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R. Richard

Literotica Guru
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This is a Yahoo article I ripped off. It offers a little of a view into legalized prostitution. Comments? [By the way, the establishment nameed is actually called the "Moonlight Bunny Ranch" and it is regarded as one of the top end establishments in Nevada.]

Nevada gives legalized prostitution uneasy embrace
By Adam Tanner

MOUND HOUSE, Nevada (Reuters) - In a small Nevada town, a sign at the end of a poorly lighted street lined with warehouses bears an unusual message: "Warning-Sexual entertainment 300 yards ahead. If sex offends you, get out of here."

At the Bunny Ranch in Mound House, men travel many miles to spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars to have sex in the only U.S. state to allow legal brothels.

Yet even in permissive Nevada, legal prostitution operates at the margins of society and, unlike other vices such as gambling and pornography, without mainstream America's embrace. The brothel owners themselves disagree whether to stay in the shadows or trumpet their services.

At the Bunny Ranch, where an outspoken owner has actively sought publicity, several women expressed ambiguity about work that is completely legal, with earnings reported to U.S. tax authorities.

"We live in a world bound by conservative religious individuals who look down on what I do," said a 29-year-old single mother from Oregon who said she became a "working lady" after a divorce.

Because she would eventually like to work in business or marketing, she uses a brothel name of Olivia Bentley to hide her true identity.

"I'd like to be something else. I don't want to stereotype myself," she said. "Do you really want to be known for that? Unfortunately, I don't know if I would be taken seriously."

The lure for many women is good money.

"Look, I just made $500 and that was for 15 minutes," Shelly Duschel, 31, a nine-year veteran of the profession, said during a pause between clients on a recent night. She spoke in a dark red lounge area where visitors choose among the women before going to a private back room.

With half of all earnings going to the brothel, Duschel said she earns about $10,000 a month, but has pulled in as much as $30,000 monthly. Cheaper brothels might charge as little as $100 per visitor, industry officials say.

Despite the good money, Duschel plans to retire soon and concentrate on developing her artistic talents and her personal life. "It's very hard to have a relationship," she said. "I'd like to find a good man."

VERY FINE LINE

Prostitution was a staple of the Wild West, but gradually officials moved against well-known brothels. Nevada, which prides itself on a libertarian attitude, opened the door for its counties to license brothels in 1970.

Las Vegas and Reno bar legal brothels, although illegal sex for sale there is commonplace. Nevada counties that allow the only legal U.S. brothels prohibit advertising and set other stringent rules.

"There is a line, a very fine line," said George Flint, the long-time lobbyist for Nevada's brothels. "When it really comes down to intimate sexual contact, it has not been and I don't think it ever will be, for lack of a better word, routine."

"You're not going to see states saying, 'Nevada's got a good idea there, let's copy them."'

Concern about that fine line has caused a rift between Bunny Ranch owner Dennis Hof, who has allowed HBO to film a documentary series at his brothel, and other owners.

"Are we going to expose ourselves like Dennis to the point that people are going rub us out of existence?" said Flint. "The less we are going to have people thinking about it, the longer we are going to survive."

Susan Austin, the madam at the Wild Horse Adult Resort & Spa outside Reno, agreed. "It will never have total mainstream acceptance," she said. Hof "is doing it all in the ways that are offensive to the majority of the people."

Austin, 55, is by no means a shrinking violet. A former prostitute, she says she had sex with as many as 15 different men a day, seven days a week, for six months during the busiest part of her career. She insists that she enjoyed the sex and said the proceeds paid for her son's college education.

Hof scorns his fellow owners for their low-key approach, and did not even want to be mentioned in an article that included other brothels. "I'm single-handedly trying to sanitize this vice," he said. "I'm on a mission."

"A high-profile approach brings higher-quality girls and better-quality customers."

WARY POLITICIANS

Many state politicians prefer to sidestep the issue. In an interview, Nevada Gov. Kenny Guinn danced around several questions on the topic before adding: "I'd prefer not to have it at all in the state of Nevada."

"Politicians tread lightly on this issue; they don't want it to be brought up," said Barbara Brents, a sociologist at he University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who is writing a book on prostitution.

At the same time Nevada legislative proposals or voter initiatives to curtail the world's oldest profession have failed over the past two decades.

"We thought it would be best to keep it out of our community," said Alan Perazzo, a dairy farmer who campaigned unsuccessfully in 2004 to bar prostitution in his county. "They didn't want to be told what to do."

Sociologist Brents said if successful, an announced effort by "Hollywood Madam" Heidi Fleiss to open a brothel catering to women could help win wider public acceptance.

Supporters say state requirements that customers wear condoms and women undergo regular health checks make brothels far more desirable than street walking. Customers are also subject to an anatomical check for signs of disease.

"I used to work illegally in Vegas," said a 20-year-old woman who uses the name Bunny Love at the Bunny Ranch. "It's a lot more dangerous."

The Oregon native seemed to be in good spirits and said she had earned $8,000 over the past week. Her parents, however, do not know about her work.

Industry officials say disease and violence are rare in legal brothels. Flint said that since testing began in the mid-1980s, no legal prostitute has ever become HIV positive; he estimates half a million legal paid sex acts are performed annually in Nevada.

Wild Horse madam Austin does carry a gun, but many prostitutes appeared more concerned about how they were treated outside the brothel.

"One of the biggest problems prostitutes face is not abuse by their customers, but the broader stigma from society," said sociologist Brents. But "I think the trend is toward more openness."
 
And what is your point of posting this? Must be a slow news day.

As a resident of Nevada, I for one get tired of seeing these articles...which seem to resurrect themselves two or three times a year...

Prostitution is illegal in Clark County , Washoe County, Douglas County, and Lincoln County. This includes Las Vegas, Reno, and Carson city.

Only counties with populations below 400,000 have the option of legalized brothels according to NRS 244.345

NRS 244.345 Dancing halls, escort services, entertainment by referral services and gambling games or devices; limitation on licensing of houses of prostitution.

1. Every natural person wishing to be employed as an entertainer for an entertainment by referral service and every natural person, firm, association of persons or corporation wishing to engage in the business of conducting a dancing hall, escort service, entertainment by referral service or gambling game or device permitted by law, outside of an incorporated city, must:

(a) Make application to the license board of the county in which the employment or business is to be engaged in, for a county license of the kind desired. The application must be in a form prescribed by the regulations of the license board.

(b) File the application with the required license fee with the county license collector, as provided in chapter 364 of NRS, who shall present the application to the license board at its next regular meeting.

Ê The board, in counties whose population is less than 400,000, may refer the petition to the sheriff, who shall report upon it at the following regular meeting of the board. In counties whose population is 400,000 or more, the board shall refer the petition to the metropolitan police department. The department shall conduct an investigation relating to the petition and report its findings to the board at the next regular meeting of the board. The board shall at that meeting grant or refuse the license prayed for or enter any other order consistent with its regulations. Except in the case of an application for a license to conduct a gambling game or device, the county license collector may grant a temporary permit to an applicant, valid only until the next regular meeting of the board. In unincorporated towns and cities governed pursuant to the provisions of chapter 269 of NRS, the license board has the exclusive power to license and regulate the employment and businesses mentioned in this subsection.

2. The board of county commissioners, and in a county whose population is less than 400,000, the sheriff of that county constitute the license board, and the county clerk or other person designated by the license board is the clerk thereof, in the respective counties of this state.

3. The license board may, without further compensation to the board or its clerk:

(a) Fix, impose and collect license fees upon the employment and businesses mentioned in this section.

(b) Grant or deny applications for licenses and impose conditions, limitations and restrictions upon the licensee.

(c) Adopt, amend and repeal regulations relating to licenses and licensees.

(d) Restrict, revoke or suspend licenses for cause after hearing. In an emergency the board may issue an order for immediate suspension or limitation of a license, but the order must state the reason for suspension or limitation and afford the licensee a hearing.

4. The license board shall hold a hearing before adopting proposed regulations, before adopting amendments to regulations, and before repealing regulations relating to the control or the licensing of the employment or businesses mentioned in this section. Notice of the hearing must be published in a newspaper published and having general circulation in the county at least once a week for 2 weeks before the hearing.

5. Upon adoption of new regulations the board shall designate their effective date, which may not be earlier than 15 days after their adoption. Immediately after adoption a copy of any new regulations must be available for public inspection during regular business hours at the office of the county clerk.

6. Except as otherwise provided in NRS 241.0355, a majority of the members constitutes a quorum for the transaction of business.

7. Any natural person, firm, association of persons or corporation who engages in the employment of any of the businesses mentioned in this section without first having obtained the license and paid the license fee as provided in this section is guilty of a misdemeanor.

8. In a county whose population is 400,000 or more, the license board shall not grant any license to a petitioner for the purpose of operating a house of ill fame or repute or any other business employing any person for the purpose of prostitution.

9. As used in this section:

(a) “Entertainer for an entertainment by referral service” means a natural person who is sent or referred for a fee to a hotel or motel room, home or other accommodation by an entertainment by referral service for the purpose of entertaining the person located in the hotel or motel room, home or other accommodation.

(b) “Entertainment by referral service” means a person or group of persons who send or refer another person to a hotel or motel room, home or other accommodation for a fee in response to a telephone or other request for the purpose of entertaining the person located in the hotel or motel room, home or other accommodation.

[1:50:1923; NCL § 2037] + [2:50:1923; NCL § 2038] + [3:50:1923; NCL § 2039] + [4:50:1923; NCL § 2040]—(NRS A 1959, 838; 1961, 364; 1971, 11; 1973, 923; 1975, 562; 1979, 20, 305, 511, 728, 730, 732, 733; 1989, 1899; 1991, 166; 2001, 1124)
 
Actually, I was hoping that the paparazzi had caught Hillary Clinton having sex with a dog. However, no such luck. So, since it was a slow news day . . .

While you are technically correct about the restriction of bordellos to counties of less than 400,000 population, the counties in Nevada are arranged so that bordellos are located not too far from the major cities [with the possible exception of Las Vegas. However, a bellman in Las Vegas can get you a whore with very little delay, 24 hours a day. Don't just take my word for it, try it yourself!]

Actually, I just wanted to see what the reaction of a group like Literotica authors would be to the story.
 
R. Richard said:
Actually, I was hoping that the paparazzi had caught Hillary Clinton having sex with a dog. However, no such luck. So, since it was a slow news day . . .

While you are technically correct about the restriction of bordellos to counties of less than 400,000 population, the counties in Nevada are arranged so that bordellos are located not too far from the major cities [with the possible exception of Las Vegas. However, a bellman in Las Vegas can get you a whore with very little delay, 24 hours a day. Don't just take my word for it, try it yourself!]

Actually, I just wanted to see what the reaction of a group like Literotica authors would be to the story.

I would think a bellman in any city can get you a whore...I do not think that this is a situation unique to Las Vegas...

I don't think the county borders were set up for the convenience of brothel operators...There are only two major cities in Nevada, Las Vegas, and Reno, with Carson City coming in at a long third...
 
How can you omit Rachel Nevada from a list of major cities in Nevada? [I am assuming the inclusion of aliens along with the count of the human population.]
 
R. Richard said:
How can you omit Rachel Nevada from a list of major cities in Nevada? [I am assuming the inclusion of aliens along with the count of the human population.]

But would ETs use human prostitutes, when it is probably legal on their own planets? :D
 
SEVERUSMAX said:
But would ETs use human prostitutes, when it is probably legal on their own planets? :D

Hey man, "The grass is always greener . . ."
 
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