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natina
11-13-2012, 12:53 AM
how many times have you been arrested for prostitution.

adult stars,escort,hookers,street walkers and massage therapist only


http://s195.beta.photobucket.com/user/troublemkngdogg/media/streetwalker.jpg.html

kensterling
11-13-2012, 12:13 PM
Bi male escort for over 12 years, never been busted. Very thankful. If you are careful and not greedy, it really reduces your chances. But it's like driving after two drinks, anybody can get a DWI. Regrets to those who have been busted, has to be a tough process to go through.

Cecil Rhodes
11-13-2012, 01:30 PM
how many times have you been arrested for prostitution.

adult stars,escort,hookers,street walkers and massage therapist only


http://s195.beta.photobucket.com/user/troublemkngdogg/media/streetwalker.jpg.html




Is that a Bulge in that dress ?

natina
11-13-2012, 10:23 PM
yes! I did a bad job tucking cause i ran out of crazy glue and medical tape. I did not tuck it is just sticking up. don't tell any one.

I got buy some more booty when I get a little fatter.

many here lie and say that they never been busted for escorting and such............


Is that a Bulge in that dress ?

Cecil Rhodes
11-14-2012, 04:18 AM
yes! I did a bad job tucking cause i ran out of crazy glue and medical tape. I did not tuck it is just sticking up. don't tell any one.

I got buy some more booty when I get a little fatter.

many here lie and say that they never been busted for escorting and such............

So that is you in the dress standing on the sidewalk on the attached image ( not the photobucket/colfax one } ?

As far as your other statement i know of several on HA that have been .

Quiet Reflections
11-14-2012, 05:53 AM
I got put in the back of a police car once in DC because I broke up a fight between two hookers. The Cops rolled up as I jumped in the middle of it and they thought I was involved. They let me go after about 5 minutes.

Dino Velvet
11-14-2012, 06:43 PM
I'm one of those "Johns" and have never had any issues with LE. Been out on the prowl since I was 17 years old and never approached by a cop even once. My biggest worries were always massage parlors being raided. Never happened when I was there but I would've said less than nothing to any questioning. "No hablo..." Nowadays I see the same group of girls sometimes trying a new one after I've checked her out to the point I'm comfortable. I know I give a cop vibe to an escort who doesn't know me so I just cooperate with her check enjoying it as well. If I were a copper I'd be a filthy one.

natina
11-15-2012, 12:12 AM
PROP 35

be afraid
be very afraid

Proposition 35's Demands For Sex Offenders' Online Info Draws ACLU Lawsuit

Proposition 35 was a big hit with California voters Tuesday, passing with 81 percent approval.

But some of its provisions, including requiring the email addresses and user names of sex offenders convicted of such things as misdemeanor indecent exposure (which can involve, for example, having consensual sex in front of an open window), has drawn the ACLU's ire:



The group is suing to stop what is says are "unconstitutional provisions" of the law.

Increases in fines (up to a million bucks) and prison sentences (up to life) for convicted sex traffickers comprised its main components.

The online-freedom group Electronic Frontier Foundation joined in the suit after opposing the user-name and email requirements.

According to an ACLU statement:

Proposition 35 requires anyone who is a registered sex offender - even people with decades-old, low-level offenses like misdemeanor indecent exposure and people whose offenses were not related to the Internet - to turn over a list of all their Internet identifiers and service providers to law enforcement. While the law is written very unclearly, this likely includes email addresses, usernames and other identifiers used for online political discussion groups, book and restaurant review sites, forums about medical conditions, and newspaper or blog comments. Under the law, more than 73,000 Californians must immediately provide this information to law enforcement ...

Those who don't could face a year behind bars.

The user name and email requirements hinder convicts' constitutional right to free speech online, says the ACLU.

EFF staff attorney Hanni Fakhoury:

Requiring people to give up their right to speak freely and anonymously about civic matters is unconstitutional, and restrictions like this damage robust discussion and debate on important and controversial topics. When the government starts gathering online profiles for one class of people, we all need to worry about the precedent it sets.


http://blogs.laweekly.com/informer/2012/11/proposition_35_aclu_lawsuit.php

natina
11-15-2012, 12:14 AM
prop 35 issues

The latest and highest-profile such proposed law is Prop 35, which appears on California's November ballot. It's a complicated measure, rife with legalese and referential to several different parts of the penal code, but essentially, Prop 35 would expand the definition of, and increase penalties for, human trafficking. On the surface, it sounds like one of those unequivocally positive ballot measures anyone can feel good about voting for — and, in fact, it's been endorsed by both of California's major political parties.

Advocates of Prop 35 — mostly law enforcement and those who work with victims of childhood sex abuse — argue that human trafficking is an epidemic in California and the laws as they currently exist don't adequately address the problem. But the ballot measure is also getting vehement criticism, much of it from within the sex industry itself: A number of victims' rights organizations have come out against it, arguing, for the most part, that a problem as complicated as trafficking deserves a more comprehensive solution, and many sex workers have raised fears about unintended consequences, specifically with regards to the fact that the proposed law would expand the definition of trafficking to anyone who benefits financially from prostitution, regardless of intent. "Prop 35 implicates a lot of adult consensual behavior," said Monet. "In my opinion, it's an erosion of sexual rights" — not a protection of human ones.

In Parton's eyes, it's not just that Prop 35 would further criminalize the kind of work she does. It's that it's predicated on the idea that that kind of work — the kind where all parties are participating by choice and no one feels exploited — is fundamentally impossible, that all sex workers are victims. And in that sense, Prop 35 isn't just an inconvenience — it's an affront to a political and social movement that's taken years to build.

Jolene Parton is a ho. She's also a Berkeley native, a comic-book fanatic, a Dolly Parton aficionado (hence the name, which is fake), an NPR listener, and a big fan of Vietnamese food. She wears big round glasses rimmed in translucent pink plastic, and, in her ears, jade-green plugs. She's redheaded and rosy-skinned and pretty in the kind of way that would be at home in a J. Crew catalog, but for the pierced septum and stylishly half-shaved head and aforementioned plugs; as is, she's probably more like American Apparel material. And she's been working in the sex industry, broadly defined, for about four years, first doing odd jobs at what she describes as the "entry-level" end of the sex-work spectrum — foot fetish stuff, artsy nude photography, one night during which she "cuddled with a guy in his apartment for money" — and then in porn and at various peepshows and strip clubs; a bit over a year ago, she started escorting. And when she says she loves her job — which she does, often and unbidden — she does so with the kind of steady-eyed enthusiasm that's hard to fake.

"It's been great, honestly," she told me a couple weeks ago at an Oakland Chinatown lunch spot, steam rising from the vermicelli bowl in front of her and fogging her lenses. She genuinely likes her clients, or at least as much as anyone can be expected to like the people they work with, and she appreciates the freedom of being able to set her own hours: "I don't have an alarm clock," she said. "I make breakfast every morning, I get to hang out with my friends whenever I want. This job affords me a lifestyle most people don't get."

Sex is one of those commodities that tends to be popular no matter how bad the economy is, and Parton said the Bay Area's booming tech industry — and its attendant cadre of young, lonely men who want an escort they're compatible with both sexually and intellectually —......................

http://www.eastbayexpress.com/ebx/redefining-sex-work/Content?oid=3365425&showFullText=true

Cecil Rhodes
11-15-2012, 12:25 AM
Sex Offender ? What do you mean ? All i was doing was taking a piss behind a dumpster in the ally . Nobody could see me . What about that lady with her tits hanging out of her top in full view ? ........ WTF do you mean she was breastfeeding ?

natina
11-15-2012, 12:31 AM
Is Prostitution the New Weed?

Texas considers measure to decriminalize repeat offenses for selling or buying sex.








If a few Texas politicians have their way, the Lone Star State may one day quit locking up women on felony prostitution charges. (Photo: Reuters)


Joining the slowly building multitude of state and local governments reassessing nonviolent crimes and laws that put offenders in jail, Texas may drop its felony-class charge for repeat prostitution (http://www.takepart.com/search/prostitution) offenders, reports say.
The new policy would be similar to statutes enacted that decriminalize possession of quantities of marijuana for individual use.
As reported in the Austin-American Statesman (http://www.statesman.com/news/texas-politics/texas-rethinks-law-making-repeat-prostitution-a-felony-2442512.html?page=2), prostitutes and their customers can now both be charged with a fourth-class felony after three misdemeanor convictions for buying or selling sex. Of the 350 inmates in state jails on fourth-class felony buying or selling sex charges, all are women, despite the presumption that men would seem to engage in buying sex at least as often as women engage in selling it.
Is the proposed sentence reform for repeat prostitution offenders a bend toward lenience and prison reform (http://www.takepart.com/article/2010/06/07/humane-prisons-norway-shed-light-overcrowded-prisons-us) for the often hard-line Lone Star State? Or is the consideration all about money? A little bit of both, it seems—the locked-up prostitutes cost the states millions to house every year, and reform proponents say that rehab and reform programs outside of penitentiaries work at a fraction of the cost of incarceration.

Either way, a Democratic Senator from the state called attaching felony charges to prostitution outlandish, and the issue may now be taken up by state legislature in January, chron.com says (http://www.chron.com/default/article/Texas-may-reconsider-sending-prostitutes-to-prison-3816368.php).
Except in parts of Nevada, prostitution is generally outlawed in the U.S.—though in Rhode Island “indoor” prostitution was strangely and unwittingly legally allowed (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=120359052) until 2009.
Also coming under scrutiny recently are online prostitution (http://www.takepart.com/article/2010/08/09/victims-buy-ads-paint-craigslist-child-prostitution-and-sex-trafficking-hub) laws. Though traditional statutes cover the full range of street-level prostitution activity, laws meant to cover online sale of sex services are still pretty meager (http://gizmodo.com/5936778/online-prostitution-laws-are-out-of-date). Indeed, an academic study announced this week that almost 80 percent of the classified ads posted on the adult-services portion of the website Backpages are prostitution ads.

http://www.takepart.com/article/2012/08/28/prostitution-new-weed?cmpid=tp-ad-outbrain-general

Dino Velvet
11-15-2012, 12:37 AM
Natina, we're both Californians and Angelenos. We disagree on many things but don't you agree that the revenue from legalized marijuana and prostitution could bring our state much needed help? If there's plenty of money to go around everybody's happy. It's when there's none that we're at each others throats. Legalize Marijuana and Prostitution in California.

JenniferParisHusband
11-30-2012, 10:42 PM
yes! I did a bad job tucking cause i ran out of crazy glue and medical tape. I did not tuck it is just sticking up. don't tell any one.

I got buy some more booty when I get a little fatter.

many here lie and say that they never been busted for escorting and such............

Natina, you're normally camera shy from what i've seen on here. Is this photo is really you? If so, don't change a thing, I already feel like I should be starting a Natina Tribute Thread.

bluesoul
11-30-2012, 11:56 PM
Natina, you're normally camera shy from what i've seen on here. Is this photo is really you? If so, don't change a thing, I already feel like I should be starting a Natina Tribute Thread.

not to mention she'd be the first flemish supermodel (http://www.supermodels.nl/jillbauwens) currently working in the netherlands moonlighting as a transsexual from los angeles and actively posting on hung angels.

either way, i'd be the first to subscribe to the natina tribute thread

natina
01-19-2013, 06:43 AM
bump it cause its hot!

nysprod
01-19-2013, 01:25 PM
yes! I did a bad job tucking cause i ran out of crazy glue and medical tape. I did not tuck it is just sticking up. don't tell any one.

I got buy some more booty when I get a little fatter.

many here lie and say that they never been busted for escorting and such............

Lol...that ain't you...

C. Saw
01-19-2013, 11:26 PM
Natina, glad you bumped this back up to the top. I'm sorry for going off topic, but that is a great picture. Beautiful...and I love the bulge - very sexy.

bluesoul
01-19-2013, 11:30 PM
Natina, glad you bumped this back up to the top. I'm sorry for going off topic, but that is a great picture. Beautiful...and I love the bulge - very sexy.

i hadn't even noticed that. thanks for pointing it out (thumbs up)