|
By Gintautas Dumcius
Reporter Correspondent
Responding to heavy community complaints, Boston
police officers from District C-11 are putting the
"squeeze" on prostitutes who walk Dorchester
Avenue.
"We were getting so many of them, we had to
address it," said Capt. John Greland. "We depend on
the community to tell us where they've seen
them."
The campaign started back in October, with the
district putting out extra cars. Officers have so
far stopped about 82 prostitutes, working with the
Suffolk County District Attorney's office to impose
"stay away" orders for the areas the prostitutes
have been picked up in.
"If we're not arresting them
we're stopping
them," Greland said.
Greland pointed to the case of one 33-year-old
female, arrested on Dec. 1 on Dorchester Avenue,
spotted several times in the area over a one hour
period. She approached an undercover officer,
asking him where he wanted to go, according to
Greland, offered $50 for sex, and rattled off a
string of other prices.
"This is the sort of stuff we've been
targeting," he said.
Greland said much of the prostitution activity
has been taking place between Fields Corner and
Peabody Square. The area has historically had
prostitution problems, back when nearby Freeport
Street was more of a port than a street.
C-11's effort, sometimes labeled "Operation
Squeeze," netted a huge early-morning haul back in
December, including seven Johns, from both the
North and South Shores and three from
Dorchester.
The men allegedly involved in soliciting sex
included: Paul John-Baptiste, 27, of Lynn; Nicholas
Taylor, 19, of Milton; Richard Mace, 19, of Quincy;
Roosevelt Wilkins, 41, of Roxbury; and William
Reynolds, 27, and Hector Najera, 52, both of
Dorchester.
Another four in the same car -including a
39-year-old from Dorchester, a 35-year-old from
West Roxbury, a 46-year-old from Boston, and a
32-year-old from Revere-were picked up an hour
later, but the operation had to be stopped due to
their car having a firearm with a scratched-off
serial number, according to police. Only one was
soliciting a plainclothes officer for sex.
Community activists who prompted the campaign
say the focused patrols are making a
difference.
"I think his efforts are proving to be
successful," said Michael Cote, a community
activist who last fall unsuccessfully ran against
District 3 Councilor Maureen Feeney, of Greland.
"It hasn't been quite so bad. We've not seen so
much now."
The problem was first noticed back in late
summer early fall, north of Fields Corner, he said.
"You'd see people loitering around." (Even the
prostitutes were noticing the upsurge, Greland
said.)
Cote noted that some of the prostitutes can move
someplace else, and some likely have. "At least we
can deal with it in Dorchester," he said.
Greland acknowledged that the prostitutes will
likely flow to other neighborhoods, but said the
best they can do is mitigate the problem.
"They don't call it the world's oldest
profession for nothing," he said.
Back
to Reporter Home Page
|