Monger Apartment Share. Aka f*ckspot
I've posted this before. Looking for a couple of guys to split an apartment we can use for meet ups. Idea is to have it furnished, split scheduled days for access, discreet apartment to be able to have fun. I'm thinking of a place near north side, close to train line for access to downtown and expressways. Already have a place in mind.
Option is to have it as a clubhouse as well. Poker nights, NFL, or small group meet-ups with a couple of nice young ladies. Mini-gangbang, Swing or swap.
Pm seniors.
Backpage CEO Arrested and Charged With Pimping. Payback?
You'll recall that Sheriff Tom Dart wrote some letters to credit card companies a few years ago, asking them to turn off processing services to BackPage. That triggered a lawsuit against him for interfering in BackPage's financial dealings, one that he eventually lost.
He won the first round because the district court said that it was not censorship, that he was acting in a private capacity to urge or convince the bankers. [URL]http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-backpage-sheriff-dart-lawsuit-met-20150824-story.html[/URL].
BackPage appealed to the 7th Circuit. The 7th Circuit promptly issued an injunction ordering Dart to back off, to cease and desist the same conduct till it decided the appeal. [URL]http://cookcountyrecord.com/stories/510648546-seventh-circuit-orders-dart-to-back-off-backpage-com-pending-appeal-of-injunction-denial[/URL].
He ultimately lost in the 7th Circuit. A panel of the 7th Circuit decided that the district court had erred and that BackPage was entitled to an injunction to stop Tom Dart from interfering with its credit card processors.
Dart asked the US Supreme Court to take the case, and earlier this week, FOUR DAYS AGO, the Supreme Court turned him down. Flat. [URL]https://www.supremecourt.gov/Search.aspx?FileName=/docketfiles/15-1321.htm[/URL] (Denial of Certiorari).
End of the trail? Not quite.
Today, the CEO of BackPage was arrested on a warrant, on the basis of California charges alleging pimping and juvenile pimping, and Texas charges claiming money laundering. He was arrested on a warrant when he landed in Houston on flight coming from Amsterdam. Then, Texas LE raided the BackPage operations center in Dallas, evidently with a search warrant. [URL]http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/backpage-raided-ceo-arrested-texas-42630540[/URL].
During the past week, there was also a flurry of activity when BackPage resisted a US Senate Subpoena by claiming that some of the materials targeted by the subpoena were protected by the attorney-client privilege. There is some old authority that Congressional subpoena power is not limited by such "common law" privileges as confidences shared with one's lawyers. And that no one has a right to hold back material sought by Congress because of the attorney-client privilege that would protect that information in just about any other context. [URL]http://www.lexislegalnews.com/articles/11319/backpage-ceo-partly-granted-extension-to-comply-with-senate-subcommittee-subpoena[/URL].
This is getting to be, frankly, interesting as all fuck.
[blue]Good news for us, we are ready. New version coming out soon.
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Chilling, that's for sure
[QUOTE=XXXlaw;3104041]You'll recall that Sheriff Tom Dart wrote some letters to credit card companies a few years ago, asking them to turn off processing services to BackPage. That triggered a lawsuit against him for interfering in BackPage's financial dealings, one that he eventually lost.
He won the first round because the district court said that it was not censorship, that he was acting in a private capacity to urge or convince the bankers. [URL]http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-backpage-sheriff-dart-lawsuit-met-20150824-story.html[/URL].
BackPage appealed to the 7th Circuit. The 7th Circuit promptly issued an injunction ordering Dart to back off, to cease and desist the same conduct till it decided the appeal. [URL]http://cookcountyrecord.com/stories/510648546-seventh-circuit-orders-dart-to-back-off-backpage-com-pending-appeal-of-injunction-denial[/URL].
He ultimately lost in the 7th Circuit. A panel of the 7th Circuit decided that the district court had erred and that BackPage was entitled to an injunction to stop Tom Dart from interfering with its credit card processors.
Dart asked the US Supreme Court to take the case, and earlier this week, FOUR DAYS AGO, the Supreme Court turned him down. Flat. [URL]https://www.supremecourt.gov/Search.aspx?FileName=/docketfiles/15-1321.htm[/URL] (Denial of Certiorari).
End of the trail? Not quite.
Today, the CEO of BackPage was arrested on a warrant, on the basis of California charges alleging pimping and juvenile pimping, and Texas charges claiming money laundering. He was arrested on a warrant when he landed in Houston on flight coming from Amsterdam. Then, Texas LE raided the BackPage operations center in Dallas, evidently with a search warrant. [URL]http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/backpage-raided-ceo-arrested-texas-42630540[/URL].
During the past week, there was also a flurry of activity when BackPage resisted a US Senate Subpoena by claiming that some of the materials targeted by the subpoena were protected by the attorney-client privilege. There is some old authority that Congressional subpoena power is not limited by such "common law" privileges as confidences shared with one's lawyers. And that no one has a right to hold back material sought by Congress because of the attorney-client privilege that would protect that information in just about any other context. [URL]http://www.lexislegalnews.com/articles/11319/backpage-ceo-partly-granted-extension-to-comply-with-senate-subcommittee-subpoena[/URL].
This is getting to be, frankly, interesting as all fuck.
[/QUOTE]What's really chilling is the fact that California was able to get another state to arrest someone flying into the US on one of their warrants. That pretty much says that if they can get an arrest warrant issued for you, it doesn't make any difference whether you're based overseas or not. You come to the US, and they will get you arrested. That is going to put pressure on a lot of sites, I think, which can't be good for us.
[blue]Sorry, I don't mean to keep jumping in. They have offices in Dallas and I'm pretty sure that arrest warrants in any state can be served in any other state. I'm not 100% on that but I'm pretty sure.
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