So we need to find a way around it.
[QUOTE=Fudge1]I'm sure by now that everyone is aware of the new law that was signed that is going to regulate massage places. The ladies will have to have a license. I believe the law goes into effect Jan. 1, 2008.[/QUOTE]Does anyone know of any laws regulating "Relaxation Spas", "Lingerie Modeling Boutiques", "Bathhouses", (they're not just for gays anymore), or whatever scenario we can think up to give a man and a woman a place to be alone together and take care of business?
Lilly's just off Allisonville?
Anyone have any info? (just north of 96th) Wondering if it's worth my while and cash? Had a WONDERFUL time at the place just west of 421 a few weeks back. VERY hot blonde with a tattoo across the back of her hips. (can't remember her name to save my life tho! ) Her body was fine as hell. Tits on the smallish side (she wants to get a boob job). She's got a girlfriend that she told me about that she likes to play with in her free time. Shared lots of photos of them from her cell phone. Nice, friendly, and did I mention hot?
PXanderP
lillys robbed thats why the news was there
Three armed men who robbed an Oriental massage studio in Fishers this week and pistol-whipped an employee may be part of an emerging threat to such parlors, the studio's owner said Thursday.
Van D. Nice, who owns and operates Lilly's Therapeutic Massage with his wife, Meilan Min, said Oriental massage businesses have become a target of robbers who know staff often live in the workplace and keep their money and valuables there. He said that is not true with his operation.
Fishers police officer Ed Gebhart said the robbery at Lilly's occurred about 9 p.m. inside the business in the 9900 block of Allisonville Road. The three men, each carrying a handgun, took an undisclosed sum of money and fled.
"It is something that's kind of going around," said Nice, whose business typically closes at 9 p.m. "Usually they can get several thousand dollars."
Nice said there has been little publicity about the emerging robbery trend because Oriental massage parlor operators are reluctant to complain to police.
He said the robbery at his store occurred when a man entered the walk-in business and was soon followed by two others, all wielding handguns.
"They held my wife at gunpoint. They took everybody and they corralled them into one room."
"They weren't satisfied with the amount of money they got, so they threatened them -- 'You want to die? Give us your money,' " Nice said his wife told him.
He said one of the robbers hit a worker in the head with his gun, and that his wife, the studio manager, was kicked in the back as the two insisted there was no more money to be taken.
Neither of the two customers in the business at the time was attacked.
Before the intruders left, Nice and Gebhart said, they ransacked the business, destroying furniture and damaging walls as they searched for hidden cash.