Trickrolling in Las Vegas is a multi-million dollar business, Pimps and Prostitutes are getting paid!!

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**Remember these are only from the REPORTED police reports... how many guys DONT report?**

People in the company of Clark County prostitutes collectively reported having $1.4 million in cash and goods stolen from them during the first nine months of this year — dupes of a larceny genre better known to police as the “trick roll.”

By year’s end, it’s estimated the total reported losses will exceed $2 million — almost double last year’s total, and probably a fraction of the real amount.

How many people file police reports, after all, when their prostitutes disappoint?

Enough, at least, for Metro vice detectives to determine the problem is getting worse, and assign two detectives to trick roll investigations exclusively. They’ve gotten roughly one case every day this year. In 2007 it was more like one a week.

That increase could have something to do with the economy. Fewer tourists with less money means supply exceeds demand. Prices drop and competition ratchets up for prostitutes, many of whom police say must meet nightly quotas set by pimps. Metro Sgt. Donald Hoier, though, says the problem picked up before the economy fell, simply because Clark County was saturated with sex workers and outlets for illicit entertainment.

When everybody scrambles for the same pool of money, bad seeds take short cuts.

Consider the reported losses Hoier reads from a list of cases: $10,000 in cash, casino chips and a laptop; $30,000 in cash and chips; $20,000 Rolex; $6,000 Rolex; $5,000 cash; and — perhaps the most interesting, a case Hoier can only hint at — $175,000 in casino chips.

These are preposterous amounts, which is probably why they were reported in the first place.

Sometimes these are crimes of opportunity. A watch is left out, a laptop is folded in the corner.

But there are prostitutes for whom sex is only a pretext to theft, and others who have no intention of sleeping with their clients, Hoier said. They know how to exploit angles and mirrors to see safe codes being punched, while others, Hoier says, actually become good at identifying the tones assigned to each number on the key pads.

“While he’s in the shower,” Hoier says, “she’s taking everything.”

Drugs are slipped into drinks. Clients are escorted to ATMs for payment, only to find their cards have been stolen by someone who surreptitiously saw the pin number. Two women come to one room and run lewd tactical diversion.

But sometimes it’s just a matter of violence.

Prostitutes have pulled guns. Pimps, waiting nearby, Hoier says, have beaten people just shy of death.

All of this is easier to accomplish when the target fits a preferred profile: intoxicated and alone.

Susan Lopez, founder of the Las Vegas chapter of the Sex Workers Outreach Project, a national group dedicated to sex workers’ rights, said the economy is definitely a factor in the uptick.

“There are a lot of transient sex workers who come here because they think it’s going to be more profitable,” she said, adding that it’s widely felt that “most of the people who are committing these infractions are pimped women, and women who answer to somebody.”

Women who steal from their clients give a shamed industry a bad name, Lopez said, much to the frustration of local, independent sex workers who take their occupations, and reputations, seriously.

At the same time, however, “the girls kind of feel like it’s the guy’s own stupid fault — when desperate and drunk people get together, they don’t have a good time.”

For the record, Hoier says, trick rolls happen everywhere. High- and low-end casinos, on the street when a prostitute brings a client down a dark alley, and outside strip clubs, when dancers go home with clients.

In one case, a couple having an affair in Las Vegas hired a prostitute. The female client later realized her engagement ring, purchased by her fiancee back home, was stolen.

In a different case, a woman approached local men in nightclubs, spent weeks getting to know them (and the layouts of their homes), then drugged them before executing high-dollar burglaries.

There’s often a gap between the theft and the time it’s discovered, which complicates things for police. Even when clients realize right away, prostitutes have vanished down access stairs and out emergency exits, avoiding notice or handing the goods off to someone else.

Getting people to come forward is another problem. To this end, police carefully explain, misdemeanor crimes, like soliciting a prostitute, only lead to an arrest when they occur in the presence of police. Other trick rolls are never categorized as such, because johns hide their real relationships to the thieves.

When cases are opened, they often reveal other related crimes. Lately, for example, trick rolls are feeding identity theft. Other times, thieving prostitutes lead vice detectives back to violent pimps.

“It happens more than you’d probably think,” Hoier said. “A lot of women would rather steal from these guys than work as prostitutes.”


Read more: http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2009/nov/04/their-valuables-gone-their-ladies-night/#ixzz2MmhWwZNr
 

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CARSON CITY – The state Pardons Board has denied the request for clemency from a female inmate who at age 15 strangled a man in a Las Vegas hotel room while posing as a prostitute in a trick roll caper.

Alisha Burns has served six years and eight months of a life term with parole eligibility after 10 years on the second-degree murder conviction.

Her co-defendant, Steven Kaczmarek, was convicted of first-degree murder and is serving a life term.

Burns told the board, “There is nothing I can say that will justify what I did. I regret it every day.” At age 15, she was the youngest inmate in the female prison. “There is nothing harder than growing up in prison. I did that.”

Attorney Randall Roske, representing Burns, said she has rehabilitated herself. And Burns asked to be immediately eligible to apply for parole.

But Steve Owens, chief criminal deputy in the Clark County District Attorney’s Office, said Burns strangled Pedro Villareal and because of her light weight had to jump up and down on his neck.

He said Kaczmarek got the death penalty but the Nevada Supreme Court ordered a new penalty hearing and he now has a life term without possibility of parole.

Attorneys for Burns said she was under the influence of Kaczmarek, who was 32 at the time when she was 15 years.

Supreme Court Justice Michael Cherry made a motion to grant the request for parole eligibility immediately but he gained only the support of Gov. Jim Gibbons on the board composed of the Supreme Court, the attorney general and the governor.

But the board granted relief to Las Vegas kidnapper Billy Johnson when his victim testified in support of reducing the sentence.

Virginia Hastings told the board that Johnson is a changed man after serving more than 12 years in prison. “He would not do it again,” Hastings said.

It is unusual for a victim to support relief. Johnson received a life term plus consecutive sentences of 60 to 160 months. Under approval by the board, he will be eligible to apply for parole in 2012 and then start serving a five-year term.

Owens opposed the clemency saying Johnson held a drill at the neck of Hastings and said he was going to rape her. She was able to escape before any sexual assault took place.

But in another case, the relatives of the victim may have convinced the board to deny the application of Richard Gaston, convicted of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Mario Wesley who died in August 1993 at the age of 23 in Las Vegas.

Vanetta Wesley and Verchelle Wesley, the mother and sister of the victim, both urged the board not to grant clemency. Verchelle said the persons who murdered her brother did not show mercy. Both cried while giving their testimony and the board voted 8-1 to deny a reduction in sentence that would have made Gaston immediately eligible to apply for parole.

Gaston was one of a group of men who robbed Wesley and another man. The state prison had recommended clemency for Gaston, who has served 16 years and four months.

The board approved relief for killer Kevin Houser, whose two life terms were reduced to 10 years to 25 years. He will be immediately eligible for parole but then will have to start serving a ten-year term.

Houser, who was 16 at the time, and co-defendant Devan Rivera drove Ismael Arevinas into the desert outside Las Vegas where he was shot to death. Rivera, also serving a life term, was angry because Arevinas reportedly "hit" on his girlfriend.

The board also voted 6-2 to reduce the life term without parole to allow Thomas Welch to apply for parole. He has served 20 years and nine months in prison. He stabbed to death another person over a gambling debt in Las Vegas.

The board delayed action on the request of Las Vegas killer Frank S. D’Agostino, sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for the fatal stabbing of Eleanor Panzarella in Las Vegas.

A legal question arose whether the board could reduce the term of D’Agostino and the case will be considered at the April meeting of the pardons board.


Read more: http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/200...cy-woman-trick-roll-strangling/#ixzz2Mmisyjhf
 

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On Feb. 16, Arnulfo Rodriguez was on a hot streak.

He'd been playing blackjack at Caesars Palace and walked out of the casino with $15,000 cash in his pocket.

When the Houston resident took a cab back to his hotel and hooked up with two women, authorities said, Rodriguez's hot streak turned cold.

He ended up in the back seat of a sport utility vehicle, being beaten and robbed by a heavy-set prostitute in what authorities said was a trick roll scheme.

"I went to open the door, and obviously the child lock was on it and I couldn't get out," Rodriguez said. "And that's when she commenced to take my money, attack me."

Authorities said Rodriguez is one of several victims of the scheme headed by Jacquelyn Yearby, who has a prior history of robbing men in Las Vegas.

Yearby was indicted last month by a Clark County grand jury on charges of conspiracy, battery, robbery, first-degree kidnapping and larceny from the person.

Lakrisha Richard, Nifataria Bell and Tineka Knight also were indicted in connection with what authorities portrayed as two separate trick roll incidents.

Rodriguez told the grand jury in the case that he was in Las Vegas for a trade show when he won the money at Caesars.

He took a ride back to Wynn Las Vegas and was immediately approached by two women authorities identified as Yearby and Bell.

"We just discussed going to have a drink," Rodriguez said.

Yearby "is a big girl, kind of heavyset, long black hair, good size lady," Rodriguez said. "And the other one a lot smaller, probably 105 pounds, with distinctive eyes that are real stunning. She almost looked like some sort of Siamese cat. It was just something unusual."

Rodriguez said he went to a bar with the two women and had a drink.

"They wanted to solicit to have some sort of oral sex," Rodriguez said. "They were offering it at the time inside the bar."

Rodriguez said he decided it was time to leave and asked for a ride back to his hotel.

"And now the littler girl started driving, the big one was in the back seat," Rodriguez said.

In the back seat with Yearby, Rodriguez said, the woman started rifling through his pockets, and when he tried to get out of the car, the doors were locked.

"That's when the big one attacked me," Rodriguez said. "I was fighting for my money. She punched me so hard, like she knew what she was doing. She knocked the breath out of me."

Rodriguez said he looked behind him and noticed a third woman in the car he'd never seen before, hiding behind a rear seat.

Eventually, the larger woman got some of his money, then kicked him out of the car, Rodriguez said.

As he recovered in a parking lot on Paradise Road, they returned. All three women emerged from the vehicle and started to beat him and rob him of more money before fleeing, he said.

"The three of them were going after the other $5,000 I had left," Rodriguez said.

After the attack was over, Rodriguez was confident he had retained some of his money. But when he checked his bankroll, he found his wad of hundreds had been replaced with a wad of ones.

Yearby, Richard and Bell were apprehended by police a short distance from the scene.

Las Vegas vice Detective Julie Wise said Yearby and Richard claimed Rodriguez robbed them of jewelry.

But when the detective interviewed Bell, the woman described the trick roll scheme and blamed Yearby.

"I'm not going down for that bitch," police quoted Bell as saying.

She said Yearby had picked up Rodriguez to rob him, and that afterward Yearby had hidden thousands of dollars in her wig. The money was later recovered in Yearby's vehicle.

Police inspected Yearby's purse and said they found five wads of $1 bills, according to authorities.

According to authorities, Yearby and Knight were also involved in the larceny of $4,000 from a tourist at Mandalay Bay.

Tourist Kevin Brooks of Baton Rouge, La., told the grand jury he'd been gambling all night when he was approached by two women who proposed sex for money. They wanted him to prove he wasn't a cop by going to an ATM machine and withdrawing money.

When he did, authorities said, Yearby obtained Brooks' personal identification number and Knight keyed it into her cellular phone.

They then rode up a hotel elevator and Yearby started hugging Brooks aggressively.

"Well, the girls were all over me, so to speak, in the elevator hugging and so on," Brooks said.

But when he got to his hotel room, the girls turned around and left. He later was approached by security, who had been watching the whole incident unfold by surveillance camera.

"(They) asked me if I had been missing any money," Brooks said. "They asked me to check my pockets and said that they believed I was missing some money.

"I found that I was missing roughly $4,000."

His ATM card also was missing.

Police said they found credit cards belonging to two other men in Yearby's possession at the time of the arrest in Rodriguez's case.

Yearby's defense attorney, James "Bucky" Buchanan, acknowledged that Yearby was on probation in Las Vegas for a prior trick roll conviction.

But Buchanan said Yearby is not guilty of the charges against her.

"We'll defend her to the limit of the law, and I feel she'll be vindicated," Buchanan said.

Pictures of the prostitutes here http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2006/May-21-Sun-2006/news/7521377.html
 

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Women who steal from their clients give a shamed industry a bad name, Lopez said, much to the frustration of local, independent sex workers who take their occupations, and reputations, seriously.




Is there anything better in life than a whore with a great reputation?
 

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Women who steal from their clients give a shamed industry a bad name, Lopez said, much to the frustration of local, independent sex workers who take their occupations, and reputations, seriously.




Is there anything better in life than a whore with a great reputation?

haha... thats funny. Even more funny is those that claim to be the best!... What a title to hold!
 

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haha... thats funny. Even more funny is those that claim to be the best!... What a title to hold!

To be truthful, there are whores who operate a great service...........providing sex and company with no intentions whatsoever of robbing them.

You hear the whores with good reputations around the city always bad mouthing the dishonest girls..........I hear them complain almost on a daily basis.
 

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I think if the girls just did what they were paid to do, no one would really have a problem with it... except for wives/girlfriends lol.

Cops would more then likely look the other way, and the casino's security/surveilance would look the other way as well.
 

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Camden County, Mo. -- A prostitution ring was outed this weekend after a plan to steal money from two clients went awry.
Three Sedalia residents were arrested and charged in connection with the incident. Ashley Shidler, 20, Marcus Holley, 31, and 26 year-old Miketyrell Gardner are all currently being held at the Camden County Adult Detention Center.

Shidler told deputies she had what she referred to as a 'date' with two men at Camden on the Lake Friday night. She told officials that she earned $500 during the date. According to Shidler, one of the so called 'johns' suggested that she come back with a friend on Saturday night because he had a lot of cash and they all could have a "real good time." Shidler did return on Saturday night with an associate and a plan to steal all of the cash that the 'john' said he had.

A plan was concocted allegedly by Holley, known as the 'King' or the ringleader of the prostitution bunch. The plan was for Shidler and her associate to get into the 'johns' room, steal the room key, then lure them out of the room and slip the key to Holley and Gardner. Gardner is in the Air Force and is supposedly Holley's cousin. Holley and Gardner were to then use the key to enter the room and steal the cash while the girls '"attended to the 'johns.' "

The plan started to unravel when Shidler's associate decided to not follow protocol. The associate was told about the plan on the way to the lake. She decided she did not want to be a part of stealing any money, but was willing to attend to the men to 'earn' money. The women lured the men out to a hot tub in the pool area where the associate outed the plan to one of the 'johns.' The two men immediately went up to their room and called the police.

Camden County Sheriff's Department officers arrived and arrested the two men and two women. Holley and Gardner were arrested and charged with promoting prostitution with conspiracy to commit stealing. Shidler was charged with prostitution and conspiracy to commit stealing. Shidler's associate was not charged.

During an interview with police, one of the suspects told them that she has been working for Holley for years and gives all the money she makes to him. The prostitution team is said to be out of Sedalia.
 

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Catch her if you can! http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/legs_diamonds_6sNZFKEQiwfmpmZjBmx5aI

This is the savvy prostitute who allegedly swiped half a million dollars worth of uncut diamonds from a hapless gem trader — caught on surveillance video as she made her barefoot getaway from a Manhattan hotel, police say.

Erika Cooper, 34 — a k a Bianca Williams — is now the target of an NYPD manhunt for allegedly pulling off the April 17 heist at the Cosmopolitan Hotel, where she waited until her john Kurt Kaiser fell asleep before she fled with his loot.

Her big mistake was giving Kaiser her real phone number, which cops have used to identify her and dig up mug shots from an earlier prostitution bust, a police source said.



NYPD handout

Erika Cooper is being sought in the theft of diamonds.

When reached yesterday, Kaiser still sounded enamored of the woman who cleaned him out. He confirmed that she’s the one in the NYPD photos and said, “She was young, hot, beautiful face, but flat-chested.”

The 5-foot-9, 120-pound Cooper, who has brown eyes, jet-black hair and pouty lips, first met Kaiser at the Whiskey Park bar on Central Park South.

Wearing a sexy short black skirt and high-heel pumps, she sidled up to Kaiser as he guzzled vodka and sodas after losing out on a deal to sell more than $500,000 worth of stones, all uninsured.

Kaiser told cops that Cooper chatted him up for 45 minutes and suggested the Cosmopolitan — after a pit stop at CVS for condoms and a $500 gift card.

He claimed yesterday there’s no record of him paying for the gift card.

Kaiser, who is unmarried and lives in Forest Hills, Queens, believes he was drugged. He passed out after sex and she was gone when he woke up.

Cooper, who previously gave cops a Manhattan address that doesn’t exist, has two prior prostitution arrests from 2007 — including one at the swanky Four Seasons, law-enforcement sources said.

Kaiser, who had two partners who were also burned by the theft, initially offered a $5,000 reward for the diamonds but yesterday said he was pulling it back.

The NYPD is asking anyone with information to call Crimestoppers at (800) 577-TIPS. All calls are strictly confidential.
 

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A Dover man with a long rap sheet in several states was sentenced today to eight years in state prison for a theft in connection with a prostitution-theft scheme.

Thomas Sperry, 37, could have faced as much as life in prison on the original charge of first-degree robbery because he is a repeat offender with a long criminal history, authorities said.

Under a plea arrangement, Sperry pleaded guilty last month in Superior Court in Morristown to third-degree theft, which is usually punishable by three to five years incarceration. However, due to his prior record, Morris County Assistant Prosecutor David Bruno sought an eight-year prison term, with a minimum of 85 percent served before parole eligibility.

Judge Salem Ahto had the discretion to issue a sentence in the three-to 10 year range. Sperry's defense attorney, Joel Harris, asked for a six-year term, citing a disparity between sentences for Sperry and his co-defendant, Diane Warech, 40.

Warech pleaded guilty in April to third-degree theft and a disorderly-persons offense of promoting prostitution. She may be sentenced next week to three years behind bars, if not only probation, for cooperating with authorities.

But in handing down an eight-year sentence for Sperry, Ahto noted that Warech had no prior offenses and cooperated, while Sperry's prior record dates to the early 1980s and included crimes in Florida, Ohio, Connecticut and New Jersey, as well as 13 aliases, four Social Security numbers, and 11 dates-of-birth.

"Any attempt at rehabilitation has been dismal and unsuccessful," Ahto said.

Sperry and Warech were arrested on Aug. 21, 2007, after a Dover man told police he was solicited by Warech on West Blackwell Street offering sex for $20 on Aug. 5, 2007.

But when the man went to Warech's apartment and gave her the $20, Sperry came out of a room and held a knife to the man's neck and threatened to kill him if he didn't turn over more money, court records stated. The man handed over an additional $70.

The pair originally were charged with robbery, promoting prostitution and conspiracy. Sperry, who also was given credit for 563 days incarceration, was dumbfounded that he was receiving eight years.

"I just can't see myself doing eight years for a simple theft. I just can't see why you couldn't shave a year off," Sperry told the judge.

Ahto replied that he was sentencing in accord with the plea bargain. When the judge also ordered Sperry to pay $90 in restitution, Sperry interjected, "Make it $1,000," because it's unlikely he would be able to repay the victim anything from prison.

"I see you're concerned about the money, you were not concerned about the sentence," Sperry told the judge, prompting Harris to silence his client with, "That's enough."
 

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Dont mess with whores in general. Get an escort from a respected agency...pricey but professional and discreet. If your ballin you could fly em to you if your in a major city. Laquesha the prostitute you meet at casino bar is a bad idea lol
 

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Some guy just got rolled last night for over $300k the news is reporting here lol... They hit a big fish supposedly
 

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Las Vegas is s gold mine to hustlers/rip off artists/hookers........there is money everywhere.

When I was out there for several months, I got to know several people. One Asian woman didn't look like she had two $20's to rub together bit would bet $10,000 on every Monday night game.

Maybe she was a runner, she would say but lots of people have big money in Vegas.

Good thing I don't drink.........picking up street hookers is dangerous & like mentioned, an escort service would be s better way to go even tho they're pricey.
 

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