State v. Wang

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 31, 2019
DocketN16C-05-138 AML
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Wang (State v. Wang) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wang, (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

THE STATE OF DELAWARE, Plaintiff,

C.A. NO.: N16C-05-138 AML

Vv.

DA ZHONG WANG,

Nee Nee Neer ree eee eee nee” eee ee”

Defendant. Submitted: July 16, 2019 Decided: October 31, 2019

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Oliver J. Cleary, Esquire, and Zoe Plerhoples, Esquire, of the STATE OF DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Plaintiff.

Brian T.N. Jordan, Esquire, of JORDAN LAW, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Defendant.

LeGrow, J. The defendant in this civil racketeering action owned and operated a series of massage parlors across the state. Over the course of 13 months, three different massage therapists at two different locations offered undercover police officers sex in exchange for money. After the third such incident, the defendant criminally was charged and ultimately pleaded guilty to permitting prostitution at his Rehoboth business. During the same time period, the sewer at a third location was clogged with hundreds of used condoms on two separate occasions. Police officers investigating the businesses found that the employees who worked there spoke little to no English and lived in the establishments. Investigating officers also observed sexually suggestive online advertisements for the defendant’s massage businesses.

At trial, against this record, the defendant denied knowing that his employees routinely were engaging in prostitution. His testimony strained credulity. After considering the evidence, I find the State proved that the defendant conspired with his employees to offer massage customers sex in exchange for money. I therefore conclude the State proved the defendant civilly is liable for three violations of Delaware’s racketeering statute. My reasoning

follows. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

These are the facts as I find them after trial and after weighing the testifying witnesses’ credibility and the exhibits admitted into evidence through their testimony. Da Zhong Wang, the defendant, is a Chinese citizen who formerly operated a handful of massage parlors in Delaware. These establishments included the Relaxed Spa in Rehoboth Beach (the “Rehoboth location”), the Massage Center in Middletown (the “Middletown location”), and Da Wang’s Bodyworks in Dover (the “Dover location”).

As described more fully below, beginning in late 2013 and extending through 2014, various law enforcement organizations began investigating Wang’s businesses for a number of reasons, chief among them a suspicion that the masseuses at the various locations regularly were prostituting themselves during massages. Those investigations culminated in Wang’s arrest in December 2014 for Promoting Prostitution and Permitting Prostitution. Wang ultimately pleaded guilty to Permitting Prostitution, a misdemeanor offense.! In 2015, the Delaware Board of Massage and Bodywork (the “Board”) suspended Wang’s certified massage technician license, finding that he violated a number of the Board’s laws and regulations.” Those violations included not displaying his license, not listing

his license number on his business cards, not maintaining appropriate business

' Trial Exhibit (hereinafter “TX”) 31. 2 TX 36. records, and not cooperating with the Division of Professional Regulation’s investigators.> By 2015, Wang had closed all his Delaware locations and moved to New York.

In May 2016, the State filed this action seeking asset forfeiture and civil penalties based on Wang’s alleged violation of the Delaware Organized Crime and Racketeering Act* (the “RICO Statute”). After discovery had concluded, both parties filed motions for summary judgment. The Court ultimately denied those motions, ruling that disputed issues of material fact precluded judgment as a matter of law in favor of either party.” In April 2019, the parties tried a two-day bench trial in this Court solely addressing the issue of whether Wang was liable under the statute. In the event the Court determines Wang is liable, the parties anticipate further proceedings on the issue of remedies. At the conclusion of the trial, the Court allowed the parties to submit post-trial briefs, but determined oral argument was not necessary.

At trial, the State’s evidence focused on investigations and evidence from all three locations. The State argues that evidence, considered cumulatively, shows Wang engaged in a pattern of racketeering activity and conspired with his

employees to do so. Wang generally denies knowledge of any prostitution

3 Td. at 2. 411 Del. C. §§ 1501-1511. > State v. Wang, 2018 WL 2202274, at *1 (Del. Super. May 11, 2018).

3 activities at two of the three locations, gives little acknowledgment to his guilty plea to permitting prostitution at the third location, and argues the State’s other evidence does not meet its burden of proving racketeering by a preponderance of the evidence.

For the reasons explained below, the State’s evidence satisfied its burden of proof in this case. Before delving into the specifics of that evidence, however, I first address my reasons for concluding that Wang’s testimony was not credible. I then address the evidence at each of the three locations that are the subject of the State’s case. In a nutshell, considered as a whole, the record demonstrates that Wang was aware of and encouraged prostitution at his establishments in order to increase business. His self-proclaimed ignorance was not convincing, and the State has shown that Wang violated three different sections of the RICO Statute.

A. Wang’s Credibility

Wang testified first at trial. He was, on the whole, not a credible witness, as his testimony was inconsistent internally and contradicted by evidence admitted during trial and by the facts to which the parties stipulated before trial. Some of those inconsistencies were minor, but they nonetheless were telling. For example,

Wang testified that he emigrated from China and the only places he has lived in the United States are New York, Chicago, Maryland, and Delaware.® He represented to the Delaware Division of Professional Regulation, however, that he was licensed to practice massage in California and he also testified that he studied in Boston.’ Further contradicting himself, Wang testified he studied massage in Boston and Chicago, but his application for a massage license in Delaware listed an institution in California as his place of study. At trial, Wang denied attending that institution.’

Other instances of Wang’s inconsistencies or prevaricating are more central to the issues in this case. For example, Wang initially denied pleading guilty to Permitting Prostitution or any other prostitution offense, despite documentation

proving otherwise.'?

Wang also testified on direct examination that he did not know why his wife, Xiu Juan Zhang, was arrested by Middletown police in January 2014.'' Wang went so far as to claim that he never discussed this seemingly important event with the woman to whom he was married.'? On cross-

examination, however, in an effort to explain why Xiu Juan Zhang was present at

his Dover location after he purportedly fired her for being arrested, Wang testified

° State v. Wang, C.A. No. N16C-05-138 AML (Trial Transcript) (hereinafter “Trial Tr.”) (Apr. 22, 2019) 9.

1 Td. at 10; TX 10.

8 Compare Trial Tr. at 10, with TX 10.

° Trial Tr. at 10.

'0 Td. at 43-44. Wang later admitted to pleading guilty to Permitting Prostitution. See State v. Wang, C.A. No. N16C-05-138 AML (Trial Transcript) (Apr. 23, 2019) 16-17.

'! Trial Tr. at 30-34.

!2 Td. at 33; see also id. at 27-28 (Wang testified he and his wife were married until mid-2015).

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Wang, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wang-delsuperct-2019.