700 block of Dudley. And some...
Was working in the Hollywood section of Boston Tuesday, (Dudley St.) Around like 8-9 am. Had a great looking girl come into the store I was at, she was white, 5'6 120lbs, brn hair and eyes, tourquise sweats on, hair in a bun, Def. looked like a worker. Manager of the store had told me "She is a good looking girl, but is in a program for drug rehab" Knew at that point I should have used my car that day, and not the company vehicle, dam!
Also had seen another one that day around like 4am on East Berkly st. at the Mobil, bsw, short light blue skirt on, not to bad looking, got scooped up as soon as she left the Mobil and got to the street. Tried to break out the camera phome for a pic here, but to dark out.
Boston Herald, 04/20-BPD enforcing law
The city has begun using a long-ignored law to slap sex-seeking johns with a $300 fine and seize their cars, one week after the Herald reported that the Hub was failing to enforce the prostitution ordinance.
“I commend the commissioner and the Boston Police Department for their swift action,” said Councilor at large Michael F. Flaherty. “Enforcing this law should make these creeps think twice before preying on our neighborhoods.”
On Friday, a Boston police sweep dubbed Operation Squeeze targeted the notorious streetwalker corners of Dudley Square and Grove Hall, nabbing seven men who allegedly were seeking back-seat trysts.
But they won’t have a back seat for at least 48 hours, now that the BPD has gotten private towing companies to hold the cars as the city ordinance allows. In a slight modification to the original bylaw - which requires suspects pay a $300 fine to retrieve their cars - cops also issued a separate $300 citation to the alleged johns. Under the law, the money will provide funds to rehabilitate ex-hookers.
“We’re doing the best to enforce as many parts of the ordinance as we can,” police spokeswoman Elaine Driscoll said yesterday.
Flaherty discovered at a recent hearing on sexual exploitation that the city had shelved the bylaw, passed by the 13-member council and signed by Mayor Thomas M. Menino in November 2004.
The law was the brainchild of Hyde Park Councilor Robert Consalvo, who yesterday said he was “pleased” at the effort to put the law to use. “We thought it would be a very effective tool in ridding the city of prostitution,” Consalvo said.
The Menino administration had failed to inform the council that the bylaw wasn’t being enforced and last week gave a litany of reasons why the law was unenforcable