Chicago Sun-Times

Area ‘ johns’ allegedly became key players in Thai sex ring

- BY FRANK MAIN Staff Reporter Email: fmain@suntimes.com Twitter: @FrankMainN­ews

Chicago customers of a Thai prostituti­on ring became key players in the nationwide operation — renting out apartments for the women, shuttling them from airports and even entering into a sham marriage with a brothel boss in order for her to work legally in the United States, authoritie­s say.

“This is a unique twist I haven’t really seen before,” Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart said.

A federal indictment unsealed Thursday charged 21 people across the country — including six in the Chicago area — with being involved in sex traffickin­g. A related indictment in October charged 17 others.

The Cook County Sheriff ’s Office worked with the U. S. Homeland Security Investigat­ions agents to shut down Thai brothels in the Chicago area and arrest six people authoritie­s identified as participan­ts.

Those charged include: Matthew Mintz, 25, Wilaiwan Phimkhalee, 38, Kanyarat Chaiwirat, 50, and Thoucharin Ruttanamon­gkongul, 34, all of Chicago; Mohit Tandon, 37, of Burr Ridge; and Richard Alexander, 52, of DeKalb.

The new indictment, unsealed in Minnesota, says sex trafficker­s in Thailand arranged for hundreds of Thai women to travel from Bangkok to Chicago, Minneapoli­s, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Dallas, Atlanta and other cities to engage in prostituti­on.

The trafficker­s painted a rosy picture of the United States when they recruited the women, according to the indictment.

But the women were forced to pay leaders of the ring for debts supposedly associated with their travel and housing — making them sex slaves, the indictment says. Their debts ranged from $ 40,000 to $ 60,000.

Many of them were required to undergo cosmetic enhancemen­ts such as breast enlargemen­t before they traveled to the United States, officials said.

Phimkhalee, Chaiwirat and Ruttanamon­gkongul allegedly acted as “mamasans,” running brothels in the Chicago area. Phimkhalee also is described in the indictment as being a sex trafficker.

The prostitute­s usually kept about 60 percent of their pay, which typically was $ 200 an hour, with the rest going to the house boss, prosecutor­s said. They said the prostitute­s were rotated among brothels across the United States.

Tandon, Alexander and Mintz are described in the indictment as “facilitato­rs.”

A law enforcemen­t source said Alexander was a customer of the prostituti­on ring, then married Phimkhalee in what authoritie­s believe was a sham wedding in order for her to obtain a green card to live and work in the United States on a permanent basis.

All three men rented apartments for the prostitute­s, sources said.

Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s must now decide whether to deport the Thai women involved in the ring.

Dart said he doesn’t have any qualms about the United States sending back the women running the brothels after their cases are adjudicate­d. But the women who were working off debts as prostitute­s are another matter, he said.

“They’re victims,” Dart said, adding that he has concerns that they could face retributio­n in Thailand from trafficker­s and even from corrupt law enforcemen­t officials.

“We want to make sure the victims aren’t put in a worse place than they were in here,” he said.

Since 2009, the sex operation has reaped millions of dollars, which were funneled back to Thailand through bank accounts structured to avoid federal reporting requiremen­ts, authoritie­s said. The ring also used an informal banking system called hawala, according to the indictment.

Customers originally responded to ads placed on the popular Backpage. com website. But once law enforcemen­t authoritie­s started to infiltrate the site, the “johns” gravitated to private sites operated by the brothel managers themselves, officials said.

Customers rated the prostitute­s on another website, and those who got low scores were threatened by their bosses to improve their performanc­es or suffer physical harm to themselves or family members back in Thailand, officials said.

One woman linked to ads for prostitute­s in the Chicago area is now serving a one- year federal prison sentence in West Virginia. Julie Karlsen, 63, of Buffalo Grove, admitted last year that she failed to pay $ 272,000 in federal taxes for income from a company that advertised escorts. According to sources, the Thai prostituti­on ring had advertised on her site.

 ??  ?? Wilaiwan Phimkhalee is charged with running a brothel that employed Thai prostitute­s in forced labor. She allegedly entered a sham marriage with a prostituti­on customer to obtain legal immigratio­n status in the United States.
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Wilaiwan Phimkhalee is charged with running a brothel that employed Thai prostitute­s in forced labor. She allegedly entered a sham marriage with a prostituti­on customer to obtain legal immigratio­n status in the United States. | FACEBOOK
 ?? TWITTER ?? Mohit Tandon
TWITTER Mohit Tandon

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