What's worse than waking up to find your money is gone? It could be finding out that the sexy lady you hooked up with last night is a transvestite.
Five Filipino transvestites accused of drugging foreign men in bars with
the promise of sex went on trial in Shanghai's No. 1 Intermediate People's Court
on Tuesday, accused of assault and robbery, the Oriental Morning Post reported
on Wednesday.
The five "she-males," aged between 26 and 30, used their curvy figures
and feminine voices to flirt with male expatriates at cocktail lounges on
Tongren Road and at the Grand Hyatt Shanghai Hotel in Jing'an district, the
newspaper reported.
The transvestites lured their victims to hotels, coaxed them to eat
chocolates that had been secretly laced with powdered sleeping pills, and robbed
them after the men fell asleep. The alleged theft of cell phones, credit cards
and personal belongings netted the transvestites 310,000 yuan ($49,780) worth of
stolen loot, the report said.
In one case, suspect Mark Garcia, 29, and a high-heeled accomplice named
Randell Dabalus, tricked a male customer into thinking they were women at the
Manhattan Bar on Tongren Road. The pretty "women" escorted their victim to his
hotel, drugged him, and then stole his Rolex watch and three credit cards.
Garcia was caught on March 2 when shopping at a cosmetics store with the
stolen credit cards. He later led police to the other suspects.
Prosecutors said the five transvestites were detained in March after a
string of similar robberies from December of last year to February.
Garcia said they came to Shanghai from Japan in February 2008 after the
financial crisis put the sex trade on hold. After months of joblessness in the
city, the she-male said he used his "good-looks" to become a street hooker on
Tongren Road.
The bar owners told the Global Times that they couldn't do much to
prevent their customers from being seduced by attractive cross-dressers.
"Our door is open to everyone. We cannot say who can get in and who
cannot," said manager Xie, at Malone's, a favorite foreigner hangout on the
street populated by bars.
"Moreover, in the dim light you can not clearly distinguish men from
women, so how can we know what they are doing?" she asked.
Richard O'Connell, an Englishman working in Beijing who frequents bars
twice a week, told the Global Times that he thinks the Filipino tranvestites are
"clever" because they managed to trick grown-up men and reaped a small
fortune.
Still, he feels Chinese pubs are "much safer" places than those in his
hometown.
"I wouldn't like to suspect that every woman who comes on to me is really
a man," he said.
The court will render its verdict at a later
date.
Hangzhou Jiaoyu Science and Technology Co.LTD.
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