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Marc of Frankfurt
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LokalNachrichten: NEW YORK CITY (U.S.A.)

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

New York


http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City

siehe auch: Länderberichte U.S.A.
http://sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=1363





Bild


Sex Worker Projekts

PROS Network
Providers and Resources Offering Services to sex workers
www.prosNetworkNYC.org

Sex Workers Action New York (SWANK)
swank@riseup.net

Sex Workers Outreach Project NYC (SWOP-NYC)
www.swop-nyc.org

Prostitutes of New York (PONY)
pony@panix.com

New York City Sexbloggers Calender
http://sexbloggerCalendar.wordpress.com





62 % der New Yorker sind gegen Legalisierung der Prostitution

Q poll: On prostitution, Spitzer, Paterson


March
20

Quinnipiac polled on last week’s topic du jour—prostitution—after former Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s resignation after being linked to a high-priced call girl ring.

The poll, with a margin of error of +/- 2.5 percentage points, found that 62 percent of New Yorkers oppose legalized prostitution involving people over the age of 18. That includes 54 percent of men and 68 percent of women. Overall, 66 percent said it was not a victimless crime.

Some 73 percent of voters said people who patronize prostitutes should face the same punishment as prostitutes themselves. On this question—and others—men were more lenient than women.

A whopping 81 percent said it was right for Spitzer to resign; 48 percent say he should be charged with a crime.

...

http://polhudson.lohudblogs.com/2008/03 ... r-paterson

Hauptseite des Gouverneur Eliot Spitzer & Kristen/EverleigClubVIP Skandals:
(Freier als Opfer)
viewtopic.php?p=33665#33665





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Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 14.11.2011, 16:26, insgesamt 5-mal geändert.

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Minderjährige

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

N.Y. Struggles to Aid Child Prostitutes

Bill Would Divert Girls to Social Programs; Opponents
Say Threat of Jail Is Needed


By Robin Shulman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, July 13, 2008; A03



NEW YORK -- The girl is very slight, pretty, with
glasses, nervously fingering the blue and gold beads
on a bracelet she made herself.

She seems like a typical shy high school kid. Little
about her suggests the tortured story she tells: At 14
she ran away from sexual abuse at home and met a
24-year-old guy who seemed like he wanted to be her
boyfriend -- until he told her he wanted to be her
pimp.


"I was like, wow," recalled the girl, now 16, though
she looks younger. She was shocked, but desperate, she
said. "At the time I needed a place to sleep, so I was
like, 'Fine, I'll go along with it.' "

On and off for the next two years, she said, she
traded sex for cash, under the control of several
different men who took most of the money for
themselves. Her work as a child prostitute caused her
to be arrested in March and placed in detention.

"The whole thing makes me sick to my stomach," said
the girl, who did not want her name to be used, like
several others who worked as prostitutes and gave
interviews for this article. "Most of the time we do
not have the right to say yes or no."





Now New York is struggling with the question of how to
treat young girls who are involved in prostitution.
Are they criminals -- or child abuse victims?


Gov. David A. Paterson (D) is considering signing a
groundbreaking bill that would divert young girls
arrested for prostitution to social programs rather
than punishing them.

The bill, known as the Safe Harbor Act, stipulates
that the first time girls 15 and younger are arrested
for prostitution, they should be designated "persons
in need of supervision
," not delinquents, and get
counseling and a safe house to protect them from
pimps.

Advocates say the bill helps to redress an inequity in
state law, which sets the age of consent for sex at 17
but sets no age limits on the crime of prostitution,
so that if a 12-year-old is paid for sex, even if she
turns the money over to a pimp, she can be arrested,
charged with an act of juvenile delinquency, and
prosecuted.

"This law is going to protect children who mostly come
from broken or dysfunctional families, who have either
been enticed or coerced into commercial sex, who need
help," said state Assemblyman William Scarborough, a
Democrat from Queens who sponsored the bill. []"We will
surely spend much more on these children if we do not
get them out of this life."[/b]





But prosecutors have argued that it is necessary to
hold the threat of jail over young girls to encourage
them to testify against pimps.


And the administration of New York City Mayor Michael
R. Bloomberg opposes the bill, saying that the best
way to keep girls from running away from services is
to keep them in the criminal system.

"Legal leverage is the best way to provide services,"
said John Feinblatt, the mayor's criminal justice
coordinator.

Across the country, cities and states are grappling
with this issue. Las Vegas has decided to arrest and
detain kids to keep them safe. Boston considers them
child abuse victims and generally does not charge them
but treats them. San Francisco has a hybrid model of
arresting girls and then diverting them to services.

These questions arise because incidences of very young
girls being coerced or forced into prostitution have
become alarmingly common, according to law enforcement
agencies, researchers and advocates. The age girls
most frequently enter prostitution is between 12 and
14 years old
, according to a University of
Pennsylvania study, which also estimated there could
be several hundred thousand youth being paid for sex
across the country.

And although prostitution in New York has largely been
chased from the Times Square area, the streetwalker
culture -- often built on young girls -- is thriving
in poor neighborhoods in the Bronx, Brooklyn and
Queens.

"It's a huge, huge problem," said Kenneth Kaiser, an
assistant director at the FBI, which has launched a
special task force, Innocence Lost, to arrest pimps
and help children forced into prostitution. "You've
got young children, 12, 13, 14 -- these are innocent
victims nobody ever hears about."





Another young, former sex worker is trying to change
that. With sad, long-lashed brown eyes and a smile
that lights up her face, she speaks publicly about her
history in prostitution and has advocated passage of
the bill.

At 15, she said, she was an honor student at
Manhattan's Art and Design High School but left home
to escape her parents' alcoholism and abuse. She ended
up in a group home, she said, where she tried to
commit suicide -- but no one even noticed.

Then she met a pimp, she said.

She said he told her, " 'I'm going to be your
everything. I'm going to be your mother, your father,
your sister, your brother, your best friend. I'm going
to take care of you, I'm going to love you.' "

She was inducted into a world with the trappings of
family -- a girl often calls her pimp "Daddy," his
friends "uncles-in-law," his other girls
"wives-in-law." But this world also has its own brutal
hierarchy: If a girl looks another pimp in the eye,
that pimp has the right to kidnap her.
When her pimp
was jailed, he bequeathed her to an "uncle-in-law," a
"guerrilla pimp" who used violence. She said one of
his tactics was to hold a hot iron so close to her arm
that she could feel the steam melt her skin.

There were beatings, a kidnapping, a gang rape, she
said, but she was always put back to work. "I felt at
that point that my soul was dying. You're just going
through something that's so unimaginable you just
can't even think, you just can't even feel."





Then she was referred to Girls Educational and
Mentoring Services
, a nonprofit group that helps about
200 commercially sexually exploited girls each year,
and is perhaps the best model in the state for
delivering services and creating the safe and
nurturing atmosphere envisioned in the Safe Harbor
bill.

"Sweetie, let's see your report card," said Rachel
Lloyd, the founder and director, to one of her girls
on a recent afternoon. Lloyd read aloud a string of
A's. "I'm very proud of you," she said.

Lloyd, who years ago worked as a prostitute, oversees
a staff of 19 to provide counseling, tutoring and job
training, along with classes in subjects such as
cooking and yoga. She will do anything for the girls:
go searching the streets at night when they disappear,
confront their pimps, and give them Christmas parties,
baby showers and the other missing rituals of family.
Sometimes it's enough to help a girl leave her pimp.
Sometimes it's not.

"One of the girls called me on Mother's Day," Lloyd
said. "She said, 'I want to come by, but it's like
going to church. It makes me want to do better, but I
feel wack about where I am in my life.' "

Research shows the girls in Lloyd's program are likely
to have certain things in common. A study by the New
York state Office of Children & Family Services found
that about 85 percent of the girls in prostitution
were the subject of an open child welfare case, often
because of abuse or neglect, and that 75 percent had
been in foster care.


Their numbers seem to be growing. Katherine Mullen, a
New York lawyer with the Legal Aid Society who
represents youth involved in prostitution, said that a
decade ago she might come across perhaps two such
children under 16 in a year. Now she represents about
200 a year, many of them 12 and 13 years old, and this
year she represented two 11-year-olds.

These girls are likely to come from the country's
poorest urban neighborhoods, said Kirsten Widner, a
fellow at Emory University's law school. She said they
may have been caught in a changing profile of local
crime that has yet to be fully assessed: At some point
in recent years, the neighborhood drug dealer might
have realized that it's more lucrative to sell
neighborhood girls.

"The word on the street is they can sell a packet of
drugs once, they can sell a person many, many times,
so it's a better business model," Widner said.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 01556.html





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Illegaler Club ausgehoben

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Lawyer Is Accused of Using Reform Group to Launder Money From Strip Club


By JOHN ELIGON and AL BAKER
Published: July 19, 2008


A lawyer who fervently contested the result of the 2.000 presidential election and started an organization advocating voter reform used it to hide profits from another venture, the police say: a strip club that offered more than dancing.

The lawyer, Louis Posner, ran the Hot Lap Dance Club out of a fifth-floor loft in Hell’s Kitchen, where the police said the wealthy clientele paid as much as $5,000 for sex with dancers in private rooms.

The authorities raided the loft on Thursday night and arrested Mr. Posner, his wife, Betty, and 19 others on charges that included money laundering and promoting prostitution. No clients were arrested.

According to the police, Mr. Posner, a 52-year-old tax lawyer, funneled the club’s money to an account for Voter March, the grass-roots demonstration organization he started shortly after the 2000 election that has been largely inactive since 2004. He deposited money into several other accounts, the police said, adding that the amounts were low enough to avoid raising a red flag at the Internal Revenue Service [IRS Steuerbehörde].

Investigators seized $570,000 from 13 bank accounts and two safety deposit boxes
held by the Posners, all of which could be traced back to the dance club, a spokeswoman for the Manhattan district attorney’s office said.

The defendants, who include dancers and other club employees, were scheduled to be arraigned on Friday night in Manhattan Criminal Court. If convicted on the top charge of money laundering, Mr. Posner could face up to 15 years in state prison.

No one answered a telephone call to Mr. Posner’s law office in Manhattan. Mr. Posner’s lawyer, Steven D. Ateshoglou, declined to comment through his secretary.

Edward W. Hayes, a Manhattan lawyer, said he was representing several of the people who were arrested, though he declined to specify whom.

“There’s a lot of girls that work there, and very few of them do anything that you shouldn’t do,” Mr. Hayes said. “Most of the people that work there are just young people that need to work nights and pick up a couple of bucks. There’s no organized crime element here.”

Mr. Hayes said the clients were “very, very wealthy people,” but he did not know whether any of them were prominent.

On its Web site, the Hot Lap Dance Club, also known as Premium Events, bills itself as the city’s premier private lap dance club, with nightly erotic shows featuring lesbian dancers and sex toys.

“And given its private, more intimate setup, Hot Lap Dance is also one of the finest spots to let it all hang out at your bachelor party,” the site said.

The site included several nude photos. Four dancers were arrested, according to the criminal complaint filed in court on Friday, one of whom, Cassandra Malandri, performed in pornographic films under the name Alexia Moore.

The club is at 344 West 38th Street, between Eighth and Ninth Avenues, in a building that includes both commercial and residential spaces. To get to the club, one must walk through an industrial hallway, take a freight elevator to the fifth floor and ring a buzzer on a door that says “Members.” A membership card and $50 are required for admission, according to the police. The cards were obtained through e-mail and by word of mouth, the police said.

The club had a bring-your-own-alcohol policy, but undercover detectives were able to secure alcohol by tipping employees, police said.

The police learned of the club in July 2007 as part of a narcotics investigation, according to Sgt. Christopher Koch, a supervisor with the Police Department’s Vice/Club Team.

A detective came across an advertisement on Craigslist for a lap dance club and, after responding to it, he received a link to the club’s Web site, according to the criminal complaint.

During an undercover detective’s visit to the club last August, a dancer told him that there was a “house dealer of cocaine,” who “made rounds at midnight,” the complaint said. One of the employees introduced the detective to a man who went by the name Lou, who told him he “was the boss,” according to the complaint. Some of the women called him “Daddy,” the complaint said.

On one occasion, Lou told the detective he had a source on the Police Department’s payroll and would be able to detect an officer, the complaint said.

When a detective visited the club in June, Ms. Malandri offered to meet with him at a different location with another dancer to have a threesome for $5,000, the complaint said.

The business earned $1 million over 10 months, the police said.

On Friday afternoon, the club had a notice on the door saying it was closed.

Ramdat Harihar, the owner of R & C Apparel Corporation, on the second floor of the building, said he had been there for 15 years and had never encountered any trouble with the dancers or the clients.

“I always see beautiful ladies coming in and well-dressed guys,” he said. “But I didn’t know what it was. I heard it was for a photography studio.”


Mathew R. Warren contributed reporting.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/19/nyreg ... othel.html

http://dirtycock.wordpress.com/2008/07/ ... raigslist/





Homepage
www.hotlapdance.com





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Strip Club Arbeit

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Women say NY's dollar-dance clubs have darker side

By CRISTIAN SALAZAR, Associated Press Writer Fri Oct 3, 4:22 PM ET

NEW YORK - As neon lights bathe the dance floor of the darkened nightclub, a group of young women from Latin America sit at tables, sipping water or soda and waiting for men to approach and hand them cash.


For $2, the women will dance one song. For $10, they will dance a set. Forty dollars buys an hour of their time.

The scene plays out in immigrant neighborhoods across New York City, providing a key source of employment for immigrant women and a haven for men seeking to stave off the loneliness of being far from home. It is a perfectly legal form of entertainment — there is no stripping but plenty of hand-holding.

But some of the women say the clubs have a darker side. They complain about exploitative management, sexual advances from clients and even violence. A 24-year-old dancer was recently shot and killed in Queens, and one of the city's largest dollar-dance venues is now the target of a federal lawsuit.

For many dancers, the stigma of working at the clubs is the most trying problem.

"Sometimes people or clients say we're prostitutes, but we're not. We dance," said Tania Zarate, a dancer at one club in Queens.

That dancing can veer from prudish to the sensual grind. Some clubs demand that dancers wear skimpy uniforms. Elsewhere, they dress in jeans and T-shirts. Bouncers are often hired to fend off unruly customers or those with straying hands.

Many of the dollar-dance places can't rightly be called nightclubs. They are bars that just happen to feature dance floors with women who get paid by the dance.

Zarate, 35, who is from Veracruz, Mexico, wore a short jean skirt, white blouse and white tights on a recent summer night. She said she returned to dancing after leaving the job to try her skills in another line of work. But that job ended.

She was not happy to return to work as a dancer.

"To have to come from my country and work this kind of job? No!" she said in Spanish, with a wave of her hand. "Sometimes you dance with a guy and then he doesn't want to pay up."

The idea of women dancing with a partner for a song has a long tradition.

During the Depression, men in many big cities could go to "taxi-dance halls" to pay for dances. Back then, each dance cost just a dime, and the women were largely of Eastern European descent.

Today, the woman hail from Mexico, Ecuador, Colombia, the Dominican Republic and elsewhere. They are often single mothers who have become migrant workers to support the families they left behind.

Carla Ramirez, 26, a married mother of three, said she began dancing at a club soon after arriving from her native Ecuador. She said she keeps the job secret from her husband.

"He thinks I work in a restaurant," she said. "He doesn't like me drinking or dancing with another man."

The men she dances with at a nightclub on Roosevelt Avenue in Queens are mostly laborers from Latin America. They are often construction workers, landscapers and restaurant workers. Many come to the clubs still wearing boots and jeans, splattered with paint and mud.

A 41-year-old laborer, who spoke on the condition that he be identified only as Emilio because he didn't want to be known as a patron of the clubs, said he sometimes spends hundreds of dollars a night on dancing, drinks and female companionship.

"When a man is lonely, he looks for someone who he can talk to and someone he can spend time with," he explained.

Ramirez said she sometimes worries about safety. "There are times when the guys are drinking, and they start to fight and throw bottles," she said, but adds that the club where she works hires bouncers.

The need for security was highlighted in December 2007 when 24-year-old Adriana Valderrama, a dancer at the nearby Tulcingo Cafe, was fatally shot and her dance partner wounded. There have been no arrests in the killing, and detectives believe the gunman fled to Mexico. Messages left for the bar's owners were not returned.

Dancers can also face the relatively ordinary peril of labor exploitation.

A lawsuit against the Flamingo, a tropical-themed nightclub in Queens, alleges that the bar's owners failed to pay wages and overtime, subjected the dancers to video surveillance in a dressing room, and required them to pay entry fees of up to $11, plus fines if they were late for work or missed a day.

Diana Trejos, a former dancer who is one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, complained that the women were controlled as if they were employees: They were given schedules, required to have doctors' notes if they missed work because of illness and required they buy uniforms for theme nights.

"All of these things were controlled," said Trejos, 40, who is from Colombia.

Attorneys for the owners of the business asked a court to dismiss the complaint, arguing that nothing in the suit was true.

The dancers and their lawyers disagree.

"You can't call a worker an independent contractor and avoid the requirements under the labor law," said Elizabeth Wagoner, an attorney for a community organization that is supporting the former Flamingo workers in their lawsuit and has organized protests against the nightclub.

Gary Kushner, an attorney for the Flamingo's owners, said he asked his clients not to comment. He said they had promised the federal judge they wouldn't litigate through the media.

Handwritten posters in the window of Flamingo apparently put up by current dancers at the club disputed the former employees' claims: "We are happy to work in the paradise of Flamingo," and "They're against us because they're not here."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081003/ap_ ... s_for_hire





Strip-Club als Kooperative der Tänzerinnen:
Lusty Lady Theatre, San Francisco
www.lustyladysf.com

Stripperinnen-Gewerkschaft:
viewtopic.php?p=29041#29041

Tina Turner singt Taxi-Dancer:
viewtopic.php?p=32842#32842





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Marc of Frankfurt
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Anlaufstellen in Manhatten

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »


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Marc of Frankfurt
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The Gentelman's Guide

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Geschichte der Prostitution

Historischer Rotlichtführer
Artikel mit historischen Fotos und Karte der über 500 Bordelle in NYC um 1870:

A Guide to Houses No Gentleman Would Dare to Frequent




Bild
A drawing titled “The Genius of Advertising” from an 1880 issue of the National Police Gazette shows men outside a brothel gazing at pictures of some of the attractions awaiting them inside.

Karte der 500 Bordelle um 1870
Map: Dens of Iniquity
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011 ... leman.html

(Damals hatte die Weltstadt knapp unter 1 Mio Einwohner.)



By ALISON LEIGH COWAN

Encyclopedic in breadth but compact enough for the vest pocket of a 19th-century gentleman on the go, the book was an insider’s guide to Manhattan, easily picked up at the newsstand before a night on the town, much the way tourists and local residents now consult a guidebook when they are in the mood for a memorable restaurant or meal.

Only this palm-sized book, published in 1870 and long hidden away at the New-York Historical Society, did not confine its anonymous critique to the quality of wines or the ambience of the 150 establishments listed between its covers. Rather, it defined its role as delivering “insight into the character and doings of people whose deeds are carefully screened from public view.”

Alan Balicki of the New-York Historical Society took the 141-year-old directory out for a spin at the request of The New York Times.

Vest Pocket Guide to Brothels
Only 4-3/4-inches tall, this detailed guide to New York City brothels in 1870 hints at what people did before they had tools like the Internet to help navigate an unfamiliar urban scene.

Especially fragile, the book is usually kept under lock and key. At the request of The New York Times, however, the historical society took it out for a spin this month so readers could experience one of the more colorful and detailed guides ever produced on the ins and outs of New York City’s brothels.

Readers of the book, “The Gentleman’s Directory,” learned that “an hour cannot be spent more pleasantly” than at Harry Hill’s place on 25 East Houston Street. And they learned that Ada Blashfield of 55 West Houston Street had “8 to 10 boarders both blondes and brunettes,” playing host to “some of our first citizens.” The book also divulged that Mrs. Wright’s place at 61 Elizabeth Street had “everything that makes time pass agreeably,” and that Miss Jennie Creagh had spared “neither expense nor labor” at 17 Amity Street, a onetime Manhattan address, to conjure a “palace of beauty forever” out of French mirrors, rosewood furniture and fine bedding.
  • “The Gentleman’s Directory”
    [150 Bordelle werden im Rotlichtführer von 1870 gelistet und 50 näher beschrieben,
    Ferner gibt es auch Negativbeschreibungen und Kondomwerbung...]
    All of those listings and more can be viewed here:
    http://documents.nytimes.com/a-vest-poc ... -on-the-go
Just as historians might someday parse Zagat dining guides to see how our generation ate and lived, “The Gentleman’s Directory” provides this generation with a glimpse of the simultaneously libertine and puritanical city that came before it. Prostitution was illegal, but brothels were rampant in the decades after the Civil War, operating under the noses of the police and census takers. And proprietors were not shy about using newfangled marketing techniques to stand out and gain a share of the market.

Timothy J. Gilfoyle, a professor of history at Loyola University, put the number of brothels in Manhattan in 1870 close to 500 in his 1992 book “City of Eros: New York City, Prostitution, and the Commercialization of Sex, 1790-1920”.
http://www.amazon.com/City-Eros-Prostit ... 0393311082
http://www.luc.edu/history/fac_resource ... gilfoy.htm

While “The Gentleman’s Directory” did not survey every brothel, it managed to include more than 150 establishments — 23 on West 27th Street alone — in the book’s 55 pages of commentary and advertisements. Readers, who take the time to view the map of all known locations, might almost come to pity the researchers who knocked on all those doors, collecting information and sampling the wares. Coincidentally or not, all 9 brothels that advertised in the book were found to be “first-class.”

Readers were warned on Page 5 that they would not learn where Central Park or the Croton Aqueduct were from the book’s contents. What they would find, the book stated, were facts about New York hospitality “which could not be procured elsewhere.”

The mission, its author (or authors) wrote with a wink, was to tell people where not to go.

“Not that we imagine the reader will ever desire to visit these houses,” the text stated. “Certainly not.”

“We point out the location of these places in order that the reader may know how to avoid them,” the book insisted, “and that he may not select one of them for his boarding house when he comes to the city.” It compared itself to the buoy that “warns the inexperienced mariner to sheer off, lest he should be wrecked on a dangerous and unknown coast.”

It apparently took effort for businesses in this line of work to displease, and only a dozen or so landed reviews harsh enough to scare people away. Mme. Pauline Beck of 69 Elizabeth Street came close, running “a noisy and untidy den of assignation, visited only by the lowest class of people” while the landlady at 105 West 27th Street was said to be “as sour as her wine.” The book was equally withering about Hattie Taylor’s house at 111 Spring Street, which it contended drew a sketchy crowd of “roughs and rowdies and gentlemen who turn their shirts wrong-side out when the other side is dirty.”

At least 50 businesses got rave reviews. Sportsmen were advised to check out 25 Houston Street. Nervous types could rest easy at 128 West 27th Street, where a doctor was on stand-by. Those with a fetish for furnishings could call on 108 West 27th Street for a peek at the frescoes. And anyone craving good conversation might have enjoyed seeing the “seven beautiful young lady scholars” of the “Ladies Seminary” on 123 West 27th Street put to the test.

One of the stranger entries was 127 West 26th Street, run by a Madame Buemont. “There is a report of a bear being kept in the cellar but for what reason may be inferred,’’ the book reported.



Modern roués, of course, have tools like the Internet. But in 1870, the closest anyone could come to getting a road map to the nearest den of iniquity was the police blotter or perhaps the federal census. (Though it was hardly the norm to be so blunt, census workers in 1870 knew enough about the goings-on at 114 West 26th Street and 116 West 26th Street to twice write “House of Prostitution” in the column asking about residents’ “occupation, profession or trade.”)

Books like “The Gentleman’s Directory,” filled the information gap, and because only a few survived, Dr. Gilfoyle suspected that patrons had gotten rid of their copies before heading home.

Picking up “The Gentleman’s Directory” in a gloved hand, Alan Balicki, the historical society’s senior conservator, pointed to its thumbed pages as proof that the little book got around. He also indicated telltale signs of hurried assembly: runny inks, pages that appear askew, breaks in the borders. “This is not a fine printing,’’ he said. “This is for information.”



A similarly themed book at the society is the “Directory to the Seraglios,” pictured on the right. Compiled by the pseudonymous “Free Loveyer” in 1859 and stitched together haphazardly, the earlier book promised coverage of New York, and “all the principal cities in the union.” Philadelphia had 57 listings, about half as many as New York. Washington landed seven, and Boston six; Ogdensburgh, N.Y. was apparently one of the cities that had to make do with a one-woman welcome committee.

As a comparison of the two guidebooks made clear, stepping out with an out-of-date directory had its perils. According to the 1859 book, gentlemen “wishing to enjoy the comforts of connubial feeling with their wives intended” were well-served at 83 Crosby Street in Manhattan. Eleven years later, “The Gentleman’s Directory,” pronounced the same spot, possibly under new management, “small potatoes.”

The earlier book recommends several addresses on Greene Street, while the later directory warned readers to steer clear of the street, calling it a “complete sink of iniquity.”

Though a few guides of this type circulated in New York in the decades before “The Gentleman’s Directory,” Dr. Gilfoyle said he tought this was the first to solicit advertising.



This advertisement for condoms and related services appeared on the last page of “The Gentleman’s Directory.”

Safe sex was delicately broached in the last page of the book in an ad that advised anyone needing “French imported male safes,” otherwise known as condoms, to see Dr. Charles Manches any time until 9 p.m. Another, possibly in-house, advertiser was John F. Murray of 57 West Houston Street, offering additional copies of the directory for $1 or copies of “Dr. Groves’s Marriage Guide” for 50 cents. Take your pick.

The low-rise buildings that housed these quaint “temples of love” have mostly vanished.

City Room thought it had spotted one still standing at 105 West 27th Street, the place whose landlady was “as sour as her wine.” But PropertyShark suggests on its Web site that the sooty-looking, four-story building only went up a century ago.

There is also no trace of an opulent three-story brownstone that once ruled West 25th Street and catered to an aristocratic crowd. Ten years ago, a hulking residential building, known as Chelsea Towers, took over much of the block.

Dr. Gilfoyle, who used police records, guidebooks and news clippings to plot the location of 5,000 known brothels for his book, said the oldest brothel he found still rooted to its spot was at 105 Mercer Street. A squat brick building with a fan-shaped window over the door, it got only the briefest mention in the 1859 book and was not cited in the 1870 work.

105 Mercer Street was built for a seamstress in 1819, according to a former owner, and later converted into a brothel.

Jeremy Spear, the home’s previous owner, agreed it was the real deal. He said he did extensive research at the New-York Historical Society after buying it and was surprised, but pleased, to learn that what started as a seamstresses’ home in 1819 was later converted to a brothel. “There’s a certain grit in New York City history, and people love to hear that everything wasn’t all rose-smelling,’’ he said. “It is part of the city’s fabric.”


Readers familiar with the fate of other places in the book are invited to send their findings to City Room in the space below.

Alain Delaquérière contributed reporting.


Original mit weiteren Bildern und Links:
http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/ ... perdition/

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Marc of Frankfurt
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Strukturwandel

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Bild

Strukturwandel Sexbiz

Wegen Handy-Technologie und höherem Wohlstand der Stadtbevölkerung verändert sich die Lage und Struktur der Rotlichtszene: weg vom Strassestrich, hin zum Escortappartment...


Mehr zum Strukturwandel und tolle Geschäftstipps:
www.wired.com/magazine/2011/01/ff_sextrade/all/1

Prof. Sudhir Venkatesh:
www.sudhirVenkatesh.org/projectsresearch/sex-work





Freakonomics Chicago:
www.sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=29759#29759

Deutsch von krone.at:
www.sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=94103#94103

Verdrehte Pressemeldung auch hier (SW & FB):
www.sexworker.at/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=102967#102967
Zuletzt geändert von Marc of Frankfurt am 19.08.2011, 13:36, insgesamt 2-mal geändert.

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RE: LokalNachrichten: NEW YORK CITY (U.S.A.)

Beitrag von friederike »

Für mich sind die USA mit ihrer puritanischen Gesetzgebung immer noch das Musterbeispiel dafür, wohin die Missachtung der individuellen Freiheit durch den Puritaner führt. Und das in dem Land, das sich als Mutterland der Freiheit fühlt. Tatsächlich ein Land der Gegensätze.

Erstaunlich ist eigentlich, dass das Prostitutionsverbot nicht zu signifikant höheren Preisen führt. Einen Zusammenhang hätte man erwarten können. Aber die Tabelle, nach der sogar Escorts zweimal im Jahr verprügelt werden, deutet darauf hin, dass die Gesetzgebung der (echten) Kriminalität Vorschub leistet.

In unserem Bordell haben wir recht viele amerikanische Touristen, die sich vor Begeisterung über die vergleichsweise liberale deutsche Gesetzgebung nicht fassen können. Der Bundesstaat Nevada lässt Prostitution zu, aber unter strengen Reglementierungen, man muss als Hure "lizensiert" sein (licensed prostitute). Das spielt wieder einem Bordellunternehmertum in die Hände, weil man nur in einem überwachten Bordell arbeiten darf. In den anderen Bundesstaaten ist der seelische Druck auf Kunden und Huren gross, die Hure muss ständig damit rechnen, dass der "Kunde" nach der Geldübergabe eine Dienstmarke zückt. Widerliche Verhältnisse!

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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Diese 'widerlichen Verhältnisse', die viele nicht ertragen wollen, erklärt auch warum es eine verhältnismäßig starke öffentlich aktive Sexworker-Bewegung gibt im Gegensatz zu A - CH - D ...

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Beitrag von Ariane »

@Friederike; es sind wenige Counties in Nevada, wo regulierte Prostitution mit lizensierten Bordellen zulässig ist, ansonsten "illegal" wie auch in Las Vegas und Umgebung selbst und den übrigen Bundesstaaten. Die Preise sind im Durchschnitt höher als in Deutschland, wenn man den Escort-Bereich betrachtet.
love people, use things - not the other way round

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Beitrag von friederike »

@@ariane, marc:

danke für Eure Anmerkungen. Ich habe keinerlei echte Recherchen angestellt, sondern nur meine "second-hand"-Informationen weitergegeben. Unter diesen Umständen hätte ich auch keinerlei Lust, in Nevada (gleich welches County) oder sonstwo in Amerika zu arbeiten. Lasst sie doch nach Berlin kommen und sich dort einmal so richtig austoben ....

Das Bestürzende ist wirklich diese seelische Kontorsion, die diese Verhältnisse verursachen: die Pornofilm-Industrie ist anscheinend grösser als die Holywood-Filmindustrie, Geistliche ("Reverends") betreiben Fernsehstationen, die salbungsvolle Sprüche absondern, und fettleibige Polizisten kriminalisieren unschuldige Mädchen, während Millionen fettleibige Puritaner vor ihren Screens sitzen und onanieren. Warum können wir nicht jeden sein Leben leben lassen? Was macht die Leute so glücklich, wenn sie ihren Nachbarn in die Fenster schauen und tuscheln können? Für mich ist das Widerwärtigste und Perverseste, was ich mir vorstellen kann, ein Typ wie Staatsanwalt a.D. Elliott Spitzer, der unschuldige Leute ruiniert, indem er sie wegen aktiver oder passiver Prostitution vor Gericht anklagt, um dann seinerseits horrende Summen für Edelnutten auszugeben. Das letztere sei ihm gegönnt, das erstere ist und bleibt unverzeihlich.

Wir fordern die Wiedereinführung der Galeerenstrafe für Elliott Spitzer, Lea Ackermann und die gesamte schwedische Regierung!

Friederike

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dazu

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Sex Workers Turn To Facebook To Recruit Customers

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/0 ... 20345.html

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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Prostitution im Netz
Die Hure mit dem Blackberry

Soziale Netzwerke verwandeln die Gesellschaft. Wie Facebook das Geschäft mit dem Sex in New York veränderte, zeigt eine Untersuchung des Soziologen Sudhir Venkatesh. VON TORSTEN KLEINZ

http://www.taz.de/1/netz/netzkultur/art ... lackberry/

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Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Sexworker Gegendarstellung:

"I've never heard of any sex workers advertising on Facebook. Not a one," wrote "Claudia," a New York-based sex worker, in an e-mail. "I gotta tell you, to me that is the biggest B.S."

"It's frustrating to see 'expert' data on our lives that doesn't reflect real experiences."



How technology is actually changing sex work

Prostitutes call foul on a recent report that Facebook is the "new Craigslist." They give us the real scoop

By Tracy Clark-Flory

http://www.salon.com/life/feature/2011/ ... index.html

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Fachbuch

Beitrag von Marc of Frankfurt »

Love for Sale: Courting, Treating, and Prostitution in New York City, 1900-1945

Elizabeth Clement
2006

www.amazon.com/dp/0807856908

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RE: LokalNachrichten: NEW YORK CITY (U.S.A.)

Beitrag von fraences »

Entlassungen an der Wall Street
Jung, verwöhnt, arbeitslos
New York


Börsenplatz NYSE an der Wall Street: In der US-Finanzbranche kriselt's
Nach der Krise kommt die Flaute: Die schwächelnde Konjunktur und magere Geschäftszahlen zwingen die amerikanische Finanzbranche, massiv Stellen zu streichen. Tausende Wall-Street-Banker werden sich neue Jobs suchen müssen - als erstes trifft es die jungen.


Sie nennen sich "High Class NY". Doch hochklassig sind hier vor allem die Preise. "Wir machen ausgesprochen anspruchsvolle Gentlemen mit Fashion-Models, Schönheitsköniginnen, exquisiten Studentinnen, Hochschulabsolventinnen und erfolgreichen Karrierefrauen bekannt", lockt die Website des Wall-Street-Hostessendienstes. "Jede Begleiterin hat nur für eine begrenzte Zahl von Verabredungen im Monat Zeit, damit Ihr Date für Sie beide besonders wird."


Vor allem besonders kostspielig: Die Stundengebühr für die Damen reicht von 720 Dollar (Güteklasse "ein Diamant") bis 3600 Dollar (Güteklasse "sieben Diamanten"), zahlbar per Kreditkarte. Dafür versüßen "Savanna", "Svetlana" und all die anderen "Ladys" ihren Klienten - vorzugsweise Broker, Trader und sonstige Finanzhaie - "das Dinner, das Wochenende oder die Geschäftsreise".
So war es zumindest bis vorige Woche. Doch nun ist Schluss. Der Bezirksstaatsanwalt Charles Hynes hat die Betreiber von "High Class NY" wegen Prostitution angeklagt: Der Service sei nichts anderes als ein Callgirl-Ring. Die "Klienten", die pro Nacht mehr als 10.000 Dollar "für Sex und Kokain" bezahlt hätten, stammten "allesamt aus der Finanzindustrie". "Leute eben", präzisierte Hynes, "mit nichts als Geld."

Manche Dinge ändern sich eben nie. Die Bankenbranche wäre durch die Kreditkrise fast in die Knie gegangen, doch ihr Hang zu erotisch-illegaler Nebenbeschäftigung ist ungebrochen. "Diese Menschen sind Hasardeure", sagt der Wall-Street-Psychotherapeut Jonathan Alpert in "Inside Job", dem Dokumentarfilm über die Krise, der dieses Jahr einen Oscar gewann. "Da gibt es viel Kokainkonsum und Prostitution."

Dabei ist der Wall Street dieser Tage alles andere als zum Feiern zumute. Im Sommer und Herbst drohen der New Yorker Finanzindustrie neue Massenentlassungen, wie es sie seit 2008 nicht mehr gegeben hat.

Weniger Gewinn als früher

Die Groß- und Investmentbanken haben erneut damit begonnen, ihren bei weitem größten Kostenpunkt zu kappen - die Lohnlisten. Die Gründe für die neue Sparsamkeit sind vielfältig: die schwächelnde US-Konjunktur, der lahme Arbeitsmarkt, flaue Bilanzen, ein schrumpfendes Handelsvolumen - und die aktuelle Unsicherheit, die der Schuldenstreit im Washingtoner Kongress verursacht.

Allein die Investmentbanken Goldman Sachs und Morgan Stanley wollen bis zu 2000 Stellen streichen. Auch die Wall-Street-Dependancen der europäischen Finanzhäuser UBS, Credit Suisse und Barclays zücken die Rotstifte. Insgesamt stehen Abertausende Arbeitsplätze auf dem Spiel - trübe Aussichten für New York und seinen Bundesstaat, der 13 Prozent seiner Steuereinnahmen der Finanzbranche verdankt.

Die Daten der US-Arbeitsmarktbehörde BLS bestätigen diesen Trend. Seit Juni 2009, dem offiziellen Ende der Rezession, gingen in der Branche mehr als 80.000 Jobs verloren. Nach nur kurzer Erholung strichen die Firmen im Juni dieses Jahres wieder 8700 Stellen - fast so viele, wie sie im Mai erst mühsam geschaffen hatten.

Nach Berechnungen der Consulting-Firma Challenger hat der Sektor allein dieses Jahr schon den Abbau von fast 11.500 Stellen geplant, 21 Prozent mehr als im Vergleichszeitraum 2010. Chefberater John Challenger sieht darin einen fundamentalen Umbruch der Branche: Die Banken müssten sich generell an weniger Gewinn gewöhnen als früher, sagte er der Nachrichtenagentur Reuters. "Das heißt, dass sie sich ihr früheres Belegschaftsniveau nicht mehr leisten können."

Goldman Sachs , der angekratzte Titan der Wall Street, kann davon ein Lied singen. Dessen Umsatz erreichte im letzten Quartal zwar rund eine Milliarde Dollar, blieb aber trotzdem weit hinter den Erwartungen der Analysten zurück. Vor allem das Geschäft mit festverzinslichen Papieren litt: Hier büßte Goldman 63 Prozent ein - und musste die Führung erstmals an den größeren Rivalen JPMorgan Chase abtreten.

Die Neuen trifft es als erste

Prompt kündigte Goldman-Finanzchef David Viniar vorige Woche an, 1000 Stellen zu streichen, um dieses Jahr 1,2 Milliarden Dollar zu sparen: Das "finanzielle Umfeld" werde "auf absehbare Zeit etwas langsamer" sein.

Morgan Stanley deutete kürzlich ebenfalls an, seine Brokerage-Abteilung um bis zu 300 Angestellte erleichtern zu wollen. Der Nachrichtensender Fox News sprach sogar von "mehreren tausend". Die Bank of America strich bereits 100 Stellen, allerdings im nahen Connecticut, dem Satelliten der Wall Street.

Die britische Bank Barclays , die 2008 die Überreste der kaputten Investmentbank Lehman Brothers geschluckt hatte, setzt nach Informationen der Website "Huffington Post" schon seit Juni Neuzugänge aus den Colleges und Universitäten wieder vor die Tür, weil denen sonst ab Juli mehr Geld zugestanden hätte. Bereits im Januar hatte es bei Barclays eine Entlassungswelle gegeben.

Der Zürcher "Tages-Anzeiger" meldete, auch die Schweizer Bank UBS streiche 5000 Stellen. Konkretes dazu soll es bei der Vorlage der UBS-Quartalszahlen am Dienstag geben. Am Donnerstag wird der Konkurrent Credit Suisse zu Berichten Stellung nehmen müssen, wonach die Bank Anfang Juli mit Entlassungen im Investmentbereich begonnen habe. Allein dabei könnten nach Angaben des "Wall Street Journals" 1500 Banker auf der Straße landen.

Laut Goldman-Sachs-Finanzchef Viniar sollen die Entlassungen "durch die Bank" gehen - "einige eher neue, einige eher ältere". Insider erwarten freilich, dass es in erster Linie Nachwuchskräfte trifft, da diese unter anderem keinen Anspruch auf hohe Abfindungen haben.

"Die erfahreneren, besser bezahlten Leute haben viel mehr Kontakte", sagte der Finanzprofessor Sung Won Sohn, zuvor Chefökonom bei der US-Großbank Wells Fargo , der "Huffington Post". "Dagegen sind die jüngeren leichter ersetzbar." Sein Resümée: "Die Wall Street ist ein Halsabschneidergeschäft."

Eine Ausnahme im Reigen der Stellenstreicher ist JPMorgan Chase , die inzwischen größte Bank Amerikas. Im letzten Quartal übertraf das Geldhaus alle Erwartungen - und stellte zugleich 7200 neue Leute ein, davon 1200 im Investment-Bereich.



All diese Planungen könnten aber schon bald Makulatur sein - wenn sich die Parteien in Washington nicht auf eine Anhebung der gesetzlichen Schuldenobergrenze einigen. Dann nämlich droht den USA die Zahlungsunfähigkeit - und den US-Banken ein Desaster. Auch am vergangenen Wochenende konnten sich Demokraten und Republikaner nicht einigen - die Fronten scheinen sich stattdessen zu verhärten .
"Wenn die Schlagzeilen des Wochenendes besagen, dass die Gespräche geplatzt sind, werden wir erleben, dass die Werte darauf reagieren", prophezeite Walter Todd von der Vermögensverwaltungsfirma Greenwood Capital in der "New York Times". "Es haut mich um, dass es wirklich so weit gekommen ist."

Und das, wo sich nun selbst die "Ladys" von "High Class NY" nicht mehr tröstend anbieten können. Mikhail Yampolsky, der Besitzer des Damendienstes, bemühte nach der Anklage das gleiche Argument wie die Wall-Street-Bosse nach der Finanzkrise: Er habe von nichts gewusst

http://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/untern ... 51,00.html
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

*****
Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

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RE: LokalNachrichten: NEW YORK CITY (U.S.A.)

Beitrag von Ariane »

NYC hat einen weiteren Skandal um einen hochpreisigen "Prostituiertenring", seine Betreiberin und ihre Kunden. Die angeklagte Betreiberin Anna Gristina, die fünf Jahre unter Beobachtung der Behörden stand und in der Upper East Side ein Millionen teures Apartment als Bordell für reiche Kunden betrieben haben soll, soll behaupten, sehr gute Kontakte zu Strafvollzugsbehörden zu haben, die ihr ihre Unterstützung zusagten, im Fall, dass sie in Schwierigkeiten geräte.

Vergleichbare Fälle und Skandale um Eliot Spitzer 2008 als Kunde eines aufgeflogenen Callgirl-Rings sowie um "D.C. Madam" Deborah Jeane Palfrey, die Betreiberin einer Begleitagentur, die auf mysteriöse Art starb, haben gezeigt, dass sich einflussreiche Kunden im nachhinein nicht sonderlich für eine Sexarbeiterin oder Betreiberin einsetzen; das damit einhergehende Kunden-Outing durch Namensnennung prominenter Klienten endet im Regelfall böse für die Angeklagten. Der Tod von Deborah Jeane Palfrey ist bis heute mysteriös geblieben.
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deborah_Jeane_Palfrey

***

Zum aktuellen Fall der NYC Madam Ms. Anna Gristina:

'Millionaire Madam' Arrested in Five-Year Public Corruption Investigation

March 5, 2012 4:58pm | By Shayna Jacobs, DNAinfo Reporter/Producer

By Shayna Jacobs and Murray Weiss
DNAinfo Staff

MANHATTAN SUPREME COURT — A mother of four, who made millions running an Upper East Side brothel, was sent to Rikers Island jail on a $2 million bond after a five-year investigation by the DA's public corruption unit, according to stunning court documents obtained by DNAinfo.com.
Anna Gristina, 44, was indicted on Feb. 22 by a Manhattan grand jury on a single charge of promoting prostitution and was arrested while meeting with a Morgan Stanley banker who she'd been trying to convince to help her expand her empire online, according to court documents. On Tuesday, police were searching for a woman believed to be Gristina's associate — Jaynie Mae Baker, 30, a recruiter for a high-end matchmaking service VIP Life, sources told DNAinfo. Prosecutors have not revealed what role, if any, they think Baker played in the ring.

Gristina, who prosecutors claim to have on tape admitting she made millions in 15 years as a madam, was hit with the hefty bail after the DA's office claimed that her network of wealthy male clients and associates, combined with a home in Canada and her British passport, made her a flight risk.
Gristina's lawyers asked for reduced bail Tuesday, but a Manhattan Supreme Court Justice kept it at a $2 million bond over $1 million cash. Gristina appeared anxious and upset as she sat handcuffed throughout the brief court conference, moving her head to the side to try to block photos by news photographers.
At her Feb. 23 arraignment in front of Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan, prosecutors said the public corruption unit had nearly a hundred hours of audio and video surveillance that showed Gristina had been providing prostitutes — including some who were underage — to a slew of powerful men out of an apartment on East 78th Street, according to a transcript.
Recordings also showed she was prepared to flee, Assistant District Attorney Charles Linehan said at Tuesday's bail hearing.
"Nothing has changed since she was arraigned two weeks ago," Linehan said. "The case remains strong as it was when we first arraigned her."
Prosecutors said the alleged madam had even bragged during the Eliot Spitzer investigation that she had a network of law enforcement sources poised to tip her off if her business was being watched, according to the documents.
The accusations stunned neighbors of the Upper East Side building where the petite, blond suspect allegedly carried on her dealings.
"She looked like a normal mom," said one local resident, who did not want to be identified. He said he has known Gristina for 12 years, and described her as very private about her personal life and what she did for a living.
Attractive women could be seen coming and going from the building — sometimes several per month — for the past few years, but the neighbor chalked it up to a sublet for college kids.
"It's shocking," said a woman who lives in the building. "I had no idea."
The two-story farmhouse in Monroe which Gristina gave authorities as her residence had children's toys and animal feed strewn in the yard on Tuesday morning. There was a small kids' wading pool, a trampoline and the beginnings of a treehouse. There were some empty enclosures for animals, a tractor and a careworn American flag on the garage.
Gristina's arrest followed an in-depth surveillance by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Official Corruption Unit that specializes in investigating NYPD officers and uniformed public servants involved in criminal conduct. She was charged along with a co-conspirator, whose name has been redacted from court records and who was not present at the arraignment.

It was not immediately clear if the DA was eyeing charges against police or other officials.
The public corruption unit was so afraid that Gristina would flee that police swooped in and arrested her when she was in a business meeting with a Morgan Stanley banker, whom prosecutors described as a "close friend," the court records show.
Sources said that she had been expecting to meet with the banker and two other businessmen when she was surprised by investigators, who arrested her.
Prosecutors believe she was trying to get the unnamed banker to invest in an online start-up that would match prostitutes with wealthy men.
Law enforcement sources said Gristina, described in Department of Correction records as petite, blond and green eyed, ran her illicit enterprise from the East 78th Street building.
Other sources said the apartment was a rent-controlled one-bedroom with a small kitchen where Gristina stayed occasionally.
During the investigation, Gristina was recorded discussing how her law enforcement contacts were "poised to help her out, to let her know if there is trouble on the front that she needs to be concerned about, particularly back during the Eliot Spitzer investigation," Linehan said at her arraignment.
She was also heard bragging about a high-powered "lawyer friend" whom prosecutors claim helped her launder money, and owned the building where she allegedly ran her brothel.
"He’s basically locked money away for her should this ever happen so she will have money when she comes out of it," Linehan said, according to the transcript.
Linehan also said Gristina, a mother of four who told the court she lives in Monroe, in Orange County, has some very influential people in her Rolodex.
"She has business contacts worldwide," he said, adding that Gristina "claimed to have made millions over the 15 or so years, she has been in business as a madam."
"She counts many high wealths [sic] among her friends and clients," he added, according to the transcript.
Gristina and her missing co-defendant are charged with promoting prostitution in the third degree for allegedly setting up meetings between prostitutes and clients in July 2011.
Gristina has been jailed at Rikers since Feb. 23. Her assets were frozen, and she was assigned a court-appointed attorney Richard Siracusa. Lawyer Peter Gleason, who told the judge he knows Gristina's family, joined her team.
"She can't go anywhere," Siracusa told the judge during the hearing.
"She is willing to wear an ankle bracelet — anything to get back to her poor kids," he said, adding that "she has a home for rescued animals as part of her estate."
The address Gristina gave officials is a house on a farm in Monroe, where she fostered feral pigs, friends said.
But Linehan disputed that she needed to be around for her four children.
"I believe two or three of those children are actually adult children," he said, explaining that her husband was believed to be living in her home taking care of the youngest child.
Lawyer Peter Gleason, who said he took Anna Gristina's case on pro bono because he's a friend of the family, denied that she was affiliated with anything untoward, particularly if it involved minors.

Private investigator Vincent Parco, who was also present at the court hearing, said Gristina was working on a legitimate start-up dating website. He said he had been tapped to be a consultant for the company, checking backgrounds on the site's clients.

"She was hiring me to do the legal verification of all he people on the website. It's more in depth and [more] highly sophisticated than Match.com," Parco said.


Source: http://www.dnainfo.com/20120305/upper-e ... z1owE6mdzC



Mehr zum Thema in der New York Times:

Woman Accused in Prostitution Case
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/06/nyreg ... ing&st=cse


Charged as Madam, and Defended as Entrepreneur and Pig Rescuer
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/07/nyreg ... ing&st=cse
love people, use things - not the other way round

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RE: LokalNachrichten: NEW YORK CITY (U.S.A.)

Beitrag von Ariane »

Nun ist die Meldung auch in deutschen Gazetten angekommen:

BORDELL-BETREIBERIN IN NEW YORK
Anna Gristinas schwarzes Büchlein

Nach der Verhaftung einer 44-jährigen Bordell-Betreiberin in New York geht unter vielen hochrangigen Bewohnern Big Apples die Angst um. Der Grund: Fast alle ihrer Kunden sollen aus höchsten New Yorker Kreisen stammen.

New York. Die Nummer 304 East 78th Street ist ein unscheinbares Mietshaus in Manhattan, ein dreistöckiger Klinkerbau ohne Portier und ohne Aufzug. In solchen Gebäuden wohnen gewöhnlich ganz normale New Yorker: Angestellte, Sekretärinnen, Studenten. Umso merkwürdiger kam es dem Nachbarn Mark Garrett vor, dass hier um Mitternacht, wenn er zum letzten Mal mit seinem Hund vor die Tür ging, häufig Luxuslimousinen mit Chauffeur vorfuhren.

Inzwischen weiß Garrett, warum allabendlich eine Parade von Edelkarossen durch sein ansonsten ruhiges Wohnviertel zog. Am Montag vergangener Woche wurde die 44 Jahre alte Anna Gristina in ihrem Landhaus in Monroe verhaftet. Der Verdacht: Gristina soll an der 78. Straße über 15 Jahre lang ein Edelbordell betrieben haben, in dem die Größen der New Yorker Gesellschaft ein- und ausgingen. „Wir hatten Politiker, Club-Besitzer, Vorstandsvorsitzende, sogar Adelige“, sagte eine von Gristinas Angestellten in einem Interview der New York Daily News.

Nervosität in Vorstandsetagen und Abgeordnetenbüros

Wer genau alles regelmäßig bei Gristina vorfuhr, ist bislang nicht bekannt. Doch wenn die Gerüchte stimmen, dann dürfte in den Vorstandsetagen und den Abgeordnetenbüros in New York jetzt Nervosität herrschen. Denn wenn am 3. Mai der Prozess gegen Anna Gristina beginnt, wird auch ihr berüchtigtes „schwarzes Büchlein“ geöffnet werden, in dem sie ihre Kunden verzeichnet hatte und von dem jetzt schon jeder redet.

Vieles weist darauf hin, dass Gristinas Kunden aus den obersten Kreisen der New Yorker Gesellschaft stammten. So forderte der Staatsanwalt die außergewöhnliche Summe von zwei Millionen Dollar Kaution für Gristina. Seine Begründung: „Es gibt zahlreiche überaus wohlhabende und einflussreiche Menschen, die ein großes Interesse daran haben, diesen Prozess zu verhindern und die ihr bei der Flucht helfen würden."

Der Daily News sind zudem aufgezeichnete Telefongespräche zugespielt worden, in denen Gristina mit ihren hochrangigen Kontakten geprahlt hat. Sie kenne jemanden, der dem FBI-Direktor sehr nahe stehe, sagte sie in Telefonaten mit einer Freundin. So nahe, dass man ihr im Jahr 2008, als der New Yorker Gouverneur Eliot Spitzer wegen eines Prostitutionsskandals aufflog, empfahl, doch für ein paar Wochen das Land zu verlassen.

Im Mai wird man wohl auch erfahren, ob Spitzer Kunde bei Gristina war. Fest steht jedoch schon jetzt, dass die oberen Zehntausend der New Yorker Society eindeutig die Zielgruppe von „Anna Scotland“ waren, wie sie sich im Gewerbe nannte.

Für eine Stunde in der 78. Straße blätterten die Kunden 800 Dollar hin, berichtete die ehemalige Angestellte von Gristina der Daily News. Doch meistens seien sie deutlich länger geblieben. Und auch beim Trinkgeld seien sie nicht knauserig gewesen. Fünf- bis sechstausend Dollar pro Nacht zu verdienen, sei nicht ungewöhnlich gewesen.

Drogen und Alkohol sind tabu

Doch die Dienstleistungen von Gristinas Imperium waren nicht auf das Haus an der Eastside beschränkt. Es sei nicht selten vorgekommen, dass man für ein Wochenende im Landhaus eines Kunden gebucht wurde. Oder sogar als Begleitung für eine Geschäftsreise nach Europa oder Asien. Einmal, erinnert sich die Informantin, sei sie mit einem Gast nach Italien gejettet, um mit ihm zusammen dort ein Ferienhaus auszusuchen. Für solche Exkursionen hätte sie bis zu 25.000 Dollar kassiert.

Um solche Preise verlangen zu können, hatte Anna Gristina allerhöchste Ansprüche an ihre Damen. Sie mussten gebildet sein und sich gut kleiden, Drogen und Alkohol waren tabu. Und die Figur musste makellos sein: „Sie hat Mädchen rausgeschmissen, wenn sie drei oder vier Kilo zu viel auf den Rippen hatten.“

Gristina selbst ließ sich derweil praktisch nie selbst in der 78. Straße blicken. Sie betrieb ihr Multimillionen-Dollar-Unternehmen fast komplett vom Schreibtisch ihres Hauses in Monroe aus, wo sie mit ihrem Mann und ihren vier Kindern lebte. Nach außen führte sie eine unauffällige Existenz als Ehefrau und Mutter. Sie fuhr in Jeans ihre Kinder zur Schule und feuerte sie bei ihren Fußballspielen an und pflegte leidenschaftlich ihren Garten. Sogar Schweinchen und Hühner hielt sie sich, mit denen die Kinder spielen konnten.

Nun sitzt sie erst einmal auf der Gefängnisinsel Rikers Island im East River und tüftelt gemeinsam mit ihrem Anwalt ihre Verteidigungstaktik aus. Und direkt gegenüber, in den Bürotürmen von Manhattan, wüssten einige Manager nur zu gerne, was dort geredet wird.


Quelle: http://www.fr-online.de/panorama/bordel ... easer.html
love people, use things - not the other way round

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RE: LokalNachrichten: NEW YORK CITY (U.S.A.)

Beitrag von fraences »

The same day they arrested accused Upper East Side madam Anna Gristina, Manhattan DA investigators raided her 78th Street “brothel” and stripped it of what they consider to be vital evidence — hairbrushes and toothbrushes, The Post has learned.
“They could potentially be used for DNA testing, hair analysis to identify people who have been using that location,” Assistant District Attorney Elizabeth Roper told a judge last month, according to court documents obtained by The Post.
The DA’s official corruption unit specifically asked Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan to sign a search warrant authorizing the tooth and hairbrush seizures.


GET A CLUE: Investigators seized hairbrushes and toothbrushes from the East 78th Street apartment allegedly used by Anna Gristina (above) as a brothel for the wealthy.

The one-bedroom apartment of ill repute was raided Feb. 22, as was Gristina’s upstate Monroe farmhouse.
The DNA evidence could be used to bolster a case against either hookers or some of the million-dollar johns who allegedly patronized the pleasure palace.
Gristina has said she refused to give up information about possible big-bucks clients to investigators during an hours-long grilling.
In an exclusive jailhouse interview with The Post, the accused Hockey Mom Madam recounted how a revolving team of investigators, each increasingly higher in rank, showed her a list of about 10 names and demanded she cough up information on them.
She said she knew some of the names, describing them as bigwigs in investment banking, real estate and business, but said she refused to talk and that prosecutors seemed to be “fishing” for information.
She demanded a lawyer and they arrested her shortly after that, the mom of four said.
Meanwhile, Gristina will have a new set of clothes, and possibly a new lawyer, when she returns to court today for a bail hearing.
News of the looming changes emerged yesterday after the jailed Scottish woman got a Rikers Island visit from husband Kelvin Gorr, who huddled outside the prison with a new criminal defense lawyer, Gary Greenwald, before heading into the big house with a bag of new clothes for his wife.
Gorr said he brought the new outfit so his wife “doesn’t have to wear that herringbone jacket” she’s worn to her last two court appearances.
The husband referred to Greenwald — who has repped mobster Vincent “Chin” Gigante — as his wife’s “lawyer” but didn’t elaborate.
“I have not been formally hired as of yet,” the Westchester-based Greenwald told The Post.
Greenwald said he plans to be in court today, where Merchan — the same judge who signed off on the brothel brush seizure — has said he will decide whether to release the accused madam on $2 million bond.


http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/brus ... NeHlF6xUoO

Anna Gristina, die Escortagenturinhaberin die Aussage verweigert, werden zu Feststellung der Identität der Callgirls werden DNA Proben von Zahnbürsten und Harbürsten von der Strafverfolgungsbehörden genommen.
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

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Fakten und Infos über Prostitution

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RE: LokalNachrichten: NEW YORK CITY (U.S.A.)

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Illegale Prostitution in New York Kondome sind kein Beweismittel mehr

Mit Ausnahme von Nevada ist Prostitution in den USA strafbar.


Prostitution ist in den USA größtenteils illegal. Bislang konnte die New Yorker Polizei Verdächtige anhand von unbenutzten Kondomen überführen. Diese umstrittene Praxis ist nun unzulässig.

Der Besitz unbenutzter Kondome wird in New York nicht länger als Beweis für illegale Prostitution herangezogen. Wie die Polizeichef William Bratton ankündigte, sollen Beamte bei Ermittlungen gegen Sexarbeiter die Beschlagnahme von Präservativen unterlassen. Eine Ausnahme bestehe beim Verdacht auf organisierten Menschenhandel.

Hintergrund ist Kritik von Bürgerrechtsgruppen, die die bisherige Praxis als destruktiv im Kampf gegen Aids und andere sexuell übertragbare Krankheiten bezeichneten. So gebe New York jährlich mehr als eine Millionen Dollar für kostenlose Kondome aus. Zudem sahen viele das Vorgehen der Polizei als Nötigung.http://www.n24.de/n24/Nachrichten/Panor ... -mehr.html
Wer glaubt ein Christ zu sein, weil er die Kirche besucht, irrt sich.Man wird ja auch kein Auto, wenn man in eine Garage geht. (Albert Schweitzer)

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Fakten und Infos über Prostitution