The customer list of the three massage parlors extends to over 200,000 people,
police said, with each shop roughly averaging 2,000 to 5,000 customers per
month.
"The customer list included lawyers, doctors, university professors,
journalists, civil servants, soldiers, office workers and a former lawmaker. We
can find virtually every profession aside from pastors, priests and monks,"
said an official from the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency.
"The shops were sophisticated in their marketing, and they provided discounts
for people paying in cash. The real number of customers could actually be
double of the number of names on the list," he said.
One of the arrested massage parlor owners, a 52-year-old whose last name is
Park, earned more than 9.7 billion won ($10.2 million) in credit card revenue
between November 2005 and October last year through his Nonhyun-dong shop.
Park's Yoksam-dong shop raked in 5.8 billion won in credit card revenue since
opening in December 2005, police said.
Considering that sex buyers usually prefer to pay in cash, police believe the
total revenue for Park's shops to be significantly higher.
The other suspect, a 57-year-old identified only as Choi, earned 19.8 billion
won in cash and credit card revenue through his massage parlor in Yoksam-dong
since September 2004.
Yoksam-dong, including the streets surrounding the Renaissance Seoul Hotel, was
one of the 24 areas in the country that police selected as intensive
surveillance zones last year and that were monitored for underground sex trade.
Law enforcement officials investigated the three shops and ordered them to
close their business last year but the owners refused, police said.
The owners of the massage parlors competed for customers, police said, leading
to unusual marketing programs and services.
The rooms at the massage parlors were differentiated by theme. There are
"classrooms" with sex workers wearing girl school uniforms and "Vietnam rooms"
in which the women wear the Southeast Asian country's traditional attire.
The massage parlors promoted their services on Internet sites.
Adopting a "zero-tolerance" approach to the sex trade and the trafficking of
women, the anti-prostitution law stipulates that brothel owners can be put in
prison for up to 10 years with a maximum fine of 100 million won. The state can
confiscate any financial gains acquired by selling sex.
Buying sex was also made a criminal offense punishable by up to one year in
jail and 3 million won in fines.
In Seoul, the red-light districts in Yongsan, Chongnyangni, Chongam-dong and
other areas are expected to be cleared up within the year through new urban
development plans. Since the anti-prostitution law was passed, police have
charged more than 40,000 brothel owners, pimps, prostitutes and customers.
However, sex transactions at massage parlors, bars, saunas, hotels and other
businesses are growing, despite the government's warning.
According to a survey conducted last year by the Korean Institute for
Criminology, more than 60 percent of the 450 adult males who said they bought
sex in 2005 said they used massage parlors, which are quickly becoming the
center of the underground sex trade.
Numbers released by the Financial Supervisory Service show that credit card spending at massage parlors rose 23 percent year-on-year in 2005.