“Sex, drugs and high rollers. A former prostitute said all three were in play during wild sex parties at an exclusive Denver social club.” (CBS4 in Denver)

Once again, professional athletes are being linked as clients in a sex scandal (see Gold Club), but this time they are even paying for the services.

After an 18-month investigation of what has been described as a “high-end prostitution business,” search warrants and federal affidavits were unsealed Thursday morning. The owner, 32-year-old Brenda Lynn Stewart, of Denver Sugar/Denver Players had her cash, financial records, and computers seized. However, neither Stewart or any of her employees have been arrested as of yet.

One woman, who is described by Denver’s CBS 4 as an employee of Denver Players and a “call girl,” spoke freely under the condition of anonymity offering up several interesting details, according to CBS4’s reporter Brian Maass:

“Basically there was allot of drug use, drinking, almost orgy type stuff going on,” she said of the late night gatherings at the club.

She said the women were paid around $2,000 to have sex with numerous men. Asked who the men were, she said they were “business guys, rich businessmen.” She said participants in the parties snorted cocaine and had sex throughout the club.

“People were having sex on the pool table, couches … in the locker room, in the steam room,” she said.

The story also includes a tale of Denver’s mayor leaving his robe at the club and girls parading around in it and the inclusion of a well-known Denver lawyer, a city money manager, and a professional poker player, but more imprtantly to sports fans:

But the woman said downtown lawyers, money managers and businessmen were just part of the clientele. She said “doctors … general contractors … professional athletes” also patronized the prostitution service, which usually charged about $300 for an hour of sex. “Nuggets basketball players … Arizona Diamondbacks … Rockies baseball players” and some Denver Broncos were customers she said.

None of the players who were involved in the Gold Club trial were ever charged with anything, so will anything happen to the professional athletes who may have been involved? Probably not…but it’s yet another black eye for sports in general (one of way too many in the recent years).

Shotgun Spratling

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