
A middle school computer science teacher allegedly ran a sophisticated prostitution operation from his suburban home for nearly four years while molding young minds by day and hosting paid sex parties by night.
Story Snapshot
- Eric Simpson, 66, a former Wayne County teacher, faces federal charges for running a prostitution enterprise from his Macedon residence between 2021 and December 2025
- Simpson allegedly used the alias “Major Hands” to promote parties via email and internet, charging cover fees and instructing guests on discreet parking to avoid detection
- He taught middle school students at two districts during the operation, passing all background checks including fingerprinting and sex offender registry screenings
- Federal prosecutors say he facilitated commercial sex work even when absent, allowing workers to use his home independently for client meetings
- If convicted under interstate commerce laws, Simpson faces up to five years in federal prison
The Double Life of a Trusted Educator
Eric Simpson built a reputation as a reliable educator in upstate New York’s tight-knit school communities. From September 2020, he worked his way from substitute teacher to middle school computer science instructor at Gananda Central School District, then moved to North Rose-Wolcott Central School District as a technology teacher in August 2024. Parents trusted him with their children. Administrators vouched for his credentials. Yet federal investigators paint a starkly different picture of what transpired at 2411 Canandaigua Road in Macedon during those same years.
How the Operation Allegedly Functioned
The indictment details a calculated enterprise that relied on modern communication tools to evade detection. Simpson allegedly sent email invitations listing available women by first name, describing them as “dancers” available for negotiated “donations.” He set cover charges for entry to parties at his residence, a quiet property near the intersection of Canandaigua and Macedon Center roads in rural Wayne County. Prosecutors say he directed attendees to park strategically to avoid raising suspicions among neighbors in the low-crime area. The operation allegedly extended beyond party hosting; Simpson permitted sex workers to use his home for individual client appointments when he was not present, functioning as both venue operator and facilitator.
Federal Charges and Legal Framework
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of New York charged Simpson with violating 18 U.S.C. Section 1952, a statute targeting the use of interstate facilities to promote unlawful activity. The law allows federal prosecution when defendants use tools crossing state lines, such as internet platforms and email systems, to advance illegal enterprises. This distinguishes the case from typical local prostitution arrests. Homeland Security Investigations led the multi-agency probe alongside Macedon Police and New York State Police, suggesting the scope extended beyond simple vice enforcement to potential trafficking concerns.
The Background Check Paradox
School officials face uncomfortable questions about how Simpson operated undetected for years. Both employing districts confirmed he passed comprehensive screening required by New York education law: fingerprinting, criminal history checks, and sex offender registry verification. North Rose-Wolcott Superintendent Scott Armbrust emphasized that Simpson underwent all mandated vetting upon hiring in 2024 and showed no red flags. Gananda Central School District similarly reported clean background results during his 2020 to 2024 tenure. The case exposes a troubling reality: background checks capture past criminality but cannot predict or detect ongoing covert illegal activity by individuals with clean records.
Community Impact and Trust Erosion
Macedon residents and parents at both school districts grapple with the revelation that a teacher entrusted with children allegedly managed a prostitution ring simultaneously. The timing compounds the shock; Simpson’s alleged operation ran from 2021 through December 2025, overlapping entirely with his most recent teaching positions. Parents wonder what other activities might have gone unnoticed. The case underscores a broader societal concern: institutions designed to safeguard children rely on systems that screen for past misconduct but struggle to monitor present behavior. School leaders issued statements distancing their districts from Simpson post-indictment, yet the damage to community confidence lingers.
What Happens Next
Simpson was arraigned before U.S. Magistrate Judge Jeremiah J. McCarthy on March 11, 2026, and released under conditions pending trial. No plea has been entered, and he is presumed innocent under law. Assistant U.S. Attorney Casey L. Chalbeck will handle prosecution. The case remains in pretrial phase with no trial date set. If convicted, Simpson faces a maximum five-year prison sentence, though federal sentencing guidelines consider factors like criminal history and cooperation. The residential property on Canandaigua Road may face civil forfeiture proceedings if prosecutors prove it was used to facilitate federal crimes. Meanwhile, Simpson’s teaching career has ended; he resigned from North Rose-Wolcott in January 2026, weeks before the indictment.
Former upstate New York school teacher accused of promoting prostitution at his house https://t.co/Mzjzusnyj3
— The Washington Times (@WashTimes) March 14, 2026
The case raises uncomfortable questions about the limits of institutional safeguards. Simpson allegedly promoted his operation openly enough to attract customers via email and internet ads, yet remained invisible to employers and law enforcement for years. Federal authorities deserve credit for building a case under interstate commerce statutes, a tool that elevates local vice crimes to federal prosecution when technology crosses state lines. The outcome will test whether existing laws adequately address modern prostitution facilitation and whether schools can implement monitoring beyond initial hiring checks without infringing on privacy. For now, Simpson awaits his day in court, and two school districts review their vetting procedures in the shadow of an alleged betrayal of public trust.
Sources:
Rochester teacher prostitution parties indictment – CNY News
Feds: Teacher Used Macedon Home to Run Prostitution Operation – FingerLakes1
Former Wayne County teacher allegedly hosted prostitution parties, meetups in his home – WXXI News
Teacher in Rochester area accused of hosting prostitution parties in Wayne County – WHEC
Former upstate New York school teacher accused of promoting prostitution – Washington Times












