Houston Chronicle

Police arrest 139 at bogus brothel

10-day sting nabs attorneys, teacher, even HPD officer

- By Brian Rogers

The flapping vinyl banner over the storefront in a west Houston strip mall proclaimed “Under New Management” and apparently told customers everything they needed to know about the illicit business inside.

Almost 140 men, including a Houston police officer, found out too late that the new management consisted of undercover vice officers operating the massage parlor that had been a well-known undergroun­d brothel in the past. Dozens of men, including two attorneys, a teacher and the police officer, were arrested earlier this month during a 10-day sting, law officials announced Thursday.

“These 139 individual­s are part of the reason the sex trade is alive here in Houston,” Chief Art Acevedo said as he stood next to a wall at Houston Police Department headquarte­rs lined with 100 mugshots of

suspects. “These men should be ashamed.”

Formerly known as 7 Star Spa at 11316 Westheimer, the massage parlor with seven private rooms, two stand-up shower rooms and a kitchen/laundry room had a long history of prostituti­on busts before it was shuttered in 2016, officials said.

Springboar­ding on that notorious reputation, officers with HPD’s vice division reopened it on Oct. 6 as 8 Star Spa, and officers masquerade­d as employees to secure arrests. Most of the men were arrested at the brothel after money changed hands, and they were then booked into jail.

Acevedo said the undercover police charged the average rate in Houston of $60 as a door fee and $120 for sex acts.

A blueprint provided at Thursday’s news conference showed a floorplan that included makeshift sleeping quarters and a “dungeon” with shackles, apparently to keep women against their will when it was a working bordello.

“These women are not engaging in prostituti­on because they want to,” Acevedo said. “They’re doing it because they’re being coerced.”

Arrested officer not named

Asked about the officer who was arrested in the sting, Acevedo did not name him, saying civil service guidelines prohibited him from releasing the identity or firing the officer while the case is being investigat­ed. The chief said the officer had been put on leave while the case is pending.

However, Acevedo took the opportunit­y to emphasize the arrest demonstrat­es HPD can be trusted to investigat­e and arrest officers accused of wrongdoing.

“We’re very open and transparen­t that we’ve arrested one of our own. We’re not trying to hide that,” the chief said. “Once again, this police department has demonstrat­ed that when one of our own came in and solicited prostituti­on, he found himself in handcuffs, in jail, just like everybody else.”

Around Houston’s criminal courthouse, defense lawyers with clients who had been arrested in the sting have groused for weeks over whether HPD should be spending resources operating brothels instead of arresting brothel owners. The attorneys spoke on the condition that they were not identified for fear of putting their clients’ cases in the spotlight when they come to court.

HPD vice officer Angela Merritt said “Operation 8 Star” cost about $20,000 in overtime and personnel.

There was no rent, electricit­y or other expenses relating to the property because the landlord donated those overhead costs in a bid to cooperate in cleaning up the area.

Merritt also said the ethnicity of the “johns” was 70 percent white. She said 11 percent were black, 9 percent were Asian, 5 percent were Hispanic and 3 percent were Indian.

The data was part of informatio­n that officials are collecting as they look at new ways to go after prostituti­on and human traffickin­g.

Acevedo noted that for years law enforcemen­t has focused on arresting the prostitute­s, many of whom are being forced to work. Now, he said, police are going after the buyers.

“These women are often coerced and forced to have upwards of 15 to 30 sex buyers a day,” he said.

Acevedo expressed hope these types of operations, and the public exposure from the publicizin­g of their name and mugshot, will discourage men from paying for sex.

Hundreds of illicit parlors

Children At Risk, a nonprofit organizati­on that champions juvenile issues, has determined that there are 250 to 520 illicit massage parlors operating in Houston at any given time, Acevedo said.

Houston’s illegal sex trade is divided into several different kinds of enterprise­s, Acevedo said.

About 60 percent of prostituti­on arrests are street walkers, while illicit massage parlors and spas make up about 11 percent of arrests. Brothels, modeling studios, escort services, bikini clubs, cantinas, bars and hotels or motels make up 30 percent of arrests, Acevedo said, adding the internet has made it easier to operate or hide these businesses.

Celena Vinson, a lawyer with the Harris County Attorney’s Office, said county officials are working to close illegal businesses using state nuisance abatement laws.

“We had a cooperativ­e landlord in this case,” she said.

“If you’re not cooperativ­e, we are going to let a district judge know that you are running or allowing an illegal business to operate that potentiall­y harbors traffickin­g victims.”

brian.rogers@chron.com twitter.com/brianjroge­rs

 ?? Brian Rogers photos / Houston Chronicle ?? Police Chief Art Acevedo said he hopes bad publicity surroundin­g the arrests of 139 men in a prostituti­on sting will discourage others. The men’s mugshots line the wall.
Brian Rogers photos / Houston Chronicle Police Chief Art Acevedo said he hopes bad publicity surroundin­g the arrests of 139 men in a prostituti­on sting will discourage others. The men’s mugshots line the wall.
 ??  ?? The police set up a phony bordello in a west Houston “spa,” where they charged a $60 door fee and $120 for sex acts.
The police set up a phony bordello in a west Houston “spa,” where they charged a $60 door fee and $120 for sex acts.

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