Metro Cracking Down on Pimps
[url]http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2009/mar/20/pimps-metros-coming-you/[/url]
It's about time they clean up the streets of the real problem and leave the ladies alone.
RR702
Re: Newbie wants an escort
Hey Oak Park,
I've had the pleasure of some of the better indies in Vegas. If a girl has a number of good reviews over time, odds are good you'll get what the reviews say. Upsell is not common among well-reviewed independents--you usually get all the goodies at the listed price.
The bad news is you won't be able to negotiate her down like a CG, and most high-end escorts will be offended if you try.
Two tips:
1. Subtract a number or two from TER reviews. If looks and service are 9's and 10's, figure a solid 8. (Some guys don't get out enough, and their ratings are through the roof.)
2. If you really are looking to go high end, set up your appointment ahead of time. The best girls are still booking ahead, even in this economy, and you may not be able to set up an appointment at the last minute.
Non-pro girls in regular clubs?
I'm a frequent visitor to vegas and generally find myself resorting to the general run of the mill stuff, casino girls, craigslist and the victim of the odd scam!! This time I'm going there to hunt for freebies and wanted to know if anybody could recommend a regular club where the clientelle is a bit more realistic ie: larger ladies and milf's and girls who are genuinely looking for a goodtime. I've tried all the high end clubs ie Pure, Moon but want somewhere a bit more real, any suggestions?
Yes there is action at the Silverton...
[QUOTE=Kirkd9]I will be heading to the Silverton Casino for a weekend, is there any action in or close by?
Thank in advance[/QUOTE]
I was there this week and hit one. Marlic (or Marlique). Told me that she only works there every of there week or so. Says the "real" country boys who stay there for the Bass shop, are easy targets. LOL She told me when it's busy, CG come there too.
I got her for a hundred...
There is also some action by the budget suites on LV BLVD right across the overpass.
felony to solicit **** girls under 18
Here's the follow-up to Hell on Wls post.
If she look under 18, you better stay away from her like she got the plague!
[URL]http://www.lvrj.com/news/42792502.html[/URL]
CARSON CITY -- A Nevada Assembly panel voted Thursday for a bill that would make it a felony to solicit a minor for an act of prostitution.
Assembly Bill 238, approved by the Assembly Corrections, Parole and Probation Committee, would go after the clients of minor prostitutes, and would require that a person who intentionally seeks to hire a child prostitute be subject to lifetime supervision.
"We're trying to get to the 'johns,' and the 'johns' are going after the kids," said Assemblyman William Horne, D-Las Vegas, the committee chairman and chief sponsor of AB238. "And they were getting slapped on the hand for misdemeanors."
Although the legal age for consensual sex is 16 in Nevada, the bill defines a "child" as anyone under age 18.
The committee also approved Assembly Bill 325, which would require that as a condition of lifetime supervision a sex offender can't have any contact with a victim of the offense or a witness who testified against the defendant.
The bill originally said an offender couldn't live within 1,000 feet of a victim, but that provision was deleted.
"We just want to be effective in protecting the victims, but give the department flexibility in extenuating circumstances," Assemblyman Lynn Stewart, R-Henderson, the chief sponsor of the measure, said after the committee meeting.
The panel also advanced a measure that would require the Department of Corrections and the Division of Parole and Probation to adopt policies that set maximum caseloads for their officers.
Assembly Bill 385 would require that parole and probation officers have a maximum of 70 cases for low-risk offenders.
The bill also would require periodic reports to legislators about staffing ratios.
Assemblyman Ty Cobb, R-Reno, opposed the bill, saying that the Department of Corrections already had those policies, adding, "I think that if we put this into law, it would just be inviting potential lawsuits."
State Corrections Director Howard Skolnik disagreed, saying that litigious inmates may decide to sue over staffing but that probably wouldn't result in much of an increase in lawsuits against the department.
After the hearing, Skolnik said the bill was a good idea, but it wrote into law procedures that the department already follows.
"It's really not a necessary bill," Skolnik said. "There was an audit, the audit findings are what drove this piece of legislation, and we already agreed to the findings and recommendations and began implementing them."