|
A fiery end for the Mustang Ranch
2
 |
Chad Lundquist/Nevada Appeal
Moonlite BunnyRanch brothel owner Dennis Hof talks with
two of his working girls Brooke Taylor, center, and a
woman who identified herself as "Air Force Amy," right,
as the remains of the former Mustang Ranch 2 brothel
burns during a training exercise on
Sunday.
Browse and Buy Nevada Appeal Photos
|

|
Jarid Shipley Appeal Staff Writer, [email protected] March 26, 2007

";
var myString = new String(window.location);
var myArray = myString.split('/');
var Loc = myArray[6];
var quote = /[\d]*/g;
if (!Loc)
{
var myArray = myString.split('=');
var temp = myArray[1];
var Loc2 = temp.match(quote);
var rawString = Loc2[0];
var Loc = rawString.slice(4);
}
document.write(IncludeStr);
document.write(Loc);
document.write(Title);
document.write(EndStr);
}
Print
Email
 Sunday morning, Air Force Amy watched
as firefighters used drip torches to ignite what was left of the
Mustang Ranch 2.
Amy came to watch as the brothel where she
worked for three years was used for training purposes by the Storey
County Fire Department.
"I look at the fence, I remember
having to climb the fence to get out," Amy said. "That was back when
we didn't have a lot of choices. We came to the Mustang out of
desperation."
.jpg)
 Chad Lundquist/Nevada Appeal
A Storey County firefighter uses a drip-torch to help start a
training fire at the former Mustang Ranch 2 east of Reno,
Nev., on Sunday, March 24, 2007. The former brothel building
was donated to the fire department by Dennis Hof, owner of the
Moonlite BunnyRanch brothel.
Browse and Buy Nevada Appeal Photos
| The 20,000-square-foot
building, located on Peri Ranch and East Mustang roads in Lockwood,
was built by Joe Conforte in 1983 at a cost of $1 million. It
operated as a working brothel until 1999 when it was seized by the
Internal Revenue Service after Conforte fled the
country.
Dennis Hof, owner of the Moonlite BunnyRanch, bought
the property for $8,600 on eBay. Hof stripped the buildings of
furniture, fixtures, telephone and fire suppression systems and had
planned on moving the building, but because of the high costs
decided against it.
Hof, who was on hand Sunday, decided to
donate the building to Storey County for fire training purposes. He
also compensated the county for overtime incurred by the
firefighters to destroy the structure.
.jpg)
 Chad Lundquist/Nevada Appeal
Storey County firefighters work to suppress a fire during a
training drill at the former Mustang Ranch 2 on Sunday. The
former brothel building was donated to the fire department by
Dennis Hof, owner of the Moonlite BunnyRanch
brothel.
Browse and Buy Nevada Appeal Photos
| "The good thing is the
BunnyRanch may save a fireman's life someday. This gives them the
practical experience that they don't often get and if that's what
happens then we've done some good," Hof said.
Fire Marshall
Eric Guevin said, "When we can do live fire training where lives and
property aren't at risk, it's a great benefit to us."
Crews
began with a multi-company night drill on Saturday night, destroying
half the building before stifling the blaze, which was ignited again
for the daytime drill Sunday morning.
Guevin said crews from across Northern Nevada have been
using the building.
"It's been a monthlong process and this
is kind of the climax," Guevin said. "As a native Nevadan, (the
building's destruction) is significant, but I see it more as an
opportunity."
As he watched the fire engulf the structure,
Hof said the building's destruction marked the end of an
era.
"The Mustang name is synonymous
with murder, bankruptcy, fraud and bribery and now, hopefully this
will mark the end of that," Hof said.
The billowing smoke
drew onlookers who watched and took pictures of the
brothel.
"We saw the smoke and knew the history so we had to
stop," said William Sayre, of Sparks. Sayre, along with his family,
stopped and took pictures of the blaze.
Air Force Amy said she wasn't sad to see the building
go, but still had a lot of memories from her time there.
"I
reminisce about the girlfriends and the memories here, but none of
those things were directly connected to this building," Amy
said.
� Contact reporter Jarid Shipley at [email protected]
or
881-1217.
|