Neptune's Lagoon: Unfairly Trashed

Anaheim PD, code enforcement and state labor officials raid a Jacuzzi-by-the-hour spot, trashing the place—and leaving the owner with the bill

A.J. Maddox usually opens the doors of Neptune's Lagoon, his by-the-hour Jacuzzi-rental business in Anaheim, around noon every day to little fanfare. But on April 3, it wasn't early-bird customers who greeted him, but more than 20 code-enforcement officers, officials with California's labor-standards enforcement, and undercover police in tactical uniforms and ski masks.

"The first thing I asked them when they came in was if they have a warrant," Maddox recalls. "They told me they didn't have a warrant and that this was not a criminal investigation. They said they were simply here to support code enforcement."

After that brief introduction, the officials proceeded to ransack the Lagoon. They seized its phones. Four of Maddox's friends who were hanging out in a back storage building were handcuffed and detained after labor standards officers determined—without any proof—they were employees paid under the table. Code enforcement found two small storage rooms built inside the original foundation that were not up to code and demanded he knock them down. Maddox was fined $13,676, and a demolition order the city executed three weeks ago left an awkward hole in his business.

Maddox didn't know it then, but the Anaheim Police Department, Code Enforcement and Labor Standards placed four massage parlors in Anaheim under the same lockdown and sweep that day. At each place, the phalanx of uniformed officers neglected to tell owners why they were disrupting their businesses. It wasn't until later that they said they were looking for victims of human trafficking.

The worst part of it? The destructive show was all for naught. Not one of the business owners was ever charged with a crime. At a hearing before the state Department of Industrial Relations' Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, officers couldn't offer definitive proof that Maddox illegally employed his friends. Agent Sammy Sima told hearing officer James W. Jackson that Maddox's friends admitted to him that they were employees. Yet when asked for the signed confessions, Sima said he didn't have them because the buddies never signed anything.

"Well, that's not a confession!" Jackson responded, threw out the case against Neptune's Lagoon, and wiped away Maddox's fines, later writing in a decision that Sima "failed to provide sufficient evidence of witnesses to conclude that the . . . individuals found on the premises, on the date of inspection, were in fact employees."

Maddox is now left with a demolished room that must be rebuilt, shaken-up friends and a loss of business due to customer backlash from the raid.

Though he's not surprised the public at large is skeptical of the business, he addresses it without prompting. "I flip the water every day, and if people want me to flip it again before they get in—I will, no problem," he says. "How often do you think they flip the water in community pools? You're much safer coming in here."

It's why Maddox gets visibly angry when talking about the Anaheim PD's allegation of human trafficking. "Look at this place," he continues, gesturing wildly toward the back storage rooms behind the tubs. "Does it look like I've ever had Ukrainian girls locked up in here? Honestly, if I wanted that kind of place, why would I do Jacuzzis? Why would I want to clean that out?"

One of two such establishments left in Southern California, Neptune's has served customers since 1982 from a strip mall off Beach Boulevard and Ball Road, sandwiched between dilapidated motels. It ain't Glen Ivy Hot Springs; people pay $30 per hour to get into 3-foot-deep tubs that wouldn't seem out of place next to your apartment pool. The lobby carpet is the kind of navy blue that doesn't show stains, and the walls are covered in Roman-Greco decorations that match the oddly proportioned Greek statues in the lobby. The rooms, meanwhile, look like a Hunter S. Thompson version of the Madonna Inn. Mismatched tiles decorate the walls and floors, and the tubs sit underneath strange, beaded chandeliers that look like they were hung during the Ford administration.

It used to look worse, according to Maddox, who bought Neptune's Lagoon three years ago and is proud of what he has accomplished. "The walls were this awful blue color with a border painted to look like stones," he describes. "I brought in some new art and the fish tanks. I want it to look nice for my clients."

Although he doesn't skirt the fact that someone could bring a prostitute into Neptune's, "if I see a girl handling money or who looks like she was just pulled in off Beach . . . I can refuse to let her in," he says. "But other than that, I can't question people's reason for being here. The police should be asking the Ritz-Carlton the same question."

He asserts 80 percent of his clients are couples, with the remainder being small groups or singles. Not all encounters are romantic; sometimes, people are healing a back injury or a guy will invite his friends "to listen to Zeppelin and crack open a beer." He adds that many of his clients are cops who enjoy an "alternative" lifestyle.

Maddox can't stop thinking about the ordeal, and he'll rant about it nonstop. More than anything, he blames law enforcement's assumptions coupled with their lack of evidence. "If they had done a proper investigation to obtain a warrant, they would have figured that [the business is legitimate]," Maddox says. "I know what they did. They came in here under the guise of supporting code enforcement so they didn't have to get a warrant."

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32 comments
badasschick79
badasschick79

Neptunes had a bad reputation many years ago, the previous owner "steve", cleaned it up and I went there quite often for my back. I would pick room two for it has the strongest jets. Most times I would be so relaxed when it was time to leave I would hate the drive home. Haven't been there is at least 6 or 7 years.

John Grace
John Grace

It's the marijuana method of code enforcement. Intimidation and denial of rights.

Wendy De La Puente
Wendy De La Puente

All I know is anything goes as long as u don't pour beer or alcohol in the hot tubs. The worker (with no teeth...probably on meth) actually pointed out the large cushion bed area next to the hot tub & said "many customers love this feature" -- I have no idea what I was even doing in that place, lol.

Notatrainee
Notatrainee

Officer Langhorne do you take your OCSD trainees here when your cheating on Sarah?

Michael Johnson
Michael Johnson

Cops are still wrong.people have rights...used to anyway.

Brett Bremer
Brett Bremer

That whole are of o.c. is trashed as fuck, I can only imagine what goes on in the place, I use to live right by it. Fucking gross

Von Henchy
Von Henchy

why did the bastards have to thrash it..You can raid a place without causing any damage. Anaheim cops seem to be real fuckin dicks.

Monique Franco
Monique Franco

Yup! He was always at the porn shop and the bar!!! Lol! In his leather jacket!

Bill Martin
Bill Martin

pigs should worry people commiting real crime

paullucas714
paullucas714 topcommenter

The dude should sue the City for the cost of relocation to a nicer place on their dime.

borntohula
borntohula

Said it before and I'll say it again. Our tax dollars spent on bored OC officers. I dont agree myself with illigitimate M parlors. But thats more of a philosophical debate. Yet there are blatant ubdebatable cold cfimes being commmited every day in OC but law enforcement insists on treating this once great county ad their own little sandbox to play out their sad fabtasies in. Sick and sad.

949girl
949girl topcommenter

OMG this brings me back to the show Blind Date.  A lot of those dates would go to these jacuzzi places.  I would never even know they existed if it wasn't for Blind Date!

stoopy
stoopy

Sounds good to me. Drive that dirty business out of here. Good job law enforcement!

lindatoo2010
lindatoo2010

@@Wendy Richards  Seems like you went there more than once. Furthermore, who are you to assume that this guy was "probably" on meth? Unless you are a doctor or dentist,  your opinion wasn't needed or wanted. If I was this guy I would sue your dumb ass for making a public statement like that.

paullucas714
paullucas714 topcommenter

@Monique Franco what are you doing at the porn shop and bar?

ocgirly
ocgirly

@949girl Blind date would go to the out door hot tubs at Puddingstone lake in San Dimas. I just Googled it to make sure I was correct & there's a Groupon for the hot tub resort right now. Eewww, grotey!

FishWithoutBicycle
FishWithoutBicycle

@stoopy  

Funny how so many people are against harassing business owners and interfering with free enterprise unless a particular establishment has anything remotely to do with sex...or smoking.

stoopy
stoopy

Never said I was against rigid regulation and strict enforcement of the law; "harassment". We need more inspectors and more cops. Especially when it comes to vice.

18usc241
18usc241 topcommenter

And spare me the lectures about morality. Orange County law enforcement attempt murder (which by default means that they have committed murder).

18usc241
18usc241 topcommenter

Hey I guess this is just another bullet point that the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce can add to it's propoganda literature in order to attract business. "Hey come to Anaheim where Mickey's Mafia Police might work your place over for a ham and cheese sandwich or a box of crayons". I encourage this man to attend an Anaheim city council meeting - tell me when and I will be there with additional verbal support.

FishWithoutBicycle
FishWithoutBicycle

@stoopy  

I have nothing against code enforcement...although I suspect it is sometimes selectively and/or prejudicially applied. Regardless, there was still no excuse for how rude the officers were to Mr. Maddox nor was it necessary for them to completely trash his place of business. Civil servants should act civil, right?

 
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