Prostitutes protest against trial of father and son pimps who exploit them for money (PICTURED)

	Five victims, also some alleged prostitutes, of alleged livery cab sex trafficers Vincert George, Sr. and Vincent George, Jr. came to a hearing for the men and left court wearing tee-shirts supporting the men. (Jefferson Siegel/for NY Daily News)

A single tear slid down the young mother’s cheek when she recalled her days as a hooker — and the pimp who still owns her heart.

“I think about him all the time,” the ex-prostitute told the Daily News about Vincent George Sr. “I’m lost without him. When he went to jail, I had nobody.”

The unlikely love story is oft-repeated by the working girls employed by father-son pimp team George, 53, and his namesake Vincent Jr., 33. The pair are currently on trial in Manhattan for money laundering and sex trafficking.

But the Daily News found the 31-year-old retired hooker, who once earned $10,000 in a weekend, received no retirement benefits once she left the Georges’ employ.

Money is now tight, work is hard to find and she has three daughters to raise — including one fathered by Vincent Jr.

The News also discovered the Georges likely misled some of the working girls about their living arrangements, leading them to believe their rent checks were actually mortgage payments.

Vincent George Jr. (left) and Vincent George Sr.

ANTHONY DELMUNDO/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Vincent George Jr. (left) and Vincent George Sr.

None of it seemed to matter to the women.

Just last week, three self-proclaimed prostitutes offered upbeat stories of their business relationship with the Georges. The hookers commuted to the city from Allentown to work eight-hours shifts.

All testified they willingly sold their bodies for the Georges — and swore the two men took care of them financially and in other ways.

The former prostitute tracked down by The News worked for the pimping pair for eight years, and still gushes about her old bosses.

“I loved (George Sr.) and Junior,” said the former hooker, 31, who did not testify at the trial.

News discovered the Georges likely misled some of the working girls about their living arrangements.

News discovered the Georges likely misled some of the working girls about their living arrangements.

“They maybe yelled at me or whatever, but they never threatened me,” said the forlorn young woman, now on public assistance with her three young girls.

“I miss the money. I’ve never had a normal job in my life. I used to make a couple (hundred) to a thousand a night,” she said.

Her daughters, including the one she had with the younger George, are 9, 7 and 2. He first wooed her when she was just 18 — and she still remembers the anniversary.

“The first day I worked (with him) it was an adrenaline rush. It was June 23, 1999,” she said. “I liked the outfits. At first, I would wear skimpy clothes until we had regulars. Then it doesn’t matter what you wear.”

The Georges have conceded to promoting prostitution, a felony that could get them up to seven years in prison.

The home of Vincent George in Allentown, Pa.

CHRIS POST

The home of Vincent George in Allentown, Pa.

They are fighting a sex trafficking charge, the top count that carries a 25-year sentence. They’re also accused of money laundering — a charge with a 15-year maximum jail term.

Prosecutors, for conviction on the most serious counts, must prove the Georges benefited from sex for profit by threatening their workers with physical injury or making the women fear for their safety.

But the anonymous ex-hooker maintained she kept most of her earnings and pulled down as much as $10,000 in a weekend.

These days, money hardly comes so easy. She has had trouble getting work because of her criminal past — two years in prison on retail theft.

She gave up hooking to protect her daughters, and said she would never want them to follow her career path.

“I just don’t want my kids out there,” she said. “They’re my girls and I want better for them.”

The elder George's Cadillac in the driveway at Allentown home.

CHRIS POST/CHRIS POST

The elder George’s Cadillac in the driveway at Allentown home.

Life doesn’t seem much rosier for Danielle Geissler, 31, who spoke in defense of her pimps at trial.

She admitted on the stand that she and George Jr. sometimes “slapped each other around,” but claimed it only happened when her polygamist pimp left her sexually frustrated.

The sleek blonde arrived in Manhattan court last week with a “Pretty Woman” vibe, sporting a conservative beige pantsuit and a stylish coiffure.

The reality was decidedly less glamorous when the News found Geissler at George Jr.’s slightly ramshackle Allentown home Thursday.

Geissler wore a scowl with her black hoodie and jeans, and kept her hair in pigtails. The sex worker stomped back into the house and called police.

Some of the women testified that the Georges set them up in solid, middle-class homes — investments that they would one day own after they paid off the mortgage.

That was about as true as the Georges’ pledges of fidelity.
Read more: NY Daily News

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