Former Social Security Employee Sentenced for Trying to Lure Beneficiary Into Prostitution
BOSTON – A former Social Security Administration (SSA) employee was sentenced today for attempting to coerce a beneficiary into crossing state lines to engage in prostitution.
Dae Sung Kim, 36, of Auburn, Mass., was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Margaret R. Guzman to six months in prison and five years of supervised release. In February 2025, Kim pleaded guilty to one count of attempting to induce a person to travel in interstate commerce to engage in prostitution.
“Public servants are entrusted to assist people, not exploit them. This was a brazen abuse of power by a federal employee who used his position and access to sensitive information to prey on a vulnerable woman who had just lost her job. This kind of predatory behavior has no place in public service, or anywhere else,” said United States Attorney Leah B. Foley. “This case represents yet another example of my office’s commitment to reduce the demand for commercial exploitation. Mr. Kim attempted to purchase access to the victim’s body and used her vulnerability and his privilege to do so.”
“This was a shocking abuse of power by someone entrusted to serve the public. The defendant, while employed as an SSA claims specialist, attempted to exploit a vulnerable, disabled mother seeking to apply for reinstatement of disability benefits after losing her job. This predatory behavior is intolerable,” said Michelle Anderson, Acting Inspector General, Social Security Administration.
In March 2024, Kim handled an in-person visit at the Gardner SSA field office from a woman seeking Social Security benefits after losing her job. Approximately 20 minutes later, after redirecting the beneficiary to another SSA field office closer to her residence in another state, Kim utilized his access to her personally identifiable information in the SSA’s computer system to find the beneficiary’s phone number and call her from his personal cell phone. On the call, Kim said he understood the beneficiary was in a “difficult situation” and that “maybe they could work something out that would benefit them both.”
During the ensuing investigation, Kim clarified in text messages and a consensually monitored phone conversation that he was proposing to pay the beneficiary for sex and attempted to negotiate a price.
Kim continued his solicitation over a period of several months through text messages with undercover law enforcement impersonating the beneficiary, including several requests for nude photographs that were declined. Eventually, Kim proposed that the beneficiary travel from her home outside of Massachusetts to a hotel parking lot in Fitchburg, Mass., to have sex in a car in exchange for $100. When Kim traveled to the hotel parking lot to meet the individual in October 2024, he was confronted by law enforcement.
U.S. Attorney Foley and Acting SSA Inspector General Anderson made the announcement. Valuable assistance was provided by Homeland Security Investigations and the Fitchburg and Gardner Police Departments. Special Assistant U.S. Attorney James J. Nagelberg of the Major Crimes Unit and Assistant U.S. Attorney Brendan D. O’Shea of the Worcester Branch Office prosecuted the case.