Central City is asking a judge to put an end to acts of public indecency at a strip club along its historic Main Street, the latest move in a yearslong debate between it and the club’s owner.
“Rick’s Cabaret is an adult theater … that regularly violates the licensing requirement, the hours regulation, and conduct restrictions,” the city complained to a judge in a Dec. 23 lawsuit.
Owned by RCI Hospitality, a publicly traded company out of Texas, Rick’s Cabaret opened in June at 130 Main St. RCI bought the 3-story brick building from the city for $2.4 million in 2022 and then spent more than $3 million rehabbing, it says.
Central City does not allow so-called sexually oriented businesses within 1,000 feet of schools and homes — effectively a ban in a town of just 800 people. But RCI believed it could sidestep the need for a sexually oriented business license by having its dancers wear latex.
“It works so well, people think they’re nude,” then-CEO Eric Langan told the Denver Gazette.
But Central City says the strippers at Rick’s are not covered in latex — or anything else.
“Entertainers at Rick’s Cabaret regularly expose their buttocks, bare female breasts and often their pubic regions, both on- and offstage,” the city explained in last month’s lawsuit.
The city is asking Gilpin County District Judge Jeffrey Pilkington to issue an injunction stopping the indecent behavior and also ordering the club to close by 3 a.m. In August, RCI extended the hours there to 4 p.m.-4 a.m. to meet customers’ increased demands.
Pilkington said he will schedule a hearing on the matter after RCI has been served the lawsuit, which has not occurred yet. Central City has hired attorneys Marcus McAskin and Christine Fitch at Michow Guckenberger McAskin in Greenwood Village to represent it.
RCI spokespeople Gary Fishman and Michael Wichman declined to comment Wednesday.
RCI is no stranger to courtrooms. The company is suing Denver’s auditor, who has fined it $14 million for alleged wage theft at RCI’s Denver strip clubs. Additionally, Langan, the former CEO who owns a home near Central City, and several other RCI executives are facing criminal charges in New York for allegedly bribing an auditor there in exchange for lucrative tax breaks.
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