
Former sex trafficking victim pardoned by President Trump reveals disturbing secrets of legal brothel
Rebekah "Bekah" Charleston had an eerie feeling when she walked inside the Moonlite Bunny Ranch, a legal brothel in western Nevada.
"While the TV show 'Cathouse' might've made it look glamorous on the side when you drive out, it's a double-wide trailer in the middle of nowhere. It's a literal compound you're entering into," the former sex trafficking victim told Fox News Digital.
"It was strange. No one was allowed to have a car there," she said. "Nobody ever left their workplace. We were forced to sleep in the same rooms where we were serving customers all day long. We'd get to change the sheets, but then we would sleep in those same rooms. That's not a job like any other."
The North Texas woman is now speaking out on A&E's docuseries, "Secrets of the Bunny Ranch."
The six-part special explores the rise of "America's No. 1 sex destination" and its charismatic owner, Dennis Hof, a self-proclaimed pimp who died in 2018 at age 72. It features never-before-seen footage, personal photos and never-before-heard interviews with ex-employees.
Fox News Digital reached out to Moonlite Bunny Ranch for comment.
"Speaking out in a docuseries like this is kind of terrifying and overwhelming," Charleston admitted. "But … I think it's important that we're holding people accountable now."
Growing up, Charleston was a troubled teen who ran away from home at age 16. Living on the streets, she was forced into prostitution by a boyfriend. By age 17, she became involved with a trafficker. Charleston said she was in her early 20s when she was sent to the Bunny Ranch as "a form of punishment."
"I was in Las Vegas working for [my trafficker] at all the casinos and escort services," she recalled. "I started getting arrested too much. The police started recognizing me as they often do in Las Vegas. So, he made me go to the brothels."
There was one rule Charleston's trafficker ordered her to follow: Stay away from Hof.
"My trafficker warned me that … all [Hof] would try to do is get girls high and drunk and then have services with him for free," she claimed. "And my trafficker wasn't about to let me do that."
According to the docuseries, the women were required to read "The Bunny Bible," which also guided them on client negotiations.
"We would line up like cattle every Thursday to get a pap smear," said Charleston. "We just go one right after the other in a room in the back. A doctor would be on the premises doing a pap smear. I also had to get my blood tested once a month to make sure that I didn't have HIV or AIDS."
The Bunny Ranch was the setting for HBO's reality TV series, "Cathouse," which premiered in 2005. While the series depicted the workers as earning loads of cash, it was far from the truth, Charleston said. That sentiment was echoed by several ex-workers in the docuseries.
"I started at the Love Ranch," Charleston said of Hof's other legal brothel in Nevada. "You had to earn your spot because the Bunny Ranch was [Hof's] prized brothel. I wound up earning a lot of money, enough money to be moved over to the Bunny Ranch."
"The house takes 50% of your money off the top, no matter what," she added. "The harsh reality is that you're automatically getting half of whatever it is that you're charging customers and having to do all the sexual services for. And then you're charged with room and board, food and supplies.
"Everybody has their hands on your 50%. ... I know some people who have worked there who have bragged about making a million dollars in a year. Well, that's automatically $500,000. And then out of that, there are 12 months of room and board, 12 months of supplies and other things. It winds up being a lot less than advertised."
While some of the ex-employees alleged in the docuseries that they'd experienced violence at the hands of customers, Charleston said she didn't face similar encounters.
"I've heard a lot of other stories – people that have died there, people that have nearly died there," she said. "There are a lot more details coming out about that in the series. But, thankfully, I didn't face violence at the hands of sex buyers."
Charleston said she was eventually pulled out of the Bunny Ranch when her trafficker realized she wasn't earning enough for him. She also described struggling to deposit enough money in the bank.
Leaving felt "liberating," she said.
GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB
"It's such a dark and dingy place," she reflected. "Girls just sat around and got high all day. … The reality is, you're sitting around all day waiting for the bell to ring. You have no idea who's going to come through the door or if they're going to pick you. … You can imagine someone working at the brothel who maybe hasn't had a date all week, but they still have to pay for their room and board every single day.
"They still have to pay for their food. You wind up being indebted to the brothel. You end up taking a call or 'a date' as we would call it, that you don't even want to do. But you have to because now you're in the red, and you have to pay for your fees."
"It's such an odd reality when you are living in an establishment that does nothing but just sells sex all the time," she said. "It was depressing, it was gross and I was really happy when I finally got to leave."
But Charleston's troubles didn't end there. In 2006, she was arrested for tax evasion and served 13 months in federal prison. She was pardoned in 2020 by President Donald Trump.
"I had been prepared for that from day one," she said. "My trafficker had drilled in and beaten into us that the only word we were allowed to say was 'lawyer.' Unfortunately, I kept my mouth shut, and I took the charge … for my trafficker, even though it was never my income. That was none of my money. But myself and the other victims, we took the charge because we were terrified of our trafficker."
WATCH: ILLEGAL MASSAGE PARLORS ACROSS US TARGETED IN MAJOR HUMAN TRAFFICKING BUST
"In some ways, [being in prison] was a little bit of a vacation," she said. "It was the first time I didn't have people touching my body. … I got to eat three meals a day. I would sometimes get to sleep eight hours a night. … In some ways, it was a reprieve from the lifestyle that I had been lured and manipulated into."
When Charleston was released, she was determined to turn her life around. In 2013, she launched Bekah Speaks Out, which provides training and consulting services to law enforcement and community leaders. She earned degrees in criminal justice and criminology and filed a federal lawsuit against the state of Nevada over the legalized prostitution industry.
Charleston also worked with senators to advocate for the Trafficking Survivors Relief Act, which "aims to provide victims the opportunity to vacate or expunge federal convictions resulting from their victimization."
The White House took notice. Officials said Charleston is a victim of sex trafficking who was forced into prostitution, and she now volunteers to help victims. Her pardon by President Trump was also supported by a law enforcement agent who arrested her.
"I was shocked to get the pardon," said Charleston. "I feel really blessed. … [But] those things still show up on my record. I still have to explain to people, 'Hey, I do have a piece of paper that President Trump signed and says he forgives me.'
"I'm still fighting for full relief, which is the Trafficking Survivors Relief Act," she said. "It's up in Congress right now. … We've been trying to get this bill passed since 2016. If it were to go through, they would go back and redact the records, and it would be as if it never happened. That, to me, would be true justice. I [wouldn't] have to explain myself any longer."
Charleston hopes speaking out encourages others to come forward.
"It makes me sad to know how many girls, many young women, were sucked in, thinking, 'I'm going to live this glamorous lifestyle. I'm going to have fun and have sex all day and make money,'" she said. "You're a prisoner stuck on the property, it's not always going to be fun and you don't really make that much money.. … I'm excited about what I get to do today and help other people."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
39 minutes ago
- Fox News
CHUCK DEVORE: Trump moves fast to save LA from a 1992 repeat
Los Angeles is rioting again. Mobs, amped up by professional agitators and implicit support from Democratic elected officials, have attacked federal law enforcement officers with deadly intent. This violence, which includes hurling rocks, torching cars, launching fireworks, and assaulting federal law enforcement officers, aims to prevent U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) from carrying out lawful deportation efforts. Missing the irony, the rioters enthusiastically waved the flags of nations to which they are fighting against being returned. In response, federal and some local law enforcement deployed tear gas and flash bangs to disperse the crowd in the LA suburb of Paramount. But with law enforcement lives clearly threatened and the local law enforcement response less than robust, President Donald Trump ordered up 2,000 members of the National Guard to restore order. Additional active duty troops are said to be on standby. Predictably, California Gov. Gavin Newsom and LA Mayor Karen Bass clutch their pearls, whining about "cruel" immigration enforcement while the city spirals into anarchy. Newsom labeled Trump's federalization of the National Guard "purposefully inflammatory." He said it would escalate tensions—one supposes the future presidential candidate sees the ruckus as "mostly peaceful." The pro-immigration without limits group, the League of United Latin American Citizens, predictably condemned Trump's order, claiming it "marks a deeply troubling escalation in the administration's approach to immigration and civilian reaction to the use of military-style tactics." Trump isn't moved by the criticism. He doesn't want to see federal law enforcement officers killed or injured by anarchists and would-be revolutionaries for simply doing their jobs. I saw this movie before. In 1992, as a California Army National Guard captain, I patrolled LA's scorched Crenshaw District during the Rodney King riots. Looters ran wild, businesses burned, and chaos reigned until Gov. Pete Wilson called up the National Guard and President George H.W. Bush invoked the Insurrection Act, sending 3,500 federal troops—active duty Army and Marines—to back 10,000 federalized Guardsmen. Order swiftly returned. It worked. There's a big difference—so far—between today's unrest and that of 1992. The Rodney King riot was initially sparked by resentment over what was seen as excessive police force. Due to LA's chronically under-staffed police department and a tactical error—pulling back law enforcement from an intersection that had been taken over by a violent mob—the riot quickly spiraled out of control. By the end, some 63 people were dead, 2,383 injured, 12,111 arrested, and more than $2.3 billion in inflation-adjusted property damage was inflicted. In comparison, the 1992 LA riot equaled all the death, injuries, arrests, and damage of the 2020 George Floyd-Antifa-BLM riots of 2020 combined. In 1992, once law and order broke down, opportunistic looting and arson quickly followed. Today's riots are fueled by open-borders radicals and their enablers, not anger over police using excessive force. ICE is enforcing federal law, rounding up illegal immigrant criminals and those with final deportation orders. And the danger, so far, is more focused on federal law enforcement officers, not private property per se. Thus, there's a subtle difference in the call-up of troops, both in the size of the deployment—13,500 in 1992 vs. 2,000 today—and in their purpose. Normally, National Guard personnel, when operating on a state mission for a governor, can enforce civilian law. The post-Civil War Posse Comitatus Act which generally prohibits the use of the military to enforce civilian laws doesn't apply. But when the Guard is federalized—that is, called up to federal service—the Posse Comitatus Act's restrictions apply to the Guard, just as they do to active-duty service members. But there's a big exception: The Insurrection Act. Through 1992, presidents have invoked the Insurrection Act 31 times. Essentially, when local law and order break down, the president is authorized to use the military to enforce civilian law. But Trump has not yet invoked the Insurrection Act. What he did instead was to call up the California National Guard and potentially some Marines to protect federal law enforcement officers. Thus, these military personnel will not be allowed to arrest agitators and rioters or conduct immigration enforcement operations, but they will be allowed to perform force protection missions and provide logistical support. Of course, if that's not enough. Trump can always invoke the Insurrection Act, federalize more National Guard soldiers—even from other states—and send in additional active-duty forces, just as Eisenhower and Kennedy did to smash segregationist resistance in the 1950s and 60s. Newsom and Bass are at fault here. Their failure is glaring. Californians have been voting with their feet for years, fleeing Newsom's wrong-headed policies. Now, his mismanagement of LA's violence will torch what is left of his presidential ambitions. These rioters aren't protesters—they're insurgents. Like Antifa in 2020, they're attacking federal authority, targeting ICE agents enforcing laws Congress passed. Newsom and Bass coddle them. Since they won't act, Trump must. The left will scream "tyranny," and some retired generals will fret about "politicizing" the military. But anarchy is a brutal tyranny of its own kind.


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
1 killed, 4 injured in wrong way crash on I-25 in Denver
One person was killed and four were taken to the hospital after Denver police say someone drove onto Interstate 25 at the Speer Boulevard exit the wrong way. The crash was reported just before 4 a.m. on Sunday on I-25 near 20th Street. Few details were immediately available, but police say a 26-year-old woman driving a gray Chrysler went south in the northbound lanes of I-25 and struck another car. The woman was killed at the scene, but a passenger in her car and three people in the other car were taken to the hospital -- three with serious injuries and one with minor injuries. The northbound lanes were being diverted onto the 23rd Street exit for hours, but that scene has since cleared and normal traffic has resumed.


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
California Republicans slam Newsom, Bass for letting LA burn with riots amid Trump immigration blitz
Riots against the Trump administration's immigration raids in Southern California are rocking Los Angeles this weekend and California Republicans are pinning blame for the violence on Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom and LA Mayor Karen Bass. "Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass have a real habit of letting Los Angeles burn," Republican California Rep. Darell Issa posted to X on Saturday evening. "If only Karen Bass fought against the Los Angeles fires like she fights for illegal aliens," Issa added in another post, referring to the Palisades fire that tore through Southern California in January. Riots broke out in Los Angeles on Friday and Saturday as immigration officials carried out raids to remove individuals illegally residing in the left-wing city, which dubbed itself a "sanctuary" for illegal immigrants in November before President Donald Trump was sworn back into the Oval Office. The raids began on Friday, with Bass issuing a statement supporting illegal immigrants in the city and bucking the Trump administration's deportation efforts. "This morning, we received reports of federal immigration enforcement actions in multiple locations in Los Angeles," Bass said in a statement on Friday. "As Mayor of a proud city of immigrants, who contribute to our city in so many ways, I am deeply angered by what has taken place. These tactics sow terror in our communities and disrupt basic principles of safety in our city. My Office is in close coordination with immigrant rights community organizations. We will not stand for this." Newsom issued a similar statement on Friday, calling the immigration raids "chaotic and reckless." "Continued chaotic federal sweeps, across California, to meet an arbitrary arrest quota are as reckless as they are cruel. Donald Trump's chaos is eroding trust, tearing families apart, and undermining the workers and industries that power America's economy," Newsom's statement read. Newsom's press office doubled down in support of shielding illegal immigrants from deportation in a response X post to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Saturday. "In recent days, violent mobs have attacked ICE Officers and Federal Law Enforcement Agents carrying out basic deportation operations in Los Angeles, California. These operations are essential to halting and reversing the invasion of illegal criminals into the United States. In the wake of this violence, California's feckless Democrat leaders have completely abdicated their responsibility to protect their citizens," Leavitt posted to X. Newsom's office responded: "These are anything but basic. Your indiscriminate sweeps are terrifying entire communities and detaining hardworking, tax-paying Californians. It's cruel escalation and must end." Other Democrats in the state have gone even further in their defense of illegal immigrants amid the raids, with Democratic Rep. Norma Torres posting to TikTok on Saturday telling ICE officials to "get the f--- out of L.A. so that order can be restored." The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) declared unlawful assembly and issued a city-wide tactical alert on Friday evening as rioters attacked law enforcement officers, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement on Saturday. "Last night, over 1,000 rioters surrounded a federal law enforcement building and assaulted ICE law enforcement officers, slashed tires, defaced buildings, and taxpayer-funded property," read a statement from DHS. "Our ICE enforcement officers are facing a 413% increase in assaults against them. Disturbingly, in recent days, ICE officers' family members have been dox[x]ed and targeted as well." As chaos broke out on the streets of LA, federal officials have pinned blame for the violence on Democratic elected officials who have "villainized and demonized" ICE law enforcement, Fox Digital previously reported. "The violent targeting of law enforcement in Los Angeles by lawless rioters is despicable and Mayor Bass and Governor Newsom must call for it to end," DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin, for example, wrote in a statement. "The men and women of ICE put their lives on the line to protect and defend the lives of American citizens.… From comparisons to the modern-day Nazi gestapo to glorifying rioters, the violent rhetoric of these sanctuary politicians is beyond the pale. This violence against ICE must end." California Republicans and conservatives have also directed their ire at Democratic leaders for the violence, Fox Digital found. "Gavin Newsom is unqualified for a plethora of reasons, the least of which is his support of illegal alien insurrectionists. He is an all purpose, all around loser," Hollywood actor and California resident James Woods posted to X. Woods additionally described Bass as a "Communist" and Newsom as "Grease" in other posts asking to describe the California Democrats in one word. "After four years of the Biden administration refusing to enforce our immigration laws, Americans voted for President Trump, who promised to enforce the law and secure the border. Our federal agencies, including ICE, have every right to enforce federal laws, even in sanctuary states," California Republican Rep. Ken Calvert posted to X. "This is on you, Governor. It is a shame that California openly defies federal law and sides with illegal aliens, including hardened criminals, against its own citizens," Harmeet Dhillon, former vice chair of the California Republican Party and current assistant attorney general for civil rights at the U.S. Department of Justice, posted to X. "Gavin Newsom seems to think that California can not only defy federal immigration law, but now federal tax law. The doctrine of nullification died with the Confederacy. What's next: firing on Fort Ord?" Republican California Rep. Tom McClintock posted to X, referring to Newsom floating withholding federal taxes in response to reports of the Trump administration cutting funding to the state. Libs of TikTok, a popular conservative X account founded by an LA native, posted a series of messages pinning blame on local Democrats and providing updates on the violence. Stephen Miller, White House deputy chief of staff and California native, responded to Bass on X after she defended illegal immigrants: "You have no say in this at all. Federal law is supreme and federal law will be enforced." When asked about California Republicans' comments and the riots overall on Sunday morning, Newsom's communications director Izzy Gardon told Fox Digital: "LA riots? Have these geniuses ever seen what happens when the Eagles win a playoff game?" Videos circulated on social media Friday night and Saturday showing people looting LA shops and setting fires, as well as lobbing rocks and other items at immigration officials. U.S. Border Patrol Chief Michael W. Banks shared a photo of a Border Patrol agent's bloody hand that was injured by a rock flying through the windshield. Trump signed a presidential memorandum on Saturday to deploy 2,000 National Guardsmen to Paramount, California, to help quell the violence, and has also slammed the local leaders for the chaos. "If Governor Gavin Newscum, of California, and Mayor Karen Bass, of Los Angeles, can't do their jobs, which everyone knows they can't, then the Federal Government will step in and solve the problem, RIOTS & LOOTERS, the way it should be solved!!!" Trump posted to Truth Social on Saturday evening. ICE acting Director Todd Lyons described what took place in Los Angeles on Friday as "appalling." "As rioters attacked federal ICE and law enforcement officers on the LA streets, Mayor Bass took the side of chaos and lawlessness over law enforcement," Lyons wrote in a statement on Saturday. "These violent rioters will be held accountable if they harm federal officers, and make no mistake, ICE will continue to enforce our nation's immigration laws and arrest criminal illegal aliens." FBI Director Kash Patel vowed that any individual found attacking an immigration official will face jail. "If you assault a law enforcement officer, you're going to jail – period," Patel said on Saturday, Fox Digital previously reported. "It doesn't matter where you came from, how you got here, or what cause you claim to represent," Patel added in comment to Fox News Digital on Saturday. "If local jurisdictions won't stand behind the men and women who wear the badge, the FBI will."