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===== Safe houses ===== Aside from simply buying and selling stolen goods, fences often played additional roles in the criminal underground of early China. Because of the high floating population in public places such as inns and tea houses, they often became ideal places for bandits and gangs to gather to exchange information and plan for their next crime. Harborers, people who provided safe houses for criminals, often played the role of receiving stolen goods from their harbored criminals to sell to other customers.<ref name=":1" /> Safe houses included inns, tea houses, brothels, opium dens, as well as gambling parlors and employees or owners of such institutions often functioned as harborers, as well as fences.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Unruly People: Crime, Community, and State in Late Imperial South China.|last=Antony|first=Robert|publisher=Hong Kong University Press|date=2016|location=Hong Kong|page=171}}</ref> These safe houses were located in places with high floating populations and people from all kinds of social backgrounds. Brothels themselves helped these bandits to hide and sell stolen goods because of the special Ming Law that exempted brothels from being held responsible "for the criminal actions of their clients." Even though the government required owners of these places to report any suspicious activities, lack of enforcement from the government itself and some of the owners being fences for the bandits made an ideal safe house for bandits and gangs. Pawnshops were also often affiliated with fencing stolen goods. The owners or employees of such shops often paid cash for stolen goods at a price a great deal below market value to bandits, who were often desperate for money, and resold the goods to earn a profit.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Unruly People: Crime, Community, and State in Late Imperial South China.|last=Antony|first=Robert|publisher=Hong Kong University Press|date=2016|location=Hong Kong|page=177}}</ref>
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