Turns out the mastermind aka Dua Peh Gong is Uncle Ho's 68 year old nephew and the bust is at the invincible Grand Lisboa Hotel.
This sort of syndicate operations have been going on for decades.
Haizzz no more chance go "race track" lim tei kill time liao.
President Xi's recent visit to Macau is already a hint.
He mentioned Macau's economy must diversify into other industries besides gaming.
Looks like Macau's humsup time is up.
Last edited by TonyCheong; 12-01-2015 at 09:23 PM.
Just stayed at The Venetian. After check in, as I was going down from room, one SYT was standing at the lift area, looked at me and smiled and asked "Chi ma?" OK, on and turned back to my room. In the room, she quickly took off her clothes, showered and we started frenching....She told me she is 19 and her BBBJ is fantastic and deepthoa..... After we finished, her friend called her and asked whether she can come to my room to hide as the hotel security is catching FLs. I said OK, and her friend turned up and is also a SYT, but better looking and better equipped. The friend said "Oh, you finished already? Why not do me?"
OK, on and I banged the second girl on the bed, and the first girl looked on, but her face and ears were very flushed.
After that, we showered and dressed up, waited and chit chat and then go down for dinner.
bro how come you nvr bang both girls tgt ? Threesome just waiting for you lei.
So how much u paid the 2 of them ? 1500x 2??
__________________ I don't know why we hang on to something we know we are better off letting go.
lt's like we are scared to lose what we really don't have.
I once thought I rather have something than nothing at all, but the truth is..... To have something halfway is so fucking harder than having nothing at all.
Turns out the mastermind aka Dua Peh Gong is Uncle Ho's 68 year old nephew and the bust is at the invincible Grand Lisboa Hotel.
This sort of syndicate operations have been going on for decades.
Haizzz no more chance go "race track" lim tei kill time liao.
President Xi's recent visit to Macau is already a hint.
He mentioned Macau's economy must diversify into other industries besides gaming.
Looks like Macau's humsup time is up.
how about the other hotels in macau? there is no mention of raids at the other macau hotels yet
Now in Macau staying at Dragon Hotel. initially thought of gng out to fish for FL mei mei but the moment I step out saw a few police cars and a van with several police. Some running around and some checking identities of those standing around the streets. Not sure of there's any new rules, so decides not to take risk and will hug pillow for tonight Strange is I receive wechat notification advertising some hotel delivery service, likewise not sure situation, decides to skip and not take risk. Will update tomorrow and also check if any news reported of any raiding. For now...... So lonely lor.
Now in Macau staying at Dragon Hotel. initially thought of gng out to fish for FL mei mei but the moment I step out saw a few police cars and a van with several police. Some running around and some checking identities of those standing around the streets. Not sure of there's any new rules, so decides not to take risk and will hug pillow for tonight Strange is I receive wechat notification advertising some hotel delivery service, likewise not sure situation, decides to skip and not take risk. Will update tomorrow and also check if any news reported of any raiding. For now...... So lonely lor.
Besides gaming Macau is famous for its KTVs/Saunas.
For now it's still "legal" so no reason for lack of action.
For FLs can also try the "Silk Road" between Venetian and Galaxy over at Cotai provided they're still around since the big hotel prostitution raid.
A hint of things to come in Macau...and also the whole of China?
Hmmm.... everyday we learn of some more things screwing up our favorite hobby in the whole of China.
The following is an article which points to worse things to come - I mean, this is about Macau - a haven which up to now is a shining beacon for EVERYTHING AND ANYTHING GOES! If Macau goes down, what chance does other places in China have??!! The precursor, the beginning of the end....
Macau Sex Ring Bust Shows China Expanding Crackdown on Graft
By Bloomberg News Jan 16, 2015
The arrest of a prominent Macau executive in the largest prostitution bust in the city’s history shows China’s President Xi Jinping is broadening his crackdown on corruption to restrict even long-tolerated vices.
Police in the former Portuguese colony arrested Alan Ho, handcuffing him and covering his head with a black hood, for allegedly operating a prostitution ring out of the casino complex of his uncle, Stanley Ho. The elder Ho held a monopoly on gambling in Macau for four decades and SJM Holdings Ltd. (880), the company he founded, is still Asia’s biggest casino operator.
The authorities’ latest target of the sex industry comes as Xi wages the most sweeping campaign in decades against bribery, embezzlement and other kinds of corruption in an effort to bolster the legitimacy of the ruling Communist Party. Macau casinos that suffered last year from the fallout of Xi’s crackdown are likely feeling the noose tighten further, particularly on junket operators, middlemen who bring in high-stakes gamblers from the mainland.
“There is undoubtedly a new sheriff in town,” said Steve Vickers, a political risk consultant in Hong Kong. “This is consistent with President Xi’s call for Macau authorities to show ‘greater courage and wisdom’ and to ‘strengthen and improve regulation and supervision over the gaming industry’.”
No Let-Up
Xi, who visited Macau last month for the 15th anniversary of its handover to China, said this week that there will be no let-up in his “fierce and enduring” battle against corruption, which has already taken down thousands of senior officials including the country’s former security chief.
Actions including restrictions on illicit fund flows have prompted mainland VIPs to avoid Macau, putting some junkets out of business. The David Group, a top 10 Macau junket operator, is in the process of shutting its VIP rooms throughout the city, Nomura analysts led by Stella Xing wrote yesterday.
Macau is seeking to curb money flows because of concerns illegal funds are being taken out of the mainland into the territory through junket operators which provide credit to high-end players to gamble in the city.
Alan Ho was among the six people arrested for running the vice ring out of the Hotel Lisboa. Last weekend’s operation was the city’s biggest forced prostitution case since its 1999 handover to China, the Macau Daily News reported. It involved 2,400 suspected sex workers and about 400 million patacas ($50 million) in illicit gains, according to the Macau Judiciary Police.
Alan Ho didn’t respond to queries sent to his work e-mail address.
Entry Fee
The vice ring collected fees from women in return for allowing them to solicit men in a hotel, according to a statement from the police. The ladies, some of them recruited on the Internet, paid 150,000 yuan as an “entry fee” and a monthly protection fee of more than 10,000 patacas, they said. The city’s security chief Wong Sio Chak promised to step up police enforcement on the sex trade in Macau after the bust, according to a report in the Macao Daily News on Jan. 14.
Macau has long tolerated the sex trade, a natural outgrowth of a casino-focused tourism city, said Carlos Siu, an associate professor at Macao Polytechnic Institute.
“It’s happened to my friends visiting Macau; sometimes pimps will approach men asking if they need such services,” Siu said. “If it’s night, the women might hide in some dark corner pretending to play slot machines, come out and approach you.”
Illegal Brothels
Galaxy Entertainment Group Ltd. (27) led declines in casino shares in Hong Kong trading today. The stock fell 4.5 percent to close at HK$38.35, the lowest level since July 2013. Melco Crown Entertainment Ltd.’s Hong Kong-listed stock dropped 4.5 percent and SJM Holdings declined 4.1 percent.
Wynn Macau Ltd. and Sands China Ltd. lost more than 3 percent, while MGM China Holdings Ltd. fell 1.6 percent. The benchmark Hang Seng Index declined 1 percent.
Macau authorities conducted 34 sex trafficking investigations in 2013, compared with 15 a year earlier, the U.S. State Department’s Trafficking in Persons Report published last June showed. Victims, predominantly from mainland China, “are sometimes confined in massage parlors and illegal brothels, where they are closely monitored, forced to work long hours, have their identity documents confiscated and are threatened with violence,” it said.
The State Department ranks Macau Tier 2 , for territories which do not fully comply with minimum standards in the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act “but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance”.
Staff from Association for Reach Out (Macau) found little evidence of the usually rampant sex trade when they visited Hotel Lisboa and another casino hotel to give out condoms and health information flyers on Wednesday, four days after the bust, said Kendy Yim, executive director of the non-governmental organization providing support for sex workers in Macau.
Nightclubs and Saunas
These sex workers usually ply their trade in places ranging from casinos to nightclubs and saunas, receiving little social and government support, said Yim, adding there are no concrete statistics on the size of the industry because of the hushed nature of the profession and lack of accurate surveys.
“Often these are young, female migrant workers with little local support,” said Yim. “They are very much marginalized and may face all sorts of dangers; violence is one of them, and unsafe sex and exploitation from their employers is another.”
The police sting on a high-profile location like the Hotel Lisboa, and the arrest of a member of the powerful Ho family, heralds of more clean-up operations to come, said Lok Wai Kin, vice president of Macau’s Law Reform Consultative Committee which advises the government on legal matters.
“Macau’s government wants to make the gaming industry a more regulated and lawful one,” said Lok, a law professor at the University of Macau. “You can’t have rampant and in-your-face prostitution in a world-class entertainment destination right?”
Just cm bk from macau ,don need find just switch on ur wechat n search many fl w add u ....enjoy bro
Yes, I too receive lots of request to add from FL. Something I never encounter before in all my previous visit to Macau. Usually I am the one requesting to add. Activity on WeChat is on a high. Quite obvious the FL are quite desperate for business. But I never try any of them, just drop by Sauna in the end. Felt safer to Chiong in Sauna in such uncertain times. Msg To all Bros is CHIONG now before all is gone. As I have a bad feeling about all this activity going on in Macau.