Porn actor wanted in sorority assault surrenders

Porn actor wanted in sorority assault surrenders
Christopher Jack Reid is seen in this undated photo from his MySpace page.
PULLMAN, Wash. -- The man sought in a rape case at a Washington State University sorority turned himself in to Pullman police on Wednesday.

Christopher Jack Reid, who has appeared in dozens of hardcore sex movies, was wanted for investigation of second-degree rape, first-degree burglary, attempted residential burglary and two counts of residential burglary in the same case in which a Washington State student, Kyle M. Schott, 23, was arrested Friday.

Reid, 25, was arrested by Pullman police and was to be taken to the Whitman County Jail, said Penni Reavis, a police department employee.

Police believe he met Schott at a bar and together they broke into three sororities early Thursday.

Bail for Schott was set Monday at $100,000, and a Whitman County Superior Court judge ordered that if he is released he must stay at least half a mile from any sorority, fraternity or dormitory. He was being held on the same charges in which Reid is under investigation except for the rape charge, which was first-degree rather than second.

His arrest followed break-ins at the Pi Beta Phi, Delta Gamma and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities early Thursday.

A woman in her early 20s who was not a Kappa Alpha Theta member but was sleeping in the sorority house told police she awoke as two men sexually assaulted her in a manner that did not involve intercourse.

Both men fled down a fire escape.

A reporter from our sister station in Eastern Washington, KXLY, spoke with Reid by phone and he said that he was too drunk last Thursday night to remember what happened.

Reid added that as an adult film actor, he gets paid to have sex with women and would therefore have no reason to rape anyone.

He has hired Spokane attorney Chris Bugbee, whose Web site identifies him as a former major crimes prosecutor who specializes in a variety of services including defending sexual crimes cases.