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Man buys motel specifically to spy on his guests and document their activities

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gutshot

Member
The New Yorker has this fascinating and disturbing tale of a man who bought a 21-room motel in suburban Colorado with the sole intent of spying on his guests.

I know a married man and father of two who bought a twenty-one-room motel near Denver many years ago in order to become its resident voyeur. With the assistance of his wife, he cut rectangular holes measuring six by fourteen inches in the ceilings of more than a dozen rooms. Then he covered the openings with louvred aluminum screens that looked like ventilation grilles but were actually observation vents that allowed him, while he knelt in the attic, to see his guests in the rooms below. He watched them for decades, while keeping an exhaustive written record of what he saw and heard. Never once, during all those years, was he caught.

He explained that he had “logged an accurate record of the majority of the individuals that I watched”

and compiled interesting statistics on each, i.e., what was done; what was said; their individual characteristics; age & body type; part of the country from where they came; and their sexual behavior. These individuals were from every walk of life. The businessman who takes his secretary to a motel during the noon hour, which is generally classified as “hot sheet” trade in the motel business. Married couples traveling from state to state, either on business or vacation. Couples who aren’t married, but live together. Wives who cheat on their husbands and visa versa. Lesbianism, of which I made a particular study. . . . Homosexuality, of which I had little interest, but still watched to determine motivation and procedure. The Seventies, later part, brought another sexual deviation forward, namely, group sex, which I took great interest in watching . . . .
I have seen most human emotions in all their humor and tragedy carried to completion. Sexually, I have witnessed, observed and studied the best first hand, unrehearsed, non-laboratory sex between couples, and most other conceivable sex deviations during these past 15 years.
My main objective in wanting to provide you with this confidential information is the belief that it could be valuable to people in general and sex researchers in particular.​

Here the author of the article describes spying on a young couple from Chicago:

While driving us back to the Manor House, Foos continued to talk. He mentioned that an attractive young couple had been staying in Room 6 for the past few days and suggested that perhaps we would get a look at them tonight. They were from Chicago and had come to Colorado to ski. Donna always registered the more youthful and attractive guests in one of the “viewing rooms.” The nine non-viewing rooms were saved for families or individuals or couples who were elderly or less physically appealing.

As we approached the motel, I began to feel uneasy. I noticed that the neon “no vacancy” sign was on. “That’s good for us,” Foos said. “It means we can lock up for the night and not be bothered by late arrivals looking for rooms.” If guests needed anything, a buzzer at the front desk would alert the proprietors, even in the attic, so that if Foos was up there viewing he could climb down a ladder in the utility room and arrive at the desk in less than three minutes.

In the office, Donna’s mother handed Foos some mail and briefed him on the maids’ schedules. I waited on a sofa, under some framed posters of the Rocky Mountains and a couple of AAA plaques affirming the cleanliness of the Manor House Motel.

Finally, after saying good night to his mother-in-law, Foos beckoned me to follow him across the parking lot to the utility room. Curtains were drawn across the windows that fronted each of the guest rooms. I could hear the sounds of television coming from some of them, which I assumed did not bode well for the expectations of my host.

Attached to one wall of the utility room was a wooden ladder painted blue. After acknowledging his finger-to-lip warning that we maintain silence, I climbed the ladder behind him. On a landing, he unlocked a door leading into the attic. After he had locked the door behind us, I saw, in the dim light, to my left and right, sloping wooden beams that supported the motel’s pitched roof; in the middle of the narrow floor was a carpeted catwalk about three feet wide, extending over the ceilings of the twenty-one guest rooms.

Crouching on the catwalk behind Foos, so as to avoid hitting my head on a beam, I watched as he pointed down toward a vent in the floor. Light could be seen a few feet ahead of us. Light also came from a few other vents farther away, but from these I could hear the noise of televisions. The room below us was quiet—except for a soft murmuring of voices and the vibrato of bed springs.

I saw what Foos was doing, and I did the same: I got down on my knees and crawled toward the lighted louvres. Then I stretched my neck in order to see as much as I could through the vent, nearly butting heads with Foos as I did so. Finally, I saw a naked couple spread out on the bed below, engaged in oral sex. Foos and I watched for several moments, and then Foos lifted his head and gave me a thumbs-up sign. He whispered that it was the skiing couple from Chicago.

Despite an insistent voice in my head telling me to look away, I continued to observe, bending my head farther down for a closer view. As I did so, I failed to notice that my necktie had slipped down through the slats of the louvred screen and was dangling into the motel room within a few yards of the woman’s head. I realized my carelessness only when Foos grabbed me by the neck and, with his free hand, pulled my tie up through the slats. The couple below saw none of this: the woman’s back was to us, and the man had his eyes closed.

Foos’s expression, as he looked at me in silence, reflected considerable irritation. I felt embarrassed. What if my necktie had betrayed his hideaway? My next thought was: Why was I worried about protecting Gerald Foos? What was I doing up here, anyway? Had I become complicit in his strange and distasteful project? I followed him down the ladder into the parking area.

“You must put away that tie,” he said finally, escorting me to my room. I nodded and wished him a good night.

The article is long but worth a full read. It's a very fascinating look, not only into other people's lives and behavior, but the mind of this voyeur who seems like a total psychopath.
 

StMeph

Member
The article is long but worth a full read. It's a very fascinating look, not only into other people's lives and behavior, but the mind of this voyeur who seems like a total psychopath.

It's also over a month old, but I remember this article. It was interesting in what manner the man lied to himself to rationalize the process in his mind.
 

gutshot

Member
It's also over a month old, but I remember this article. It was interesting in what manner the man lied to himself to rationalize the process in his mind.

Yeah, I realize it was from last month but I did a search and didn't see it posted. Figured it would be new to a lot of people here.
 

Ekdrm2d1

Member
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About halfway through - good read so far. Fascinating reading about human behavior and Foos' bizarre 'notes' on the encounters.
 
Read this last week. Pretty crazy, but it's also not the only case of this happening.

I think the extra creepy part of the story is how he kept documentation.
 

gutshot

Member
What, he was never arrested?

He was never caught and only told his wives and this author who signed a confidentiality agreement. Only recently did he decide to go public with his "research" and waived the confidentiality agreement. This story is the first any one has heard of this.
 

bounchfx

Member
Only halfway through reading city honestly this is pretty fascinating, besides the obvious lack of privacy. Did he keep any of the names of people he's watched? Hopefully not. This is super interesting though just as a documentation of how people act with others in private. So many honest, intimate moments. I'm genuinely curious at his findings in a morbid way. Again, the privacy part is fucked but the data gathering is something to admire, rather than straight vouyer
 

Risible

Member
Is this not illegal?? Can't he be prosecuted for this, or is it something like since it's his place he can do what he wants? WTF.
 

Fuchsdh

Member
The most interesting part of the article to me was that the guy found not one but two women who were totally into helping him with it (and the second wife was totally into the voyeurism as well.)
 

Savitar

Member
Read it awhile back and yeah it's an odd look into the mind of someone who is clearly doing something illegal yet you really want to know the why. It certainly reminded me of so many motel movie stories in the day.
 

Jebusman

Banned
While unethical, it's interesting to read about the kinds of things he observed.

This. Some people in this thread don't seem to be able to separate the lack of ethics versus the curiousity of it all.

Like look, we know what he did was illegal, for decades. But it's because of ethics that we don't ever get to see something like this, and having a look into someone's mind, along with his observation of public nature. It's something you can't ever get given that even the slightest knowledge of being watched would taint their interactions.

Yes, it's wrong. And I'm not advocating for the lack of ethics when it comes to stuff like this. But now that it's out there, it's a real facinating thing to read and understand.
 

Zaphrynn

Member
Stories like this always makes me feel better about changing in motel bathrooms only (never the actual room) and being quick as possible haha.

Can a confidentiality agreement even be legit when the activities are illegal? I'd imagine not.

Dude's sick, and the meticulous documentation of guests adds another layer of creepy. Glad he had non-viewing rooms for families.... I hope.

Regardless, this is fascinating in its own way.
 
Creepy how this guy is acting like this shit is totally normal or seriously important research. You're just getting off on spying on people, literally.

That said this story is still fascinating.
 

Nyoro SF

Member
My observations indicate that the majority of vacationers spend their time in misery. They fight about money; where to visit. . . . All their aggressions somehow are immeasurably increased, and this is the time they discover they are not properly matched. Women especially have a difficult time adjusting to both the new surroundings and their husbands. Vacations produce all the anxieties within mankind to come forward during this time, and to perpetuate the worst of emotions. . . .
You can never really determine during their appearances in public that their private life is full of hell and unhappiness. . . . This is the “plight of the human corpus,” and I’m sure provides the answer that if the misery of mankind were revealed all together spontaneously, mass genocide might correspondently follow.

Travel stress man.
 

gutshot

Member
The furry part got me though.

the obese fellow who checked in with a much younger man and then dressed him up in a furry costume with horns, saying, “You are heavenly; I have never seen a more beautiful sheep-boy.”
 

Deft Beck

Member
This. Some people in this thread don't seem to be able to separate the lack of ethics versus the curiousity of it all.

Like look, we know what he did was illegal, for decades. But it's because of ethics that we don't ever get to see something like this, and having a look into someone's mind, along with his observation of public nature. It's something you can't ever get given that even the slightest knowledge of being watched would taint their interactions.

Yes, it's wrong. And I'm not advocating for the lack of ethics when it comes to stuff like this. But now that it's out there, it's a real facinating thing to read and understand.

Yes, this is my attitude about it.
 

Angry Grimace

Two cannibals are eating a clown. One turns to the other and says "does something taste funny to you?"
He was never caught and only told his wives and this author who signed a confidentiality agreement. Only recently did he decide to go public with his "research" and waived the confidentiality agreement. This story is the first any one has heard of this.

The author should have reported him anyways.
 

Grifter

Member
That story about the guy eating KFC was like a light, funny, gross reprieve from the rest of the article and stirred up a while different set of emotions.

The idea that he had wifes who would spy with him and they'd get intimate while watching...

That he'd enter the rooms to check women's bra sizes was one of the more off-putting details.

Considering the inconsistent dates and lack of record of the Jane Doe, was the author implying that parts of the journal may be fabricated?
 

Instro

Member
I find it interesting that the author never reported him. That contract is completely meaningless. I'm not sure the writer of the article I much better than the hotel owner, although he paints himself as such.
 
This gets into serious FUBAR territory when he becomes involved in a murder. That woman probably would not have been killed if not for his actions. And he left her die on a motel room floor.
 

gutshot

Member
This gets into serious FUBAR territory when he becomes involved in a murder. That woman probably would not have been killed if not for his actions. And he left her die on a motel room floor.

Yeah, the whole story is pretty crazy but that part literally made me say "holy shit". Although there is some question as to the veracity of the murder story.
 

platocplx

Member
While unethical, it's interesting to read about the kinds of things he observed.

yeah it is pretty interesting, pretty much caught people in their most intimate moments its crazy as hell and there is absolutely no way that you could ever get something like this in an ethical manner. but man this is pretty wild.
 

Dot-N-Run

Member
I'm reading through this and it's been an interesting article so far, but I just can't stand the font they are using. For some reason every single character is incomplete in some way, like all the As missing the horizontal stroke (resulting in it just appearing as an upside down V). I find it really frustrating to look at.
 

Jebusman

Banned
I'm reading through this and it's been an interesting article so far, but I just can't stand the font they are using. For some reason every single character is incomplete in some way, like all the As missing the horizontal stroke (resulting in it just appearing as an upside down V). I find it really frustrating to look at.

Are you sure that's not just a rendering issue on your side? All the As look fine to me.
 
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