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Famous adult star Jenni Lee now lives as a ‘mole person’ underground

Famous adult star Jenni Lee now lives as a ‘mole person’ underground

Jenni Lee, real name Stephanie Sadorra, was a leading porn star on the world’s most popular adult film website. Today, she lives as a “mole person” in the storm-drainage tunnels deep under Las Vegas. Rather than hanging out with high-flying porn producers, she spends her days with a secretive homeless community that have dwelled in the tunnels for decades.

Jenni’s first major filming gig was in adverts before shooting her first porno at just 21-years old.

Even today, she is still recognised for her early work and is ranked 119th on the website Pornhub’s list of best actresses.

She was spotted last month in the tunnels again, surviving without any heat, lighting or running water.

Her whereabouts were first shared with the public in 2019, just three years after her last film, when a Dutch TV crew found her while filming a feature about the tunnels.

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Ms Lee is among countless homeless people who share a home with rats and scorpions in 200 miles of tunnels.

The tunnels, which hit fame in 2002 after a murderer escaped arrest by fleeing underground, snake under popular parts of the city including Sunset Strip.

Ms Lee, from Clarksville, Tennessee, told filmmakers who coincidentally found her she had become “a little too successful”.

She said: “I actually got very famous. Maybe a little too famous.

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“I should still be in the top 100 on some list somewhere. I used to be so hot.”

Back in 2002, a man called Timmy “T.J. Weber” used the tunnels to escape police after he murdered his girlfriend and 15-year-old son.

But the population of the tunnels is not exclusively held by fugitives. Many of the residents are desperate US citizens with drug problems without shelter.

Ms Lee said there were benefits to being in the tunnels, despite relying on a torch to find her way around her underground home.

“It’s not as difficult as you might think, everybody’s really respectful. Everybody’s good to each other, which I don’t think you find much,” she said.

In August, local media reported the deaths of two people in a flood channel or “tunnel” near Mandalay Bay.

Despite the mix of hustlers, drug addicts, and full-time workers in the tunnels, Ms Lee said the groups operate in harmony.

“I like that those hardships build camaraderie. I feel like you make more genuine friends,” she said.

Ross Kemp also explored the tunnel system back in 2014 as part of the Sky series Extreme World.

He spoke to a man named Shay who had decorated their tunnel home with posters from their home and had a small heater for boiling water.

Shay said: “You can’t tell whether it’s day or night. Sometimes, when our clock says six o’clock, you don’t know whether it’s six o’clock in the morning or in the evening. If some light comes in at the end of the tunnel, we know – it’s daytime.”

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