Edmonton Sun Article - Feb. 17, 2006
The city police vice squad is investigating a south-side massage parlour after neighbours complained that it's ruining the neighbourhood.
According to Gordon McIntosh, director of the Strathcona Business Park, the G-Spot, 4003 98 St., is a troublesome tenant drawing a bad crowd and driving down the value of the offices at the industrial-area office strip.
The G-Spot opened its doors in 2002 and trouble followed, including "three drive-by shootings with a paintball gun, theft and vandalism of property, drugs, sex paraphernalia, to mention a few," said a Feb. 2 letter from the Business Park board to police Chief Mike Boyd.
And a private investigator hired by the Business Park, swore in Dec. 2004 he'd gone undercover and was told, while in a massage room at the G-Spot, that oral sex would cost $85, a body shampoo was $125 and a "complete" was $185.
Yesterday, a sign inside G-Spot advertised "Asian Shower - body shampoo" and "Safari Room - porno video."
G-Spot's manager wasn't available for comment.
"We're upset," McIntosh said yesterday. "We're upset with the city police because what we see is a common bawdy house."
Bawdy houses, where people pay for sex, are illegal in Canada.
McIntosh thinks police and the city are looking the other way to keep prostitutes off the street.
But yesterday, a police spokesman said they're looking at the G-Spot.
"An investigation has been started," said Jeff Wuite. "In fact, the staff sergeant in charge of vice is looking into that."
The city police vice squad is investigating a south-side massage parlour after neighbours complained that it's ruining the neighbourhood.
According to Gordon McIntosh, director of the Strathcona Business Park, the G-Spot, 4003 98 St., is a troublesome tenant drawing a bad crowd and driving down the value of the offices at the industrial-area office strip.
The G-Spot opened its doors in 2002 and trouble followed, including "three drive-by shootings with a paintball gun, theft and vandalism of property, drugs, sex paraphernalia, to mention a few," said a Feb. 2 letter from the Business Park board to police Chief Mike Boyd.
And a private investigator hired by the Business Park, swore in Dec. 2004 he'd gone undercover and was told, while in a massage room at the G-Spot, that oral sex would cost $85, a body shampoo was $125 and a "complete" was $185.
Yesterday, a sign inside G-Spot advertised "Asian Shower - body shampoo" and "Safari Room - porno video."
G-Spot's manager wasn't available for comment.
"We're upset," McIntosh said yesterday. "We're upset with the city police because what we see is a common bawdy house."
Bawdy houses, where people pay for sex, are illegal in Canada.
McIntosh thinks police and the city are looking the other way to keep prostitutes off the street.
But yesterday, a police spokesman said they're looking at the G-Spot.
"An investigation has been started," said Jeff Wuite. "In fact, the staff sergeant in charge of vice is looking into that."





