Doe v. Choice Hotels International. Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 28, 2025
Docket8:24-cv-01598
StatusUnknown

This text of Doe v. Choice Hotels International. Inc. (Doe v. Choice Hotels International. Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Choice Hotels International. Inc., (D. Md. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

JANE DOE (J.S.H.), an individual, Plaintiff, Vi. Civil Action No. 24-1598-TDC CHOICE HOTELS INTERNATIONAL, INC. and GP4 PROPERTY OWNER, LLC, Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiff Jane Doe has filed this civil action against Defendants Choice Hotels International, Inc. (“Choice”) and GP4 Property Owner, LLC (“GP4”), in which she asserts claims under the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (“TVPRA”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1581-1597, based on her allegation that she was a victim of sex trafficking by unidentified third parties at a hotel in Jacksonville, Florida owned and operated by GP4 and subject to a franchise agreement with Choice. Choice has filed a Motion to Transfer Venue or, in the Alternative, to Dismiss, and GP4 has filed a Motion to Dismiss based on a lack of personal jurisdiction, improper venue, and a failure to state a claim. After briefing, the Court held a hearing on the Motions on June 10, 2025. For the reasons set forth below, Choice’s Motion will be GRANTED, and GP4’s Motion will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, in that the Court finds a lack of personal jurisdiction over GP4 but will transfer the claims against it, and the entire case, to the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida.

BACKGROUND I. Trafficking Allegations In the Complaint, Doe, a resident and citizen of Georgia, alleges that she was the victim of

sex trafficking at the direction of unidentified traffickers (“the Individual Traffickers”). Specifically, Doe alleges that she was “trafficked through force and coercion by her trafficker to

engage in numerous commercial sex acts,” and that she was trafficked “continuously from 2010

through November 30, 2016.” Compl. § 23, ECF No. 1. Of particular relevance to this litigation, Doe alleges that, between June 2014 and October 2014, she was trafficked “an incalculable number of times” in rooms at the Suburban Extended Stay Hotel Bay Meadows located in Jacksonville, Florida (“the Suburban Bay Meadows”). Jd. §§ 23, 25. During 2014, the Suburban Bay Meadows

was owned and operated by GP4, a limited liability company based in Raleigh, North Carolina, as

a franchise of Suburban Extended Stay, a hotel brand of Choice, a Delaware corporation and hotel

franchisor with its principal place of business in North Bethesda, Maryland. In this litigation, Doe brings claims under the TVPRA against Choice and GP4, a Choice franchisee, both of which Doe alleges “owned, operated, and controlled” the Suburban Bay Meadows. Id. §§ 14-15. Doe first alleges that Defendants had “actual and constructive knowledge” of her trafficking at the Suburban Bay Meadows. Id. 454. In support of this

allegation, Doe presents facts about the “widely known and pervasive” nature of hotel sex

trafficking generally as well as the “endemic” nature of sex trafficking at Choice-branded hotels

specifically. Id. §§ 26, 40. As to the nature of hotel sex trafficking generally, Doe alleges that

“sex slavery is pervasive in the United States, and hotels are the primary place where it happens,” citing statistics such as that, in 2014, “92 percent of calls to the Human Trafficking Hotline

involved reports of sex trafficking taking place at hotels,” and asserting that, given this link,

“government agencies and non-profits have devoted significant efforts to educating the hotel industry, including Defendants, on best practices for identifying and responding to sex trafficking.” Id. §| 27-29. According to Doe, this “relationship between sex trafficking and the hotel industry necessarily shapes what [Defendants] knew or should have known regarding the trafficking at their hotel properties.” Jd. 26. As to the nature of sex trafficking at Choice-branded hotels specifically, Doe asserts that Choice’s “actual knowledge is nor limited to general awareness of the problem of sex trafficking in the hotel industry.” /d. §40. As to Choice, Doe alleges that it “monitored criminal activity occurring at its branded hotels and was aware of activity indicating commercial sex trafficking or related crimes occurring at those branded hotels, including Suburban Bay Meadows.” /d. 941. In support of this allegation, Doe primarily points to numerous online reviews left by customers of various Choice-branded hotels between 2006 and 2018 referencing the presence of prostitution and other illicit activities. With respect to both Choice and GP4, Doe alleges that they were “specifically aware that sex trafficking was prevalent at the subject Suburban Bay Meadows.” /d. §] 46. In support of this allegation, Doe asserts that Choice and GP4 “knew that [the Suburban Bay Meadows] was in a high-crime area with a known history of reports of sex trafficking,” id. §] 47, and identifies two online reviews, published after the time period during which Doe was trafficked, referencing the presence of prostitution and other illicit activities at the Suburban Bay Meadows. First, a Yelp review dated May 21, 2015 stated: Avoid this hotel at any cost. It is a drug/lowlife/prostitute infested pit, it stinks, it’s filthy, and I’m sorry I ever booked it. Don’t believe the website photos .. . it is nothing like that in real life. The only hotel I’ve been in that was worse was one | was shot at in, and this is a very close second. Id. 448. In addition, a Yelp review from April 8, 2018 stated:

The place is more like a halfway house. It seems to be filled with drug dealers, prostitutes, and homeless people. The room was disgusting. If you are in the area and can’t find another hotel, do yourself a favor and sleep in your car.... Id. Further, Doe alleges that GP4 “knew or was willfully blind to the fact of” her sex trafficking at the Suburban Bay Meadows because “there were obvious signs that her traffickers were engaged in sex trafficking” observed by Suburban Bay Meadows managers and employees. Id. 50-52. These signs included that the “hotel rooms in which she was trafficked were frequently paid for with cash or prepaid cards,” “[o]ther girls were trafficked at the same hotel at the same time,” Doe “asked for clean sheets and towels multiple times a day,” there was “heavy foot traffic in and out of [Doe’s] room involving men who were not hotel guests,” and Doe “had around twenty (20) johns every day” who “entered and left at unusual hours and were present at the hotel for brief periods of time.” Jd. § 50. Doe alleges that despite its knowledge of the sex trafficking involving Doe, GP4 facilitated it by continuing to “rent|] rooms to these traffickers, including the rooms used to sexually exploit victims,” thereby “providing them a venue in the form of hotel rooms and related services.” Jd. {] 56-57. Doe further alleges that GP4 facilitated her trafficking by (1) “allowing inappropriate and inadequate practices for hiring, training, supervising, managing, and disciplining front-line staff regarding issues related to human trafficking”; (2) “inadequate and inadequately enforced sex trafficking notice[s] and training for hotel staff”; (3) “choosing not to report known or suspected criminal activity including sex trafficking according to reasonable practices, industry standards, and/or applicable franchisor policies and procedures”; and (4) “implicitly encouraging the activities of traffickers by creating an environment where they did not need to incur the burden of

taking significant steps to conceal their activities but, instead, could operate without concern for detection or interference by the hotel staff.” /d. § 58.

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