The World Cup is bringing the world’s best soccer players to the New York area — and sex workers are scrambling to score.
Escorts are experiencing a spike in bookings ahead of the arrival of 1.2 million soccer fans from around the globe who are expected flock to MetLife Stadium, which will host eight matches starting June 13, including the July 19 championship.
One Brooklyn-based escort who spoke to The Post on the condition of anonymity charges as much as $10,000 for a full day of her kink-centered services and said she’s been overwhelmed by session requests which line up directly with World Cup events in the NY/NJ area.
“I have been getting a lot of new client requests,” the 31-year-old, who offers $800-per-hour foot worshipping sessions, told The Post.
As foreign visitors plan their Gotham tours, her online profiles have seen three times as many engagements in May — including more couples looking for three-ways, she said.
“Interestingly, I have gotten a spike in couples requests. I usually only get one new couple client request per month. I got 25 requests in the last month,” she said.
The lady of the night has a recurring roster of steady clients, but is now entertaining one-time offers from tourist for the right price.
“Money is everything and if someone gave the right price for pretty much anything, you’d do it right?” she said.
“If someone came in for the World Cup and it was the right amount of money and it was a service I was interested in doing, of course I would do it,” she said.
A New Jersey-based escort who goes by “Spice V” revealed to The Post that she has already pocketed several $3,000 deposits from horndog soccer tourists.
“June is filling up quickly,” Spice said, adding, “There is a high expectation to be readily available once a client arrives. I am in high anticipation.”
Spice said she has already secured two clients from Europe, including one from London, and has another client coming in for the games from Colorado.
Escorts aren’t the only ones gearing up for the games. Law enforcement is bracing for an influx of human traffickers.
“When we think of large-scale events, we often focus on visible threats — terrorism, crowd safety, theft, fraud — and all those are very real concerns. But there’s another crime that thrives in these environments — human trafficking,” Montvale Police Chief Andrew Caggiano, who’s president of the New Jersey State Association of Chiefs of Police, said in the NJ Monitor.
As part of the effort to thwart predators, New Jersey State Police will deploy 1,200 troopers at various official and unofficial World Cup event.
The US Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network is also ringing the alarm bell over the “ever-present threat” of human trafficking.
“The 2026 FIFA World Cup is expected to draw millions of foreign and domestic visitors, and individuals visiting or residing near host cities may be vulnerable to sex or labor trafficking by perpetrators seeking to exploit the surge in economic activity,” a May 11 release from FinCEN warned.
Attorney General Jennifer Davenport told New Jersey state lawmakers on Wednesday the state has been planning to make sure both visitors and the state’s residents are protected.
“It will be a test of our law enforcement capacities, particularly our ability to stop human trafficking,” Davenport said in NJ Spotlight News.
Read the full article here
