Irish Drifter wrote:
I think the reporting in this case is factual.
Kickstand wrote:
ET: The writer may have a bias, but the article is mostly factual.
Here's my take on it. The article says "the arrests usually are made at the low-budget operations. When upscale massage parlors and similar are raided the case generally dissolves into a dispute over a business license."
Well there are only three upscale MP's that I'm aware of (HLH, NF, and Idem). As Kickstand said, HLH has had several people detained and investigated for pimping (and one person suddenly left the scene). What has or will become of the investigation at HLH is not clear. There's a good chance that it disappeared for some "consideration", but it was also recent enough that some charges could still be pending. All three upscale MP's have at one time or another been briefly closed for administrative reasons.
Since 2005, the year in which the woman in the
AM Costa Rica article was arrested, there may have been at least 50 raids on a much larger number of Tico MP's. That would be about a conservative ten a year. I usually keep a pretty good eye on the local Spanish press, and can only recall two or three cases in which pimping charges have been brought. It seems to me that about 95% of the time the local MP's re-open after a couple of days with no-one be charged with pimping. And the percentage that have never been closed at all, is probably lower than the 100% for upscale MP's.
Comparing what happens in three upscale MP's to what happens in maybe three dozen Tico MP's makes it easy to play with the facts and numbers. It seems to me that, if nothing else,
AM Costa Rica is spinning the facts.
And I totally agree that pimping laws should be enforced more vigorously.