Vice detectives clamp down on massage parlor
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Marisa O’Neil
Police arrested two Los Angeles County women this week on suspicion
of prostitution at a local massage parlor.
Officers received an anonymous tip that New Oriental Mass. was
operating without a license in a medical building at the corner of
Harbor Boulevard and Fair Drive, said Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Marty
Carver. Vice detectives started an investigation and sent an
undercover officer into the business.
“He got solicited and made the arrest,” Carver said, adding that
the solicitation was for sex, not massage.
Alhambra resident Yanling Sun, 39, and Hacienda Heights resident
Chunyan Li, 31, were both arrested Monday for prostitution and booked
into the Costa Mesa Police Department’s jail. They were released with
a written notice to appear in court, Carver said.
Police did not know how long the alleged prostitution had been
going on.
The parlor had placed ads in local newspapers, but did not have a
massage license, as required in the city, he said. Officers shut down
the business.
On Friday, the suite in which the parlor had operated was dark. No
sign was on the door, and blinds on the window were drawn.
The building houses medical businesses such as a chiropractor,
dentist and acupressure office. Customers and workers in College
Pharmacy, a few doors down from the closed parlor, said they had not
heard anything about the prostitution arrests.
Costa Mesa has had a licensing program for massage parlors since
2001. Operators and workers must register with the police department,
undergo a background check and take a written test to obtain a
license, Carver said.
Right now there are about 30 licensed businesses in the city, he
said.
“Our vice officers are going out and actively working these places
and checking their permits to keep them from getting out of control,”
he said.
Before Costa Mesa and Newport Beach started the licensing program,
authorities in both cities had problems with prostitution at such
businesses, Carver said.
In March of 2001, the City Council passed the ordinance requiring
licensing. The ordinance also requires that businesses use only white
light and doors that cannot be locked.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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