アメリカでのセクース

このエントリーをはてなブックマークに追加
181名無しさん
韓国系マッサージ・パーラーの真実
The University of Chicago
Ask Mu Yung Shin (not her real name), presently a prostitute at a Korean massage parlor in Dallas.
→Abducted at the age of 14 from her village home in South Korea by a group of Korean criminals,
she was repeatedly raped, then sent to one of the infamous "sex farms" used by the South Korean army, where she was made a sex slave for two years.
In the early nineties she was moved to the US legally through a sham marriage with an American GI and has served ever since as a Korean massage parlor prostitute
in various locales stretching from Chicago and Houston to New York City1.
→Mu Yung Shin is just one of several thousand Korean women abducted, raped,
and virtually enslaved by the multimillion-dollar international prostitution network run by the Korean Killers,
or KK. Korean Killers, and other major Korean gangs in the US such as Korean Power, based in New York,
deal not only in prostitution, but in drug trafficking, extortion, and firebombings, mostly directed against the Korean community.
Take Tae Sook Lee (not his real name), a longtime member of the Korean Killers based in Los Angeles' Koreatown. With two accomplices, called his "enforcers,"
Tae would visit Korean businesses in the area, mostly car dealerships, and demand payments of money ranging from $30,000 to $50,000. If threats and intimidation failed to net him the money,
arson would result. According to Ray Futami, a detective with the LAPD, "If they [Korean business owners] didn't pay, Tae would send in his boys, his enforcers, and they would burn cars and dealerships."
つづく↓
http://home.uchicago.edu/~dae/korean_pride.htm