Massachusetts

Man pleads guilty to role in operation of high-end Mass., DC-area brothel network

Authorities said the commercial sex ring in Massachusetts and northern Virginia catered to politicians, company executives, military officers, lawyers, professors and other well-connected clients.

U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Massachusetts

A man accused of booking appointments for buyers in a high-end brothel network with wealthy and prominent clients in Massachusetts and the Washington, D.C., suburbs pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday.

Junmyung Lee, 31, pleaded guilty to federal charges of conspiring to run an interstate prostitution network, and conspiracy and participating in a money-laundering conspiracy to hide the proceeds as part of a plea deal, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Massachusetts confirmed Thursday.

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Lee was accused of vetting potential buyers, booking appointments, and bringing women to the brothels, often transporting them to and from the airport. Prosecutors said he was paid between $6,000 and $8,000 in cash per month in exchange for his work. Prosecutors say he was recruited to work for the network in late 2021 through early 2022.

He is scheduled for sentencing on Feb. 12. In the meantime, he was released on bond and will have to undergo GPS monitoring

Lee was among two others indicted earlier this year in the case. The alleged ringleader, Han Lee (of no relation to Junmyung Lee), pleaded guilty to charges against her in September. She is scheduled for sentencing in December.

Officials say the brothel functioned as a kind of club, offering clients menus of women and services for meet-ups at rented luxury apartments in Cambridge and Watertown, Mass., as well as eastern Virginia

Authorities said the commercial sex ring in Massachusetts and northern Virginia catered to politicians, company executives, military officers, lawyers, professors and other well-connected clients.

Prosecutors have not publicly named any of the buyers and they have not been charged. Acting Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Josh Levy has said prosecutors are committed to holding accountable both those who ran the scheme and those who fueled the demand.

Federal law enforcement and Cambridge police announced that three people were arrested for allegedly running a high-end brothel through rented luxury apartments in Massachusetts and Virginia. Watch the full remarks from their press conference at Boston's federal courthouse.

Some of the buyers have appealed to the highest court in Massachusetts in a bid to have their names remain private.

The women who worked in the brothels were not identified or criminally charged and were considered victims, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors said their evidence included witness testimony from women who worked at the brothels, sex buyers who made appointments or received services, physical surveillance and electronic evidence.

Han Lee maintained the operation from 2020 to November 2023. The money made at the brothels was sometimes kept in the freezer to be picked up, prosecutors said. They said she also helped train Junmyung Lee to help vet sex buyers.

The brothel operation used websites that falsely claimed to advertise nude models for professional photography, prosecutors allege. The operators rented high-end apartments to use as brothels in Watertown and Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Tysons and Fairfax, Virginia, prosecutors said. Brothels were maintained at four locations in Massachusetts and two in Virginia.

Han Lee recruited women and maintained the websites and brothels, according to authorities, who said she paid Junmyung Lee between $6,000 and $8,000 in cash per month in exchange for his work booking appointments for the buyers and bringing women to the brothels.

The operators raked in hundreds of thousands of dollars through the network, where men paid from approximately $350 to upwards of $600 per hour depending on the services, according to prosecutors.

Officials say Han Lee concealed more than $1 million in proceeds from the ring by converting the cash into money orders, among other things, to make it look legitimate.

Investigators said they found money orders in a Louis Vuitton shoebox, condoms and lubricants in bulk, an ill-gotten Corvette and "appointment books" at the Massachusetts apartments of two people believed to have run a high-end brothel in the Boston and D.C. areas.

According to court documents, the defendants established house rules for the women during their stays in a given city to protect and maintain the secrecy of the business and ensure the women did not draw attention to the prostitution work inside apartment buildings.

Authorities seized cash, ledgers detailing the activities of the brothels and phones believed to be used to communicate with the sex customers from their apartments, according to court papers.

Each website described a verification process that interested sex buyers undertook to be eligible for appointment bookings, including requiring clients to complete a form providing their full names, email addresses, phone numbers, employers and references if they had one, authorities said.

The defendants also kept local brothel phone numbers to communicate with customers; sent them a "menu" of available options at the brothel, including the women and sexual services available and the hourly rate; and texted customers directions to the brothel's location, investigators said.

The Associated Press and NBC10 Boston
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