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Sugar Cookie

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A grand jury handed down an eight-count indictment against a pair of in-laws accused of running a “residential brothel” out of a Denver home.

Investigators accused Xiaoli Gao, 51, and Zhong Wei Zhang, 49, of laundering money received from a prostitution operation through a nearby Chinese massage business that Gao owned.

Gao and Zhang are facing charges related to pimping and prostitution in addition to money laundering, filing a false tax return and violating the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act.

According to the indictment, Gao and Zhang are accused of setting up a brothel at a home in southwest Denver.

A neighbor who lived next door to the alleged brothel house, said he would watch dozens of men visit the house at all hours of the day. Sometimes, he said, he counted 30 customers per day.

He said his wife called the human trafficking hotline when things started spilling onto his property and he worried for their safety.

“That call was the sole information that we had to start this investigation,” said Lara Mullin, a senior deputy district attorney in the Denver District Attorney’s Office. Mullin heads the human trafficking unit, according to McCann.

The indictment indicates that investigators found “over 100 used condoms, a paper with Chinese characters that appeared to be a ledger, KY gel containers and used tissues,” when they searched the trash outside of the house. Investigators also found that sex-related advertisements were placed on the Backpage.com website listing prices for sexual services.

A surveillance camera outside of the home also captured video of 257 men who came and went from the home and stayed for 30 minutes or less between mid-March 2018 and mid-August 2018.
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Instead, the six victims of alleged trafficking were able to connect with services and return to their homes in China, she said.
The tenants at the home, all young women, never seemed to leave the house, according to the indictment.
The neighbors rarely saw the women who lived in the house leave, and the women were routinely moved in and out of the home, the indictment states.
Police then installed a camera outside the home, which recorded 257 men over a five-month period who entered the home and left after about 30 minutes. The cameras also caught Gao and Zhang entering the home.
I suck at math but, is that roughly 2 a day?

 
@Fives My Charm your math is correct, but the assumption that each man only visited once is where you're getting thrown off. The way the quote goes, it's made a roster of 257 men who fall in a category of total time per visit being 30 minutes or less. It doesn't count how many visits per man, and seems to indicate it excludes men who were outside that 30 minute average. I bet there were some men who came in more than 2x a day, some who came in right before and right after work, etc.

I work statistics all day, and I hate how many ambiguous ways we can display data. It causes for some very misleading conclusions.
 
Where did they find them at? Just hidden in a closet?

Why would you not throw that shit away?

China is such a disgusting place. It makes me sick when their bullshit pollutes civilized, good places like Colorado, whether it's crime or viruses.
 
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