
WEIGHT: 59 kg
Bust: SUPER
One HOUR:150$
NIGHT: +90$
Services: Travel Companion, Fetish, Oral, Food Sex, Oral
Some communities seized the cars of "johns" arrested for prostitution. Other cities like Washington, D. West Palm Beach, Fla. Other police departments made periodic sweeps to clean things up for awhile--especially during elections--then looked the other way.
And San Francisco flirted with legalizing the oldest profession. Although the approaches vary widely, it's evident cities nationwide are taking a tougher stand against prostitution. And for the first time, they're coming down hard on the demand side. But perhaps nowhere is this war against prostitution being waged more innovatively than in St.
Petersburg, Fla. The cops there are taking it to the streets to drive out prostitution with a new high-profile program--one of the most comprehensive in the nation. It's driven not from the top, or by city hall, but by the community police officers on the beat.
Working in concert with residents and business owners, they have become an integral part of the department's highly successful community policing philosophy. In fact, the enforcement effort was formulated at the street level by a lieutenant and seven officers.
And, it went all the way to city hall and back to the streets, basically unchanged. Some critics claim that you can't win the war against prostitution--you only drive it across the city line or transform it into a different shape--but St.