The victims were flown into the UK and forced to see up to 15 men a day.
The sex ring set up brothels in hotels across England, and student halls at the University Of Sussex.
And when the slaves complained, the gang menaced them with snaps of their families and threatened to out them as hookers.
Hungarian
nationals Mate Puskas, 25, Zoltan Mohacsi, 36, brothers Istvan Toth,
34, and Peter Toth, 28, as well as Puskas’s British ex-girlfriend
Victoria Brown, 25, were sentenced to a total of 22 years.
Judge Richard Hayward told Hove Crown Court they had committed a crime that “society finds repugnant”.
But the Toth brothers dodged justice after going on the run.
During the trial David Walbank, prosecuting, highlighted the many “individual tragedies” sparked by the crimes.
And one traumatised victim gave evidence about how she feared being disowned by her family.Speaking from behind a screen, the 24-year-old said: “My family would be so ashamed. They might reject me.
“They would be heartbroken. I have a really tiny family and almost no-one.
“I knew if they found out I might not be part of it. I thought that I might have no-one.”
Jurors heard how the women were advertised on sex websites offering them up for extreme sex.
A University Of Sussex spokesman yesterday said the case had nothing to do with its staff or students.
The spokesman added: “Through the vigilance and swift actions of our staff, the police were able to piece together the wider operations of this criminal gang and bring a case against them to court.”