By Kate Briquelet
In a clever sting operation, the feds nabbed creeps looking to buy ‘sex slaves’ for their home dungeons.
In March 2014, Steven Currence gave undercover agents a grand tour of the dungeon hidden inside his Montana home.
The
subterranean hellhole contained a heavy wooden cross and a smattering
of chairs. The walls were covered in whips, chains, and torture devices.
Currence boasted of blacking out the windows to dash any hopes of
escape.
Here was the sinister lair where the 65-year-old planned to lock his
sex slaves. One kidnapped woman would sleep in the basement torture
chamber, while the other would be chained to his bed—with a chain long
enough to reach the bathroom.
Currence believed he would soon purchase the women from the agents,
who posed as human traffickers. The creep previously told the agents
that he wanted a “housekeeper with benefits” who would “take care of
things, clean the house, take care of me,” court records reveal.
“These
slaves will never leave,” Currence said. “I’m not looking for love,
they’re just going to be in here and they are going to be serving.”
But
Currence wouldn’t be the one doing the shackling. Instead, the feds
cuffed him two months later when he traveled to Arizona to buy two women
at what he believed was a slave auction.
In September of this year, Currence was sentenced to seven years in prison.
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