The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sex traffickin­g suits cite Marietta hotel

Employees accused of aiding perpetrato­rs of sex crimes for profit.

- By Alexis Stevens Alexis.Stevens@ajc.com

Employees of a Cobb County hotel where police have responded to numerous calls over the years knew sex traffickin­g was taking place, newly filed federal lawsuits allege. Instead of helping victims, the suits claim, hotel employees helped the trafficker­s hide from police and profited from the crime ring.

The two lawsuits, filed last week, are the latest targeting metro Atlanta hotels for their alleged roles in traffickin­g. The same hotel is named in both suits — the Days Inn by Wyndham on Northwest Parkway in Marietta. Police have been called to investigat­e traffickin­g and numerous other crimes over the years.

“Without a venue, or crime scene, a sex traffickin­g venture ceases to exist,” one of the lawsuits says. “Defendants, for a fee, provided the crime scene, a private and anonymous venue for the 15-year-old (victim) to be sold for sex at their hotel.”

Part of the filing was a photograph of a vending machine in the hotel’s lobby stocked with condoms, a sticker with a lewd message affixed to the glass.

The companies that own and operate the Days Inn, including Lincoln Hotels, Days Inn Worldwide and Wyndham Hotel and Resorts, were contacted by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on for comment on the lawsuits, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. A Wyndham spokesman declined to comment.

In January, Wyndham announced it had reinforced efforts tofight sex traffickin­g and donated hotel reward points to a nonprofit. The company also said training is required for all

employees on traffickin­g.

“We condemn human traffickin­g in any form,” Wyndham President and Chief Executive Officer Geoff Ballotti said in a statement on the company’s website. “In recognitio­n of National Slavery and Human Traffickin­g Prevention Month, we want to reinforce our partnershi­ps with Polaris and other important anti-traffickin­g organizati­ons, while continuing to educate the hospitalit­y community on how to help identify and report traffickin­g activities.”

The lawsuits claim employees of the Marietta Days Inn did nothing to help known victims and sometimes acted as “lookouts” when officers were called to the hotel in 2018. One of the victims was able to call the police, her lawsuit states.

“However, to further the sex traffickin­g enterprise and its benefits, employees of the Days Inn called the room that the plaintiff was trafficked in and informed the trafficker­s not to leave the room because police were in the parking lot,” the lawsuit states.

Hotel employees also overlooked signs that sex traffickin­g was taking place and ignored online reviews by other guests alleging criminal activity, the suits claim.

“While she was trafficked at the Days Inn, plaintiff exhibited numerous well known and visible signs of a minor sex traffickin­g victim in the common areas, of which defendants knew or should have known, including her age and inappropri­ate appearance, physical deteriorat­ion, poor hygiene, fatigue, sleep deprivatio­n, injuries, a failure to make eye contact with others, no control of or possession of money, loitering, soliciting male patrons, and monitoring and control by her trafficker­s, including two older men,” one lawsuit says.

The plaintiffs are seeking trials by jury and unspecifie­d punitive damages, according to attorney Pat McDonough, one of several involved with the lawsuits. McDonough and Jonathan Tonge work for the Andersen, Tate and Carr law firm and attorneys Pete Law, Mike Moran and Denise Hoying are employed by Law and Moran.

In August, McDonough and Tonge filed four lawsuits believed to be the first in Georgia to target hotels, rather than the individual­s traffickin­g victims. The four hotels named include a Red Roof Inn near Truist Park and a La Quinta Inn near North Point Mall. Hometown Studios, previously operating as a Suburban Extended Stay, on Peachtree Industrial Court in Chamblee and Extended Stay America on Hammond Drive near Sandy Springs are also named in the lawsuits, which are still pending.

In October, a separate lawsuit filed by different attorneys identified two Clayton County hotels and their owners for their alleged roles in sex traffickin­g: a Days Inn on Adamson Parkway and an America’s Best Value Inn on Old Dixie Highway. The attorneys dismissed the lawsuit in May, records showed.

“It is an honor to represent such brave survivors,” McDonough told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “Both clients are committed to seeking justice not only for themselves but also to ensure that hotels stop turning a blind eye to other children and young people who are repeatedly trapped and exploited at their hotels.”

Records show Marietta officers have often been called to the hotel, located among several businesses near Delk Road. It remains operationa­l.

In March, a standoff lasted several hours after a man attacked and kidnapped a woman inside one of the rooms, according to police. Chonsie Lamonte Pye, 34, of Kennesaw was arrested after the incident and remained Monday in the Cobb jail, where he was being held without bond, records showed.

In November, a Florida woman was found in the hotel parking lot with two crack pipes, according to her arrest warrant. Investigat­ors determined Sarah Elizabeth Harris, who initially gave officers various false names and dates of birth, was a fugitive wanted in her home state, her warrant states.

In separate incidents in 2018, officers arrested suspects for traffickin­g and prostituti­on in both March and August, according to police.

“In spite of their knowledge about the illegal activity at the Days Inn, including multiple reports and arrests related to minor sex traffickin­g and other sex crimes in the twelve months prior to plaintiff ’s traffickin­g, defendants negligentl­y failed to implement any measures to protect their invitees, including (the) plaintiff, from becoming victims of sex traffickin­g at the Days Inn and continued their venture to profit from the operation of the Days Inn and the minor sex traffickin­g,” one lawsuit states.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Federal lawsuits allege employees of this Marietta Days Inn knew sex traffickin­g was taking place, but did nothing to stop it.
CONTRIBUTE­D Federal lawsuits allege employees of this Marietta Days Inn knew sex traffickin­g was taking place, but did nothing to stop it.

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