Markham Exotic Massage
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Sensual Jennifer
Sensual Jennifer has worked in Markham a few days per month for many years.
She works out of a large hotel.
She also works in downtown Toronto and Mississauga.
Previously she worked for Hands From Heaven in Brampton.
She is a very sexy and classy woman from west Toronto.
Fruitopia Machine
The Alden Road Spa in Markham had a famous Fruitopia Machine.
This Spa was open between 1995 and 2005.
It was staffed by Eastern European attendants.
This exotic massage parlour was implicated in human trafficking.
Around 2003 several people were charged with bringing women from Europe under duress.
One of th epeople invloved was an fringe NHL player from Eastern Europe.
Most of these Eastern European women have vanished from the scene many years ago.
Markham Massage 1995-2002
Markham had a very active massage parlour scene in the 1990s up until the Mirage Spa Murders.
Markham issued bodyrub licences to many massage parlours including Mirage but immediately stopped them after the tragedy.
Oasis on Hood Road was one of the more famous places.
It moved to Scarborough around 2005.
Oasis even had a website for a while.
Labels:
Markham Massage 1995-2002,
Oasis Spa
Location:
Markham, ON, Canada
Mirage Spa Murders
York Region Police continue looking for the murderers
The crime was shocking: Three people were gunned down inside a massage parlour in Markham eight years ago. They were bound, wrapped up and stuffed inside a red Ford Explorer owned by one of the victims. Related: Still no answers in 2004 triple slaying The bodies were found inside the SUV, 12 kilometres north in the rear parking lot of Victoria Square United Church on Woodbine Ave. at Elgin Mills Rd. E. Why did the killers leave a bloody scene inside the massage parlour and take the victims to a church parking lot next to a cemetery? Was this a message: Here are the bodies, go bury them? So far, the killers have covered their tracks very well. But York Region police are not giving up. The Police Services Board recently approved doubling the reward for information to $200,000, in hopes of a break in the case. Two seasoned homicide detectives, known for their persistence and background in investigations, have been assigned to review the case to see what might have been missed. Steve Rudback, tall and talkative, and Joe Amato-Gauci, shorter and quiet, may seem different, but they share 22 years of experience and a passion for solving crimes. Amato-Gauci’s background was in investigating child-abuse cases. Rudback came to homicide in 2008, after two tours in the Richmond Hill Criminal Investigations Bureau. “Joe and I have only been working together since mid-February but he is sharp, methodical and intuitive — a perfect cold case partner,” Rudback said. “We are very patient,” Amato-Gauci says. On Tuesday, they returned to the scene of the crime with a reporter and retraced the possible route of the killers. Travelling north on Warden Ave. to Highway 7 and then north on Woodbine Ave., the route passes wooded areas and another church where the bodies could have been disposed of. Mirage Spa was managed by Zhu Xia Lin, 41, also known as Judy, Amy or Sally. Early on that day in 2004, she was there with worker Yan Jun Liu, 35, (also known as Rita or Julie) and their friend, Walter Xian Chen Zhang, 40. All three were shot and killed. The killers stuffed their bodies into Zhang’s red Ford Explorer and drove north for 15 minutes. They pulled into the back of Victoria United Church and parked. The Sunday morning service was only hours away; the killers must have known people would soon be arriving. “They made no attempt to conceal the bodies,” Rudback says. All day, the truck sat there largely ignored, until around 4 p.m., a man began to wonder about it and wandered over to take a look. Horrified to spot a leg sticking out of the back, he called police. Minutes later, police learned of the bloody crime scene to the south and connected the two incidents. The employee who discovered the Mirage Spa crime scene hadn’t called police right away. Cameras inside the studio weren’t on at the time, but there is no indication they were turned off by the killers. The biggest mystery is why the killers took the risks involved in driving to the church, when they could have just left the bodies in place. Though the other two didn’t have any known enemies, police uncovered reasons to believe someone wanted Zhu Xia Lin dead. The divorced mother had made many enemies after arriving from Fouzhou, China, in 1997 and claiming refugee status after paying $40,000 to a “snakehead” or illegal immigration consultant. She waited on tables and serviced strangers at a Toronto massage parlour, eventually becoming the manager. She also got involved in underworld money-laundering schemes. A few months before the murders, she had been the target of a home invasion in which she was badly beaten and robbed. Her son, about 20 at the time, lived with her. He has apparently now fled back to China. “Was this a warning?” Rudback wonders. Police continue to look into the backgrounds of the victims and have a box full of material to review. They are also appealing to the public for help and using social media to get the word out — including a YouTube video. “Somebody knows something,” Gauci says. Rudback hopes that, as the years have gone by, allegiances have fractured and people feel more at ease to pass on information. “This case is a big mystery,” Rudback says, “but we’re one phone call away from cracking this.” The reward of $200,000 for information that leads to a conviction will expires next Jan. 31 and won’t be renewed, police say. Information can be passed on to the York Region homicide squad at 1-866-876-5423, ext. 7865, or anonymously through Crime Stoppers. Related: Still no answers in 2004 triple slayingOf course no Asian cops were assigned to the case.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)