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hooboy click here to view user rating
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19-Jan-10, 05:57 PM (PST)
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"SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Towners"
 
SAN FRANCISCO (BCN) -- San Francisco Police Chief George Gascon hopes a tough new enforcement operation targeting prostitutes, pimps and johns in one downtown neighborhood will put a dent in the city's "free-for-all" reputation when it comes to the sex trade.

"For far too long, too many people have come to the belief that there are no consequences when you come to San Francisco to commit a crime," Gascon said at a news conference Tuesday afternoon at the department's Northern Station.

Police are two weeks into a new enforcement operation by the department's vice squad and units from the Northern, Central and Tenderloin stations.

They're focused on a stretch of Polk Street and the surrounding area that they say has been the increasing subject of complaints by residents and merchants who see prostitutes operating openly on street corners, as well as drug use and other associated crime.

Police, politicians and prosecutors today touted their collective effort, with the announcement of 51 arrests in the past two weeks, most of them prostitutes and johns from outside San Francisco, police said.

"This is a joint effort," said Gascon. "This is community-based policing at its best."

Board of Supervisors President David Chiu, whose district includes the targeted area, acknowledged there had been "many frustrations" in the community leading up to the new operation.

"For the first time, everyone is really rowing together in the same direction," Chiu said.

Both Gascon and District Attorney Kamala Harris said that prostitution "is not a victimless crime."

While the reasons some take up prostitution are varied, Gascon said, "Very few have anything to do with glamour or choice."

The city offers education and treatment programs for those arrested for prostitution.

For those "beyond help," Gascon said police and city leaders need to develop the right tools to make it difficult for them to operate in San Francisco.

Prostitutes and johns come to San Francisco because they "could not get away with this behavior in their communities," said Gascon. He said prostitution brings with it drug dealing, fights, and needles and condoms strewn in front of people's homes.

"People should not be subjected to this type of behavior," Gascon said, calling it a "free-for-all in San Francisco."

The seven-days-a-week enforcement operation is tackling the area of middle and upper Polk Street, and a four-by-six-block area between Van Ness Avenue and Leavenworth Street, and between Sutter and Washington streets.

Police are using surveillance and undercover decoys in the operation. Most of the prostitution activity occurs there between 1 a.m. and 6 a.m., they said.

Police called it a "renewed" effort, similar to a stepped up prostitution enforcement about two years ago, sparked by a gun battle between two pimps fighting over territory at the nearby intersection of Pine and Larkin streets.

In that episode, one person was hit by gunfire and bullets flew through apartment windows and into parked cars, according to police Capt. Ann Mannix.

Of the 51 arrestees so far in the current operation, 36 were women soliciting for prostitution and 15 were male johns, police said. The women, many of whom had been arrested before for prostitution, hailed from Berkeley, Oakland, Vallejo, Fairfield, Sacramento and as far away as Los Angeles, San Diego and Las Vegas. Another was a juvenile girl from Santa Rosa.

Most of the men were also out-of-towners, from Mountain View, South San Francisco, San Bruno, San Jose and Santa Rosa, police said.

Harris called the operation "a clear message."

"You come to San Francisco and you think you are picking up a prostitute, and that prostitute may very well be a police officer, so be careful," she said.

Gascon also floated the possibility of seeking new regulations allowing the towing of johns' vehicles and the publication of repeat offenders' pictures on the department's Web site.

"We're trying to come up with sustainable solutions to the problem," he said.

Ideally, Gascon said, police would not be making arrests in the same neighborhood every night, and further, the department does not have the staff to put officers on every corner or continue enforcement operations indefinitely, he said.

Gascon defended his controversial proposal to embarrass johns into taking their business elsewhere.

"Johns, typically, are not repeat offenders, he said. "We want to leave these more embarrassing moments ... for people who do not get it."

(Copyright 2010, Bay City News, All rights reserved.)


http://www.kron4.com/News/ArticleView/tabid/298/smid/1126/ArticleID/4624/reftab/536/t/SF%20Police%20Step%20Up%20Prostitution%20Enforcement%20Blame%20Out-of-Towners/Default.aspx


"You only think you're free"

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brochahinkito0588
Member since 18-Nov-09
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19-Jan-10, 06:08 PM (PST)
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1. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #0
 
TARGETING ON PIMP GREAT NEWS. BUT DO NOT TARGET ALL THE SWEET LADIES, WORKING HARD, MAKE GUYS HAPPY.

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Mindfreak
Member since 30-Aug-08
881 posts
19-Jan-10, 07:32 PM (PST)
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2. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #1
 
I agree that pimps should be the only one who gets busted but the ladies and their clients should not.I wish prostitution gets legalized but the problem with our society is that we are still living like puritans in a judeo Christian society and it's really time to moved to the 21st century folks! But this is a battle that law enforcement cannot win,never has and never will because this business has been around since the dawn of man,I mean even a caveman probably did it too but only back then he most likely paid with a sea shell or animal skin to get laid as a trade off.

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ngsfmale click here to view user rating
Member since 19-May-03
2068 posts, 13 feedbacks, 26 points
19-Jan-10, 07:36 PM (PST)
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3. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #2
 
   Between 1 to 6 am, hopefully I am in bed sleeping soundly.

The out of towner have providers in their own town too.

Carmen Chu will rev up enforcement in Sunset and close up AAMP next?

Just my 2 cents.

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escort4us click here to view user rating
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19-Jan-10, 07:49 PM (PST)
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6. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #2
 
>I agree that pimps should be the only one who gets busted
>but the ladies and their clients should not.
---
If the residents dont want them there, whats the actual problem?


The local tax base gets to decide what they want, not you.


The street world is where the sex industry will have to go, to clean house..if it ever wants taken seriously in the US.


But..here we are, and everyone's up in arms..how DARE a community ask for it's civic leaders to do something for it.


Perspective..try it out sometime, you guys going on TV to open your zip codes up for a stroll? No..of course not, but you wont admit it.

Fujiwara tofu rocks!

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Client69
Member since 13-Mar-08
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19-Jan-10, 07:45 PM (PST)
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4. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #0
 
   San Francisco's new Police Chief Gascon seems smart to focus on street prostitution rather than internet-based escorts: the SF Police and DA are now able to boast 51 arrests, compared to the measly 2 arrests that Burlingame Police netted last year from their sting of internet-based escorts last year. From a publicity and return-on-resources perspective, it makes much more sense for the cops to work the streets, rather than to surf escorts web pages ... the citizens are happy that the streets are cleaned-up, the politicians are happy with television coverage, and the lower-profile escorts face less competition from trouble-making pimps and street ho's.

Client69

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Dellsnorto click here to view user rating
Member since 8-Nov-08
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19-Jan-10, 07:47 PM (PST)
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5. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #0
 
   "The seven-days-a-week enforcement operation is tackling the area of middle and upper Polk Street, and a four-by-six-block area between Van Ness Avenue and Leavenworth Street, and between Sutter and Washington streets."

And now, must be close to over or that info would not be so readily available.

Isolated prostitution enforcement initiatives are like playing whack-a-mole: No matter how hard you hit'em they just pop up somewhere else.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------


"Gascon defended his controversial proposal to embarrass johns into taking their business elsewhere.

"Johns, typically, are not repeat offenders, he said. "We want to leave these more embarrassing moments ... for people who do not get it."

Chief Gascon is clearly not familiar with RB street action mongers, which is probably a good thing Shhhh...don't tell him who really doesn't get it!

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VonClitzentitz
Member since 10-Apr-07
3786 posts
19-Jan-10, 10:48 PM (PST)
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7. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #0
 
   >"You come to San Francisco and you think you are picking up
>a prostitute, and that prostitute may very well be a police officer, so be careful," she said.

What's wrong with a female police officer moonlighting as a prostitute? If the City does not want it they should pay them better, right?

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Herb408 click here to view user rating
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3458 posts, 37 feedbacks, 60 points
20-Jan-10, 00:36 AM (PST)
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8. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #7
 
   >>"You come to San Francisco and you think you are picking up
>>a prostitute, and that prostitute may very well be a police officer, so be careful," she said.
>
>What's wrong with a female police officer moonlighting as a
>prostitute? If the City does not want it they should pay
>them better, right?

I'm sure that they pay them very well,
plus terrific benefits on top of that.

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jjrb801
Member since 28-Mar-09
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20-Jan-10, 04:35 AM (PST)
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9. "RE: SF Police Step Up Prostitution Enforcement, Blame Out-of-Town"
In response to message #0
 
   Like many victimless "crimes" on the books - the answer to the problems they discuss in the article above is not further crackdown, but to remove the laws from the books outlawing this "crime". Then all the issues they discuss could be approached in an aboveboard manner and a whole host of the problems go away. Another wonderful example of the collosal failure of laws like this is the "war on drugs" - in fact most of the problems with drugs isn't the drugs but a direct result of the fact that they are illegal. Anyway, I'm probably preaching to the choir here.

Jim.

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