards when criminals hide in plain sight among those trusted with children.

Federal Indictment Details Operation

A federal grand jury indicted Simpson on one count: using interstate facilities to promote, manage, establish, carry on, and facilitate a prostitution enterprise. The charge covers activities from 2021 through December 2025. U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced the case Thursday, March 13, 2026, after filing on Tuesday and unsealing Wednesday. Assistant U.S. Attorney Casey L. Chalbeck handles prosecution in Western District of New York court. Maximum penalty stands at five years imprisonment.

Homeland Security Investigations, led by Special Agent-in-Charge Erin Keegan, spearheaded the probe with Macedon Police Chief John Colella and New York State Police Major Kevin Sucher. Arraigned before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jeremiah J. McCarthy, Simpson secured release on strict court conditions. One indictment note mentions his alias “Major Hands,” hinting at deeper operational layers. Facts align solidly; no contradictions appear across reports.

Background Checks Fail to Catch Crimes

North Rose-Wolcott confirmed Simpson passed fingerprinting, background checks, and New York State Sex Offender Registry screening upon hire in August 2024. Gananda verified his service from 2020 to 2024. These standard procedures missed his alleged enterprise entirely. Parents now question if proximity to schools enabled risks to students. This exposes limits in current vetting—non-sex offenses evade registries, yet common sense and conservative values prioritize proactive protection of children over blind trust in flawed systems.

Simpson wielded power over commercial sex workers, dictating terms and logistics. Customers faced his rules for discreet access. His educator role lent legitimacy, sustaining the scheme. School districts now battle reputational damage, with parents voicing anxiety over unchecked conduct near kids. Districts may face lawsuits; broader New York schools confront hiring scrutiny.

Short-term fallout hits Macedon residents, school staff, and families hardest. Long-term, expect policy shifts: deeper monitoring, advanced checks beyond registries. Educator trust erodes as patterns emerge—like New Jersey cases of teachers arrested for sex offenses in 2024-2025. Federal-state-local coordination shines here, proving multi-agency force dismantles hidden crimes. Yet, prevention demands vigilance; no system is foolproof without moral accountability.

Sources:

U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney’s Office, Western District of New York: Official indictment announcement and case details

WIBX 950 (Entercom Communications): Established news organization covering regional news

Finger Lakes Daily News: Regional news publication

WXXINEWS.org: Regional news outlet

WHEC (NBC affiliate): Established television news organization

Washington Times: National news publication