Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Have a great day, Ann Dunsky

- By Nate Gartrell

Check out what’s going on in your neighborho­od, the community on Wednesday.

>> Over the course of two years, police across California investigat­ed seemingly unrelated crimes and disappeara­nces: teens from the Bay Area who’d allegedly been abused by their pimp and “branded” with tattoos. A woman from the Central Valley whose 3-monthold baby was kidnapped to force her into sex work. A 14-year-old girl who ran away from home in Los Angeles County and told a family member she was making money “tricking.”

Location in common

These women and girls were from different areas, different background­s, and ended up with different men who were eventually identified by police as their exploiters. But they all had one thing in common, according to authoritie­s: when they turned up, it was at the same place, the Desert Star Motel in Bakersfiel­d, whose owner and general manager now stand accused of essentiall­y running a brothel in plain sight.

In court records filed Monday morning, the motel’s owner, Jatinbhai Naresh Bhakta, and a man who allegedly worked as a manger and handyman, Roy Gene Drees, were charged in federal court with facilitati­ng “the promotion, establishm­ent, or carrying on of unlawful activity” — in this case, sex traffickin­g. The charging documents allege that Bhakta’s phone showed evidence he communicat­ed with hundreds of people who were responsibl­e for placing nearly 30,000 prostituti­on ads online.

Months-long probe

The charges were the result of an investigat­ion that started in March 2019, led by Bakersfiel­d police, and included undercover work, a pole surveillan­ce camera, and dozens of interviews with women and girls who were allegedly trafficked or agreed to prostitute at the motel. According to a sworn statement by an FBI special agent, the hotel appeared to authoritie­s to “primarily cater to prostitute­s and their potential clients,” and that it was rare to see someone using the motel for legitimate overnight residency.

Authoritie­s wrote in court records that the motel was well-primed to be a brothel: It is a line of about 25 rooms, with a single entrance and exit to its parking lot off South Union Avenue, which is protected by a large iron gate. Some, if not all, of the room windows are covered with bars, which one alleged victim later remarked scared her because it eliminated an escape route if she was attacked.

“Depending on the time of day, it is not unusual to see most, if not all of the rooms’ doors wide open with suspected prostitute­s in lingeries standing outside, waving to drivers and approachin­g their vehicles,” FBI special agent David Hunter wrote. “Prospectiv­e customers will park directly in front of the room of the prostitute they choose, at which time the prostitute will either direct them into the room immediatel­y or meet the customer outside to arrange a deal.”

The investigat­ion came to a head last week when a team of federal and state authoritie­s raided the hotel, rescuing 16 people, making three arrests and recovering three guns, law enforcemen­t officials announced a Jan. 22 news conference.

Stories come in

Stories of some of the missing teens — a woman whose baby was allegedly kidnapped — and other suspected human traffickin­g victims who turned up at the motel are spelled out in the charging records against Bhakta and Drees.

In May 2019, officers in Merced investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of two teen girls there worked with Bakersfiel­d police to track the girls’ cellphones to the motel. When the girls were detained for a police interview, one of them identified her pimp as “Diamond” or “Big Daddy” and said he also went by “D.” That was evidenced by a tattoo on one of the girl’s faces: the letter D with a crown resting above.

The girls later told authoritie­s that they traveled throughout California, including Los Angeles and the Bay Area, with “Diamond.” They stayed at the motel for about 10 days, and were traffickin­g every day. He kept the money but gave them, “food, clothes, and ‘weed,’” according to Hunter’s statement. The girls told police he wanted them to make around $500 a day but didn’t seem “overly concerned” if they failed to make the quota. During one three-day span, they brought him $10,000, they told authoritie­s.

“Diamond” was later arrested at a hotel in Antioch and identified as Darnell Edwards, according to court records. He is facing federal sex traffickin­g charges on a separate docket, court records show.

Other cases

In another case in January 2019, a woman arrested in a prostituti­on sting identified her pimp as a Fresno man who “kidnapped her 3-month old son to use as leverage against her in order to compel her to continue prostituti­ng against her will,” Hunter wrote. The man and another alleged prostitute were later arrested on kidnapping charges, according to court records. One month before that, authoritie­s raided a hotel room to rescue a woman who had allegedly been kidnapping from another part of California, according to the complaint.

Last December, a 14-yearold girl ran away from home in Los Angeles County and allegedly ended up at the motel, where she told her sister a man named “Jamal” had been pimping her there. Hunter wrote that the girl told her sister she was making “good money” through “tricking” and that she was uncooperat­ive when police attempted to interview her later that month, according to the complaint.

Also in December 2020, a 17-year-old girl was allegedly assaulted and raped during an argument with her pimp, who dressed her down about “sleeping” instead of facilitati­ng “dates.” Part of that confrontat­ion was reportedly captured on a surveillan­ce camera surreptiti­ously installed on a light pole near the hotel. Another traffickin­g victim allegedly asked for Bhakta’s help taking the girl to the hospital, but he responded that he didn’t want to get blood on the seats of his car, the complaint alleges.

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