Dallas Morning News, March 12, 2014, "Dallas' illicit sex market estimated to be $99 million"
Dallas' illicit market for sex is estimated to be about $98.8 million, according to a study released Wednesday by the Urban Institute and commissioned by the U.S. Department of Justice.
Researchers studied eight cities including Dallas to find out more about the economy of the industry and try to fill in gaps about how the trade works for a study titled Estimating the Size and Structure of the Underground Commercial Sex Economy in Eight Major U.S. Cities.
The researchers found that the number of massage parlors increased over the past few years as the sex trafficking and prostitution moved behind legal fronts such as the massage parlors, or topless bars.
What was unique to Dallas, according to the report, is that American pimps operate the Asian massage parlors, creating partnerships with the owners of the shops, said Meredith Dank, senior research associate at the Urban Institute and lead author of the study.
Through interviews with sex trafficking victims and voluntary prostitutes as well as pimps and law enforcement, researchers also found that pricing varied by ethnic group and age. A street prostitute might charge $5 as an individual whereas a sex worker might charge $120 under a "facilitator."
The study also found that little money is exchanged for child pornography because most men exchange it for free.
Dank said there are a few unexpected elements of the illicit sex market that researchers learned. Law enforcement confirmed that some pimps were approached by female sex workers who asked for protection or a facilitator.
"It's a hard pill to swallow because people see men as the perpetrators and women as the victims," Dank said. "We don’t talk a lot about the pathways into this industry."
Researchers also learned that many pimps are not connected to other illicit businesses such as drugs.
"This an extremely complicated topic and economy," the researcher said. "It's hard to understand and the media puts out just a small piece of it."
Here's the link to the study:
Urban Institute, "The Hustle: Economics of the Underground Sex Industry"