U.S. Marshals arrest fugitive sex offender allegedly posing as LGBTQ+ journalist for years
A man who worked as a journalist in LGBTQ+ media has been arrested and identified by California authorities as a fugitive sex offender who police say had been living under an assumed identity since at least 2016.
Police officials allege that George Paul Bishop, 66, had lived under the name “Brody Levesque” in Santa Cruz County, south of San Francisco, for several years. The alias matches a journalist who has written for LGBTQ+ news site LGBTQ Nation, and a Brody Levesque once even served as editor-in-chief of the Los Angeles Blade.
According to Fairfax County Circuit Court in Virginia, just outside Washington, D.C., a warrant for Bishop’s arrest has been active since June 14, 2016. Authorities allege that Bishop failed to register as a sex offender, leading to officials designating him as a fugitive.
Bishop was taken into custody on Wednesday by the Capitola Police Department, working alongside the U.S. Marshals Service, a press release announced. According to Capitola Police Captain Leo Moreno, Bishop was arrested on an active warrant issued from the D.C. area.
Moreno, who also serves as the department’s LGBTQ+ liaison, confirmed to The Advocate that Bishop and Levesque are the same person who “identified himself as press” and that the department is conducting a follow-up investigation into his activities.
Bishop has a criminal history dating back at least two decades. According to court records and a 2005 report in The Connection, Bishop was previously convicted in Fairfax County for manufacturing and possessing child pornography.
Authorities at the time alleged that Bishop filmed and photographed a 16-year-old boy in bondage gear at the home of a co-defendant, Richard Wendall Evans, who was also convicted.
Bishop pleaded guilty in June 2005 and was sentenced to three years in prison and 12 years of probation. Court records show that he was required to register as a Tier 3 sex offender for life but failed to do so in 2016, leading to his classification as an absconder, according to the Virginia State Police Sex Offender registry.
According to a LinkedIn page, Brody Levesque listed himself as a producer at Rated LGBT Radio and former editor-in-chief of the Los Angeles Blade, where he worked from 2020 until last June. He is listed as the editor-in-chief of Rated LGBTQ, a news website. The Advocate contacted a representative for the site but did not receive a response.
A Muck Rack profile also attributes work to Levesque at publications, including The New Civil Rights Movement, Georgia Voice, and Pink News UK. The profile describes Levesque as a longtime wire service reporter who has worked for UPI, Reuters, and Agence France-Presse, covering the White House, Capitol Hill, and the European Union. The Advocate contacted the wire agencies for confirmation but did not immediately receive a response. A spokesperson for Reuters said they would respond to questions about Levesque’s employment after looking into it.
The Advocate also contacted the publishers of the Washington Blade and Los Angeles Blade, who did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Executive editor of LGBTQ Nation’s parent company, Q.Digital, Bil Browning said that Levesque worked for the previous owners of the news site about ten years ago. Scott Gatz, the founder and CEO of Q.Digital confirmed that Levesque wrote for the publication before the company acquired LGBTQ+ Nation. “This individual has never worked for Q.Digital, but his byline appears in the archives which we acquired in 2015,” Gatz told The Advocate. Levesque first appears on LGBTQ Nation’sauthor page in 2010 and his last contribution was in February 2013.
Beyond his past as a writer, Levesque’s name appeared in media industry announcements just months before his arrest. In September 2024, Axiosreported that Uncloseted Media, a newly launched LGBTQ-focused news outlet, had named Levesque as a member of its business and media advisory board. The outlet, founded by Spencer Macnaughton, an LGBTQ+ journalist and adjunct professor at New York University, sought to revitalize investigative journalism focused on LGBTQ+ issues. Macnaughton did not immediately respond to The Adovcate’s request for comment.
Authorities are now investigating whether Bishop committed additional crimes while living under his assumed identity. In a press release, Capitola police described him as a “registered sexually violent predator.”
The Capitola Police Department urges anyone with information about Bishop, particularly any potential victims, to contact Detective Albert Gonzalez at agonzalez@ci.capitola.ca.us.
According to Santa Cruz Superior Court records, Bishop remains in Santa Cruz County custody after a Friday arraignment and is scheduled to appear for a review hearing on April 1. It’s expected that Bishop will be extradited to Virginia.
Levesque did not respond to messages. The Advocate has reached out to Bishop’s court-appointed attorney, Manuel Nieto, for comment but has not received a response as of publication.
This is a developing story and has been updated with comments by representatives for LGBTQ Nation.