World Modeling became infamous for unknowingly representing a then underaged
Traci Lords. Lords became the September 1984
Penthouse "Pet of the Month," for which she earned $5,000, and first performed in pornographic movies in 1984. Following the May 1986 revelation that most of Lords' porn work was illegal, South was arrested on March 4, 1987, and was among those later charged by the
U.S. government with
pandering and
child pornography. The charges were eventually dismissed after the discovery that the government had issued Lords a passport under the name Kristi Nussman. In an interview, South said, "The only reason [the charges were dropped] was that the federal government that saw the very same ID I saw gave Traci a passport to go to Europe to make an X-rated movie." That movie,
Traci, I Love You, which was made in
Cannes soon after Lords' 18th birthday, is her only legal porn film in the United States. In interviews and her book, Lords held him in perpetual contempt for what she saw as the unapologetic role he and others played in her sexual exploitation. She stated that she named him "Tim North" in her autobiography not for legal reasons but as a means to protect people from him, and to avoid giving him and his company any publicity, which could draw young women into the sex industry. Lords wrote that South gave her
cocaine and
champagne during her first nude photo shoot at World Modeling, a charge that South denied. In 1991, porn producers discovered that
Alexandra Quinn, a World Modeling talent, had entered porn in 1990 at age 17. Quinn pretended that she was born in 1968, the same year as Traci Lords' birth. Unlike the Lords case, Quinn did not generate a scandal with media coverage, nor did anyone face legal action. On December 5, 2007, South announced the reopening of World Modeling with a change of direction, as well as an intent to reduce the number of young women he would represent. ==Business model==