Prostitutes in sex-trafficking case: Life was good
MEGHAN BARR, AP
NEW
YORK (AP) — Prostitutes in a sex-trafficking case that's winding down
in New York City say they and their pimps were one big happy family,
enjoying a comfortable suburban life as
"wife-in-laws" in Pennsylvania and commuting by night to work in
Manhattan.
But
prosecutors say the women were coerced into prostitution by a
father-and-son team that threatened them with beatings, withheld money
and referred to them as animals.
Closing arguments were underway Thursday
in the trial of Vincent George Sr. and Vincent George Jr., a case that
drew widespread attention after several prostitutes took the witness
stand
to defend their pimps. The men, who have admitted promoting
prostitution, pleaded not guilty to sex trafficking, money laundering
and other charges.
"What
I don't understand is why people refuse to understand that some women
want to be in this lifestyle. This is what they always wanted to do and
they willingly entered that lifestyle,"
defense attorney Howard Greenberg said in court Thursday, describing one of the women as a "happy hooker."
Prosecutors
say the women made as much as $500,000 a year for the Georges but got
only a few dollars a night themselves. The women were threatened with
beatings when they didn't bring
in as much money as expected or were late to check in, according to the
district attorney's office.
The
men used a music recording company and a livery car service to launder
millions of dollars for the prostitution business, prosecutors said.
The
women told the packed courtroom about big houses, nice cars, vacations
in Florida and lavish physical attention from their men.
"The
whole point to our family was just to become better," said a
31-year-old woman who said she met Vincent George Jr. when she was 17.
"This wasn't our lifestyle. This wasn't something
where we said, 'Hey, I'm going to do this until I'm gray.'"
But
recordings of the wiretapped phone calls presented by prosecutors
present a darker side of the prostitute-pimp relationships. In one call,
George Jr. angrily and profanely demands
money from one of the women.
"Yes, sir," the woman replies.
The Associated Press is not naming the women because they are alleged victims of sex crimes.
Legal
experts say the notion of prostituted women standing by their pimps is
common, but that defending them before a judge is not. While most
sex-trafficking cases hinge upon the cooperation
of the women involved, prosecutors relied upon wiretaps and
follow-the-money techniques that are typically used to prosecute
white-collar business crime.
Greenberg denied allegations the women were living in fear.
"None
of them were forced to enter the life," he said. "None of them were
forced to stay in the life. They were all in the life before they met
any pimp named George."
Wearing
a striped dress that revealed her pregnant belly, a 26-year-old woman
had a tattoo on her neck that said "King Koby," a nickname for George
Jr., whom she met when she was 19 and
working as a prostitute in upstate New York.
"I would say that I make my own choices," she said. "I am not a dumb person. I know what I'm doing."
The
women have been sexually exploited and stripped of their self-worth,
said Norma Ramos, executive director of the Coalition Against
Trafficking in Women. Ramos said tattoos are commonly
seen among sex trafficking victims.
"They're branding their women. They're branding their victims," Ramos said. "They're treating them like cattle."
Two of the women used the word "daddy" when describing their relationship with George Jr. in court.
"I'm
not a victim towards anything, and I think the best way to show and
prove that is for me to be here," said a 24-year-old woman who began
working as a stripper and streetwalker at
age 13, according to prosecutors.
One
photograph presented by the prosecution shows the woman with a visible
black eye in 2007. At the time, she told former prosecutor David Novick
that George Jr. caused the injury.
"She said she deserved it, and it wasn't a big deal," Novick told the court during his testimony.
For
many sex-trafficking victims, their relationship with their abusers is
the only source of love they've ever experienced, and they'll do
anything to maintain that attention in their
lives, said Bridgette Carr, director of the Human Trafficking Clinic at
the University of Michigan Law School.
"I think one of the questions is: Is this what love looks like?" she said.
( looks like $$$ apparently but seriously folks lots of countries have legalized prostitution,and it it is a billion dollar industry, the tax revenues alone would be staggering,and subjecting the worlds oldest profession to health inspections,regulation and maybe even unions would be a boon)
,
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Associated Press Writer Colleen Long contributed to this report.
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