San Diego

San Diego Targets University Heights Massage Parlor Tied To Years Of Police Calls

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Published on March 28, 2026
San Diego Targets University Heights Massage Parlor Tied To Years Of Police CallsSource: Google Street View

The City of San Diego is gearing up for a civil legal fight with a University Heights massage business after local reporting surfaced records tying the operation to years of criminal activity. The move would put the city's Nuisance Abatement Unit on a familiar path, mirroring recent crackdowns on suspected illicit massage operations that have rattled neighbors worried about public safety and exploitation.

According to CBS 8, city attorneys reviewed documents linking the University Heights business to repeated police responses, arrests and online advertisements promoting illicit services. The station reports that the records stretch back several years and that the city is preparing a nuisance-abatement lawsuit.

City enforcement teams have leaned on civil nuisance suits in similar situations, according to a City Attorney press release. "This case isn’t just about shutting down an illegal business, it’s about protecting vulnerable people from harm and exploitation," City Attorney Heather Ferbert said in that earlier statement. Those lawsuits typically seek court orders to close the business, civil penalties and repayment of investigative costs.

What the documents show

Documents obtained by News 8 reportedly list multiple police responses and advertisements promoting sexual services tied to the business, the station says. Records like those, such as online ads and repeated calls for police service, are often the core evidence the city relies on when it argues a business is operating as a public nuisance.

City's past enforcement shows what could happen

San Diego has gone down this road before. In a high-profile case involving Ocean Spa in Kearny Mesa, investigators documented hundreds of online ads and multiple undercover offers for sex, and the City Attorney moved for civil enforcement to shut the operation down, as reported by Times of San Diego. Those joint efforts with the SDPD vice unit have previously led to court orders and sizable financial penalties.

Legal implications

When the City Attorney's Office files nuisance-abatement suits, it often asks the court for injunctive relief to close the business and for civil penalties. In prior filings, the office has sought penalties of up to $2,500 per day per violation, according to a City Attorney press release. Judges can also order property owners to fix code violations and reimburse the city for its enforcement costs.

What's next

It is not yet clear when formal court papers will land in the University Heights case. We will update this story once filings become public or the City Attorney's Office releases an official statement.