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Angela Delgado Williams Said She Hopes Her Suit Will Spur Change Around Nevada’s Sex Industry

The woman who accused Mally Mall of sex trafficking her as part of a class action suit against the state of Nevada said she hopes to shine a light on the depravity in the state’s legal prostitution industry.

Angela Delgado Williams said Mally Mall trafficked her around the country to engage in the sex trade for four years and called the music producer “probably one of the biggest traffickers of all time.”

“A lot of people are lured in,” Williams said. Nevada “Is a hub for sex trafficking and Jamal (Mally Mall) is one of the front men of one of the sex trade in Las Vegas.”

Williams said Mally Mall – whose real name is Jamal Rashid – used his connections in the industry to entice and manipulate females into working for him. She said Mally financed his career in the music business through the proceeds from prostitution and spent most of his time entertaining celebrities in his Neverland-style luxury mansion.

She said he would tell her and others that he’d eventually take them away from the prostitution and they’d all be on his reality show, “Mally’s World.”

“He glorified our life so much,” Williams exclusively told BOSSIP. “He really had coercion and manipulation on another level. When I was actively being trafficked by him, paying him, working for his escort service, he was working with Young Burg. He always had artists and industry people in his house, and he was paying his way into the music industry.”

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According to Williams’ class action suit, which was obtained by BOSSIP, Williams alleged that Mally used coercion to traffic her and others around the country as sex workers for is Vegas-based escort service VIP Entertainment. For the first few months, he let her keep 30 percent of her earnings. But after he convinced her to become a “priority girl,” he took all of her earnings, and he’d only contact her if something was wrong with her payments to him, the suit said.

“Nobody won except for Jamal,” Williams said. “Nobody got anything good out of what he was doing. It was a big scheme.”

Williams said in the lawsuit that during her time with Mally, she endured a 13-month stint in jail because he refused to bail her out. The suit said she also said he forced her to perform oral sex after she spurned his requests for vaginal sex.

“It was worse than any of the clients that I saw,” Williams recalled. “He made me hum on it (his penis). He made me sing on it. It was the creepiest experience ever.”

Williams said Mally Mall and other people exploiting sex workers were flouting the laws or using loopholes to circumvent the policies governing sex work in Nevada, the only state in the U.S. where prostitution is legal.

Mally Mall has not officially responded to Williams’ case but has said publicly that another woman who accused him of trafficking her was trying to extort him and was out for money. We’ve also reached out to Mally’s lawyer for comment.

Williams has since left the sex industry and is married. She said she is working on to become a survivor leader to help other women and girls who are still trapped in the cycle of sexual abuse. In the meantime, her suit wants the state of Nevada to better regulate its sex industry and to create a fund to help people trying to get out of it.

“If they made better laws…it wouldn’t be a hub for sex trafficking,” Williams said.