Police barely decent in massage parlor sting
Pay for play may be far too risque
By 
Jim McElhatton
-
The Washington Times
8:52 p.m.,                          Sunday, February 6, 2011
She told him to take off all his clothes then follow her into the  shower room at a downtown Washington massage parlor. He didn't say no.
After  all, the man wasn't there for a good time. He was working for  taxpayers. He was a police officer, and he was determined to uncover  evidence.
So uncover he did.
Trying to build a prostitution  case against Jasmine Therapy on a busy stretch of M Street Northwest,  the officer lay down in the shower room and the woman went to work: "She  then proceeded to scrub UC's body to include the genital area,"  according to court papers filed recently by the District in an effort to  shut down the business.
The officer's identity, if not much else,  was kept private in the court records. And the woman is known only as  "D1." She told the officer to turn over, "and D1 again scrubbed UC's  body and continued to wash his genital area," court filings say.
After  a while, the officer and woman made their way back to a private room,  where they agreed on oral sex for money. Before that happened, the  officer was satisfied he had the evidence he needed and made an excuse  to leave the massage business. Police came back a few days later to  conduct a similar operation.
The undercover operations stopped  just short of the sort of activity that focused unwanted attention on  Spotsylvania County in Virginia a few years ago, when sheriff's deputies  received sexual services from "masseuses" during their massage parlor  investigations - one deputy even leaving a $350 tip.
Still, 
Metropolitan Police Department officials say, officers typically don't get naked during investigations - and the 
department doesn't approve.
"This is not standard practice in these types of operations," 
Metropolitan Police spokeswoman 
Gwendolyn Crump said.
"Physical  contact between a suspect and a member in one of these undercover  operations is prohibited, but as you can imagine, it can also be  difficult to control," she said. "We will obviously look at this  situation to see if the contact could have been avoided."
According  to the city's recent D.C. Superior Court filing, Jasmine Therapy has  had a history of prostitution arrests. The complaint says the officer  stopped by the business about 2:15 p.m. one day last month. He met an  Asian female, described as "D1" in court papers, and the pair walked to  "room No. 2," where the woman asked for a $70 "house fee."
The officer gave her $200, the records show.
The  defendants named in the civil complaint filed by the D.C. attorney  general's office could not be reached for comment last week, and a  hearing in the case is set for this week.
When police raided the  business, located on the 1800 block of M Street Northwest, they found "a  large quantity of U.S. currency hidden in lotion dispensers with false  bottoms, and hidden condoms."
Authorities said they seized more  than $70,000 overall, including money that D.C. police officers had paid  out during their undercover work.
In court papers, authorities  want a judge to order Jasmine Therapy closed, saying it operates as a  front for a house of prostitution.
Police raided the business  after a different visit by an undercover D.C. police officer, who also  gave $200 after being asked for $70.
According to the complaint,  the officer also took off his clothes and headed to the shower room, but  declined a massage afterward, saying he didn't have the time. The woman  "made a sexual motion simulating intercourse," left the room and  returned with a condom, court filings say.
That was when police  raided the business, acting on a signal from the officer. The two women,  identified only as D1 and D2 in the court papers, were arrested on  charges of solicitation and giving massages without a license.
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