San Diego Union-Tribune

CITY WANTS MASSAGE PARLOR SHUT DOWN

Ocean Spa accused of being a front for prostituti­on

- BY LYNDSAY WINKLEY lyndsay.winkley @sduniontri­bune.com

People having sex in parked cars. More than a thousand online prostituti­on advertisem­ents. Sexual noises loud enough to disrupt a nearby Bible study.

These were some of numerous complaints made over several years that prompted the City Attorney’s Office to ask a judge to shut down Ocean Spa massage parlor in Kearny Mesa on allegation­s that the business was a front for prostituti­on.

Officials announced the action at a Tuesday news conference in front of the Kearny Villa Road business. Neither the business nor its owners could be reached for comment.

“The owners of Ocean Spa have been masqueradi­ng as a legitimate business for far too long,” City Attorney Mara Elliott said in a statement. “Ocean Spa is a sex shop — not a massage parlor — and it has no place in our community or anywhere else.”

Police have been fielding complaints about the business, which has gone by several names, since at least 2018, court documents indicate. Community members and nearby businesses have reported foot traffic at the location at all hours of the day, sexual sounds coming from the location, and employees who wear explicit clothing.

A church that opened a Bible study center for university and high school students next to the business in the summer of 2022 regularly reported having sessions interrupte­d by “the sounds of loud moaning,” court documents read. And on numerous occasions, employees at the parlor would approach male students of the church and tell them to “come over and visit.”

The church later left the business complex due to activity at the parlor, according to court documents.

Last year alone, San Diego police detectives spent more than 125 hours investigat­ing misdemeano­r prostituti­onrelated crimes at the property, officials said. Spa workers offered to sell sex to undercover police officers at least four times since 2018 — most recently in December — leading to two arrests for prostituti­on. Investigat­ors have also documented 1,270 online advertisem­ents for sex at the spa over the last five years.

City inspectors sent to the property in October also found half a dozen building and zoning violations. The owners combined two units in the business complex and created multiple massage rooms without submitting the required permits, court documents say. Some areas in the business appeared to be used for habitation, not massage — another zoning violation, the documents state. There were beds instead of traditiona­l massage tables in some areas, a kitchen area with a wellstocke­d refrigerat­or, and multiple suitcases and storage areas with clothing, shoes and other personal items, according to court documents.

These suspected habitation areas had city officials concerned that some of the women who work at the business may be victims of human traffickin­g, officials said.

“We’re not convinced that these women voluntaril­y sold sex,” Elliott said. “We’re very concerned about the well-being of these employees.”

Several notificati­ons have been sent to various owners connected to the location about the alleged prostituti­on and other misdeeds occurring at the business. The owners briefly shut down the business in 2019 after being told of the violations, only to start it back up less than two months later under a different name.

The City Attorney’s Office is seeking more than $100,000 in civil penalties and reimbursem­ent for attorney fees and enforcemen­t costs, and has asked the court to prohibit the business from continuing to operate.

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