Alleged stalker of ESPN personality ordered confined to Ill. home
By Jeff Coen
Chicago Tribune
CHICAGO — Michael David Barrett, the traveling insurance salesman charged with surreptitiously videotaping ESPN reporter Erin Andrews, was ordered confined to his suburban Westmont, Ill., home Monday by a federal judge in Chicago.
Barrett, 47, was charged in Los Angeles with interstate stalking charges after he allegedly booked hotel rooms next to Andrews, used a saw to alter her rooms’ peepholes, secretly videotaped her undressed and tried to cash in on the naked videos online.
In ordering electronic monitoring, U.S. Magistrate Judge Arlander Keys said Barrett must be confined to his home between 9 p.m. and 6 a.m. “If the allegations are true, they’re horrific,” the judge said.
Assistant U.S. Atty. Steven Grimes said Barrett was a danger to the victim and to other women. “This was an obsession, your Honor, and one he acted on,” Grimes said in seeking home monitoring.
Barrett has been held in jail since his arrest Friday at O’Hare International Airport.
He is accused of trying to sell videos of Andrews to celebrity Web site TMZ.com and posting them online. He faces interstate stalking charges in Los Angeles, where TMZ is based. If convicted, he could be sentenced to up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
His neighbors said Sunday they were surprised by his arrest. Barrett kept his yard manicured, played golf and enjoyed cooking on a gas grill on a patio behind his $300,000 townhouse. The normalcy of his life was what made the accusations so upsetting to neighbors and acquaintances.
“I’m totally shocked,” said David Wayne, 72, a retired corporate executive who lives several doors down from Barrett. “He looked absolutely normal — nothing distinguishing.”
Investigators believe Barrett recorded Andrews by aiming a cell phone camera through an altered peephole in the door of her hotel room.
Andrews, 31, worked the Auburn-Tennessee game for ESPN on Saturday night in Knoxville, Tenn. She issued a statement after the arrest thanking FBI agents and federal prosecutors for their work and said she hoped the case will eventually help others.
There didn’t appear to be anyone home Sunday at Barrett’s two-story, two-garage house in Westmont, a leafy, middle-class suburb about 20 miles west of Chicago lined with quaint, gas-lamp replica street lights.
The housing development is favored by doctors, executives and retirees, many of whom don’t have children, so people don’t tend to get to know each other well as in other communities, said Dolores Shea, 79, head of the neighborhood association.
Barrett kept to himself, too, Shea said, and no one interviewed on his street Sunday could provide details about his character or personal life. Shea said Barrett drove an expensive car, and she would often see him throwing golf clubs in his trunk.
Shea said a “For Sale” sign was put up in Barrett’s front lawn about two weeks ago. A real estate Web site set the price for the house at $299,000, and described the home as having three bedrooms, two baths and two fireplaces.
An FBI affidavit said Barrett specifically asked for a room next to Andrews at a Tennessee hotel where seven videos were likely taken, apparently through an altered peephole. An eighth video may have been shot at a Milwaukee hotel.
Marriott International Inc. and Ramada Worldwide, which operate the hotels where the videos may have been shot, have issued statements saying they are concerned about their guests privacy and safety, are looking into the matter and are cooperating with authorities.
Barrett’s lawyer, Rick Beuke, said he did not believe Barrett had so much as a traffic ticket on his record.
“He’s as regular a guy as you’ll ever meet — a great friend,” said Beuke, who has known him for a decade. “I must have calls from 30 people wanting to know what they could do to help.”
Beuke said Barrett has been divorced for some time and has children. The Combined Insurance Company of America confirmed that he was an employee who worked in sales management.