New Orleans Escorts: Cafe helps Saints’ Strief satisfy hunger to help
December 31, 2011
She spoke of one young man who quickly went AWOL from his internship at the Roosevelt Hotel, where populist Gov. Huey Long was known to stay when he visited New Orleans many years ago.
“We called him up, like, `What’s going on?’ And he says, `I don’t belong there. I don’t fit in.’
“It was like his world was so different,” Specha said, noting that the person eventually returned to the program and now works full-time as a doorman at the hotel. “Some of them still feel like, `I’m not worthy enough. I’m not good enough. Nobody’s ever treated me like this. Nobody’s ever given me a safe place.’”
There’s now a waiting list to get into Cafe Reconcile’s program, although an expansion is under way at its headquarters in the city’s Central City neighborhood, which is starting to show the early signs of renaissance. For years, the area was overrun by drug dealing, prostitution, and violent crime.
See the full article from “BusinessWeek”
New Orleans Escorts: Cafe helps Saints’ Strief satisfy hunger to help
December 31, 2011
She spoke of one young man who quickly went AWOL from his internship at the Roosevelt Hotel, where populist Gov. Huey Long was known to stay when he visited New Orleans many years ago.
“We called him up, like, `What’s going on?’ And he says, `I don’t belong there. I don’t fit in.’
“It was like his world was so different,” Specha said, noting that the person eventually returned to the program and now works full-time as a doorman at the hotel. “Some of them still feel like, `I’m not worthy enough. I’m not good enough. Nobody’s ever treated me like this. Nobody’s ever given me a safe place.’”
There’s now a waiting list to get into Cafe Reconcile’s program, although an expansion is under way at its headquarters in the city’s Central City neighborhood, which is starting to show the early signs of renaissance. For years, the area was overrun by drug dealing, prostitution, and violent crime.
New Orleans Strip Clubs: New Year’s Eve at La Casa
December 30, 2011
… Going to La Casa” meant a night of boozing, conga drum banging and dancing dances you never thought you knew with women you never knew. It also meant rubbing shoulders with motorcycle gang members, anti-Castro Cuban revolutionaries (many of whom eventually wound up stranded or dead on the beaches at the Bay of Pigs), transvestites, physicians, nurses, high school classmates (nobody checked anybody’s ID at La Casa), strippers from Bourbon Street, Mafiosi and Mafiosi wannabes and characters who would become part of late District Attorney Jim Garrison’s “Kennedy Assassination Trial” circus. In short, anybody who was anybody – or nobody, for that matter – sooner or later wound up at the iconic bar, La Casa de Los Marinos, at the corner of Decatur and Toulouse. However, no need to go through all those tongue twisting gyrations. If you said simply, “La Casa,” you said it all.
New Orleans Escorts: New Orleans Saint Zach Strief’s hunger to help is satisfied at Cafe Reconcile
December 26, 2011
She spoke of one young man who quickly went AWOL from his internship at the Roosevelt Hotel, where populist Gov. Huey Long was known to stay when he visited New Orleans many years ago.
“We called him up, like, ‘What’s going on?’ And he says, ‘I don’t belong there. I don’t fit in.’
“It was like his world was so different,” Specha said, noting that the young man eventually returned to the program and now works full-time as a doorman at the hotel. “Some of them still feel like, ‘I’m not worthy enough. I’m not good enough. Nobody’s ever treated me like this. Nobody’s ever given me a safe place.’”
There’s now a waiting list to get into Café Reconcile’s program, although an expansion is under way at its headquarters in the city’s Central City neighborhood, which is starting to show the early signs of renaissance. For years, the area was overrun by drug dealing, prostitution and violent crime.
See the full article from “NOLA.com”
New Orleans Escorts: Cafe helps Saints’ Strief satisfy hunger to help
December 23, 2011
She spoke of one young man who quickly went AWOL from his internship at the Roosevelt Hotel, where populist Gov. Huey Long was known to stay when he visited New Orleans many years ago.
“We called him up, like, `What’s going on?’ And he says, `I don’t belong there. I don’t fit in.’
“It was like his world was so different,” Specha said, noting that the person eventually returned to the program and now works full-time as a doorman at the hotel. “Some of them still feel like, `I’m not worthy enough. I’m not good enough. Nobody’s ever treated me like this. Nobody’s ever given me a safe place.’”
There’s now a waiting list to get into Cafe Reconcile’s program, although an expansion is under way at its headquarters in the city’s Central City neighborhood, which is starting to show the early signs of renaissance. For years, the area was overrun by drug dealing, prostitution, and violent crime.
See the full article from “STLtoday.com”
New Orleans Adult Entertainment: New rules for Jefferson Parish motels are aimed at curbing prostitution, drugs
December 22, 2011
New rules for Jefferson Parish motels are aimed at curbing prostitution, drugs
Published: Thursday, December 22, 2011, 7:55 PM Updated: Thursday, December 22, 2011, 8:02 PM
Jefferson Parish’s Planning Advisory Board on Thursday recommended the adoption of new rules for motels and hotels, including requirements that guests provide identification, aimed at curbing prostitution, drug deals and other crimes. The Planning Advisory Board unanimously voted in favor of the plan, proposed by the Planning Department and based on a U.S. Department of Justice study on crime at motels and hotels.
Times-Picayune archiveThe Sugar Bowl Motel, right, and Rainbow Motel, center, on Airline Drive were torn down in September, and will be replaced by a CVS pharmacy. Parish officials had targeted the motels and several others as the site of illegal activities.
See the full article from “NOLA.com”
New Orleans Escorts: Cafe helps Saints’ Strief satisfy hunger to help
December 22, 2011
She spoke of one young man who quickly went AWOL from his internship at the Roosevelt Hotel, where populist Gov. Huey Long was known to stay when he visited New Orleans many years ago.
“We called him up, like, `What’s going on?’ And he says, `I don’t belong there. I don’t fit in.’
“It was like his world was so different,” Specha said, noting that the person eventually returned to the program and now works full-time as a doorman at the hotel. “Some of them still feel like, `I’m not worthy enough. I’m not good enough. Nobody’s ever treated me like this. Nobody’s ever given me a safe place.’”
There’s now a waiting list to get into Cafe Reconcile’s program, although an expansion is under way at its headquarters in the city’s Central City neighborhood, which is starting to show the early signs of renaissance. For years, the area was overrun by drug dealing, prostitution, and violent crime.
See the full article from “The Southern”
New Orleans Escorts: Café helps Saints’ Strief satisfy hunger to help
December 22, 2011
She spoke of one young man who quickly went AWOL from his internship at the Roosevelt Hotel, where populist Gov. Huey Long was known to stay when he visited New Orleans many years ago.
“We called him up, like, ‘What’s going on?’ And he says, ‘I don’t belong there. I don’t fit in.’
“It was like his world was so different,” Specha said, noting that the person eventually returned to the program and now works full-time as a doorman at the hotel. “Some of them still feel like, ‘I’m not worthy enough. I’m not good enough. Nobody’s ever treated me like this. Nobody’s ever given me a safe place.’”
There’s now a waiting list to get into Café Reconcile’s program, although an expansion is under way at its headquarters in the city’s Central City neighborhood, which is starting to show the early signs of renaissance. For years, the area was overrun by drug dealing, prostitution, and violent crime.
New Orleans Adult Entertainment: Naughty Santas, Drunken Rescues, Grave-kit Robbers
December 19, 2011
Each week, Patch takes a peek at some of the more surprising, shocking, stunning and occasionally silly police-related incidents reported throughout New Jersey for “OMGs from NJ PDs.”
Some of this week’s reports:
Feeling Possessive: The right way to dispute a vehicle repossession is to take it up with the creditor, or even legal authorities if you think the creditor’s out of line. But the wrong way is to make a getaway with the car and run over the repo man’s foot. Toms River police say a resident chose poorly when faced with that particular set of options.
Ho Ho Ho? Against a backdrop of Christmas music piped in from the downtown public address system, Collingswood police detectives and officers from the Camden County Prosecutor’s Office executed a search warrant on Zheng Salon, where they took two people into custody because of alleged prostitution at the business. Zheng offered massage, waxing and nails services, but police say customers got a lot more.
See the full article from “Patch.com”
New Orleans Adult Entertainment: Man gets prison for soliciting sex from FBI agent posing as teen girl | The …
December 15, 2011
NEW ORLEANS — An illegal immigrant from Honduras has been sentenced to more than 10 years in prison for soliciting sex over the Internet from an undercover FBI agent posing as a 15-year-old girl.
U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt on Wednesday sentenced 30-year-old Dennis Sorto-Enamorado, of Metairie, to 121 months in prison followed by a lifetime of supervised release.
In August, a jury convicted Sorto-Enamorado of attempting to coerce a minor into having sex and attempting to receive child pornography from a minor.
Prosecutors say he was arrested last year after he drove to a New Orleans hotel for what he thought was a meeting with a girl who had responded to a classified ad he posted on Craigslist.
See the full article from “The Republic”