Tucson Escorts: Two people are behind bars after encouraging a 14-year-old girl to solicit sex

Tucson, Ariz. (KGUN9-TV) - Less than two weeks ago, a Tucson police officer spotted a young girl walking along 6th Avenue, appearing to be soliciting sex. He learned she was a runaway from Phoenix, where she met up with a man named David, and four other girls. TPD’s Sergeant Fabian Pacheco told KGUN 9, “They were training her to be a prostitute.”
The runaway, was only 14 years old.  The girl’s parents notified Phoenix police that their child had run away. Days later, they hired a private investigator. Even though the girl was found by an officer, Pacheco tells KGUN 9, a parent has a better chance of finding their child… if they hire a P. I.
So I asked him.. ”If a parent doesn’t hire a private investigator, then what’s the standard protocol with law enforcement… does it mean a parent’s runaway may be more likely to slip through the cracks?”

Police arrested two girls, and charged them with child prostitution. They say the ringleader got away.

See the full article from “KGUN”

Tucson Escorts: LAWS ARE NOT MADE TO PICK AND CHOOSE

The issue of Illegal Immigration is no different in terms of law. These laws
are on the books to maintain civility, safety and order in our nation and have
to be treated as instruments of maintaining peace, harmony and civility to
our society.
The issue of Illegal Immigration is no different.  Those who enter our country
illegally should have to pay the price for breaking the law.
As a person who has had the privilege of living in Southern California during
the late 60’s and 70’s, I can say without any reservations that many communities
there have taken a nosedive in status since then, and have been transformed from
desirable beautiful communities where one would be proud to live to cities
where drugs are ramped, gang violence is an overgrowing presence,
prostitution is part of the daily scene and neglect of overall appearance is
now accepted as common normalcy.

See the full article from “The Cypress Times”

Tucson Escorts: 2 indicted for pushing Phoenix girl into prostitution

TUCSON
, Ariz. (
) — A Pima County grand jury has indicted two women suspected of encouraging a teenage Phoenix runaway to prostitute herself in Tucson.
Prosecutors say 24-year-old Moraima Guadalupe Selig and 18-year-old Whitley Alicia Minter have been jailed and charged with child prostitution of a minor under 15. If convicted, prosecutors say the women could each be facing prison sentences of up to 27 years.
A Tucson police patrol officer spotted the 14-year-old girl apparently soliciting on a Tucson street April 24. When questioned, the teen admitted she was the missing girl from Phoenix and was being trained as a prostitute.
Police say the girl has been reunited with her parents, who had hired a private investigator to look for her.

See the full article from “Sierra Vista Herald”

Tucson Escorts: Migra! A History of the US Border Patrol

The rapid expansion of early agribusiness brought increasing numbers of migrant workers. Landowners, eager to profit from the agricultural boom, had access to various sources of labor. They hired California Indians and Chinese immigrants to fill the task. However few American Indians survived the 1880’s genocidal campaign against them and the landowners became dependent on Chinese labor.
Ultimately the large immigration of Chinese labor along the U.S.-Mexico borderlands threatened to take over much of the agribusiness and this brought about the first immigration law, “Anti-Coolie Act of 1862.”
From these adverse beginnings Congress dispatched Immigration Acts for the next several decades prohibiting “lunatics, idiots, convicts, polygamists, epileptics, anarchists, beggars, imbeciles and feeble-minded persons.”
New guidelines on who was prohibited from entering the United States now included all Asians, illiterates, prostitutes, criminals, contract laborers, unaccompanied children paupers, the diseased and defective, alcoholics and, beggars.

See the full article from “Huffington Post (blog)”

Tucson Escorts: Napolitano: Border could be ‘more safe’

An official with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said “it’s too early” to say whether any signs were missed in Shahzad’s naturalization process. But the official acknowledged that any screening is just “a snapshot in time” and can’t catch everything.
“This is just one of those realities that we face,” the official said.
While the citizenship process is rigorous and takes about four months, there are areas it can miss.
Take foreign travel.
The main citizenship form asks applicants for a five-year history of their travel outside the United States. It also asks a series of questions about the applicant’s criminal and personal background, including whether they have ever been a member of a terror group; ever advocated for the overthrow of any government by force; ever been a part of the Nazi government; ever been a prostitute; ever been “a habitual drunkard”; ever been a polygamist; ever committed a crime but not arrested; or ever lied to get into the United States.

See the full article from “Immigration Blog”

Tucson Adult Entertainment: Arizona Immigration law dividing GOP

Unaware that a large minority of conservatives and republicans actually possess principles, the wing-nut racist who crafted the law and the Neo-Nazi affiliated State Senator who sponsored it were clueless in respect to the fact many republicans would repudiate it. They rightly see it as an attempt to deprive Americans of a basic constitutional precept, LIBERTY which in practical terms, means the right of Americans to walk down the street, confident they lived in a Republic where the police were prohibited from stopping them at random to demand they show their papers.
I commend the members of the GOP who displayed moral character in denouncing this law for what it really is, the befouled and rancid issue of soulless political prostitutes who wake each day eager to exploit fear and profit on the misery of others. Responsible liberals, conservatives and independents agree its way past time we reform this Nations immigration policy.

See the full article from “Examiner.com”

Tucson Escorts: A brief history of immigration

Below, a timeline of major legal changes:
1790: The first federal law on naturalization, which had previously been under the control of the individual states, establishes uniform rules by setting the residence requirement at two years.
1802: Law establishes basic requirements for naturalization, including good moral character, allegiance to the Constitution, a formal declaration of intention, and testimony from witnesses. 1862: An act prohibits the transportation of Chinese “coolies” on American ships. 1864: The first Commissioner of Immigration appointed by President to serve under the Secretary of State. An act authorizes immigrant labor contracts whereby would-be immigrants would pledge their wages to pay for transportation (repealed in 1868).
1875: An act prohibits the entry of undesirable immigrants for the first time, excluding criminals, prostitutes, and Asians transported without their free and voluntary consent.

See the full article from “Congress.org (blog)”

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