Showing posts with label Police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Police. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 April 2008

MARCHMONT BROTHEL REVEALED

SquareOne News

by Katie Smyth


Residents of Edinburgh's Southside have reacted with mixed feeling to the confirmation that a local sauna is a front for brothel.



The New Gentle Touch of Argyle Place, Marchmont poses as a massage parlour but its main trade is in prostitution. "We have the sauna and of course we do sex, £50 for a half hour, £70 for an hour," the proprietor, who wished to remain anonymous, told SquareOne.



Her statement ends years of conjecture which have surrounded The New Gentle Touch since it’s arrival in middle-class Marchmont. Eileen Dickson, spokeswoman for the Marchmont St Giles branch of the Church of Scotland Ladies' Guild said: "When it opened there was great trepidation. Everyone knew it was a brothel." However another Guild member who lives on Warrender Park Terrace, was shocked to discover this establishment exists in the neighbourhood.



Their concern coincides with that of Lothian and Borders Police who launched a new team in September 2005 to tackle exploitation and prostitution. In a press release at the time, Assistant Chief Constable Tom Halpin said, "We will be looking at people who are being lured over to this country on false pretences … Prostitution … is an area that we will be particularly focussing on."



David Anderson, barman at the Argyle pub, accepts the presence of a brothel in Argyle Place: "When it first came there was a lot of nose-turning, but now it is just one of those things. The most concerning thing is having Sick Kids and Sciennes Primary school down the road. The mothers are passing it with their kids all the time."However, he claimed The Gentle Touch does bother the people who live in the houses opposite it and one woman left the area after her public protest proved futile.



Despite certain practices surrounding prostitution's continued illegality in Britain other traders in Argyle Place were unconcerned by the confirmation of The Gentle Touch's status. Florist Monica Higgins said, "I don't have a problem with it. It's very discreet. I'm sure if there was a real problem the local bobbies would be on to it because we're a very close-knit community."



A year on from the Ipswich murders the general consensus in Marchmont is that it is safer if prostitutes operate from brothels. David Anderson said, "it takes it off the streets so it's not downgrading the area. Once you get prostitutes on the streets you then get drug-dealers. This way is better because it's regulated."




Monday, 7 April 2008

WOMBAT GETS NAUGHTY WITH DRONGO'S FRECKLE?!



Kate Smail

SquareOne News


Last week a New Zealand man was charged with wasting police time after he called emergency services, claiming he had been raped by a wombat. Not surprisingly, the operator was not convinced. Everyone knows you don't get wombats in New Zealand.

The man claimed he was unharmed after the incident, except for "now only being able to talk Australian." A deeply distressing affliction for any self-respecting Kiwi. He received 75 hours of community service after the defence lawyer explained that alcohol played a major part in the man's life.

This is not the first time animals have found themselves under the scrutiny of the courts; Square One brings you our favourite examples from the twisted world of animal justice.

In the United States last year, a convicted paedophile claimed his actions were the result of a deeply traumatic childhood experience, and was therefore not responsible for the crime committed. Gene Morrill told the court in Virgina that he was raped by Bigfoot as a teenager, and had suffered flashbacks ever since. The judge remained unconvinced and sentenced Morrill to twenty years.

A Florida man got more than he bargained for when he decided to shoot his unwanted puppies. Having shot and killed three of his four targets, Jerry Bradford picked up the remaining pup, which then jumped on the trigger, shooting Bradford in the wrist. Bradford survived and was promptly charged with animal cruelty. Puppy power indeed.

A woman sued her best friend after she slipped in his pet dog's urine in his kitchen and twisted her ankle. Her reasoning? If he was really her friend, he would have cleaned it up when he knew she was coming over. Unbelievably, the pair are no longer friends.

The parents of a man found naked and dead on the back of a killer whale at Sea World, Orlando, have dropped a lawsuit alleging Sea World caused his death by portraying the dangerous orca as safe and cuddly. It transpired the man was under the influence of alcohol, had broken into Sea World at night, and voluntarily jumped into the tank to play with the whale.


Two animal handlers who say they were fired for refusing to expose their breasts to a 300-pound gorilla have settled their lawsuit against the Gorilla Foundation charity. Nancy Alperin and Kendra Keller claimed that Gorilla Foundation president Francine Patterson pressured them to indulge Koko the gorilla's 'nipple fetish,' as a way of bonding with the 33-year-old female. The charity denies the claims.


Monday, 17 March 2008

MARILLION: COOLER THAN YOU THINK

by Christopher Mackie

SquareOne Entertainment

Mark Kelly Interview


For a band that has worked so hard to shed the Genesis comparisons over the past 25 years, Marillion were in real danger of heading back to square one in August. One month after Phil Collins’ prog-rock behemoths took to the stage at a sold-out Twickenham Stadium, the classic Marillion line up, including bellicose front man Fish, briefly reunited in Aylesbury for an unrehearsed stomp through their first single Market Square Heroes exactly 25 years after its release.


The event was significant enough to make the BBC news, but keyboardist Mark Kelly diplomatically fends off suggestions of a Genesis-style reunion tour: “We are not planning to reform. Things have moved on. To reform would mean doing some sort of nostalgia tour and we have always tried to avoid that. We did it for fun, and there was nothing intended by it”.


In fact, unlike the recent Genesis and Police reunions, the return of the classic Marillion line up was met with something approaching warm indifference by the group’s devoted followers. Most are so happy with the bands current output with vocalist Steve Hogarth that they are willing to pay for an album that isn’t even finished yet and is not expected to be delivered until June. In September, Marillion announced that their 15th studio album was to be financed by the fan base via up-front payment for the finished work.


As a reward for their loyalty and (crucially) cash, fans can expect a name-check in the album sleeve notes and a chance to win various competition prizes: “We are taking people’s money six months to a year ahead of when they are going to receive the goods” Kelly explains “so to try and make it different, to make it more fun, and as a reward for people who pre-order (the album), we have offered various prizes”.


Selling directly to their audience is not unfamiliar to Marillion. In 1997, fans raised $60,000 via an online whip-round to help the band tour the USA. Spotting the potential of the internet to eliminate the need for record company support, 2001’s Anoraknophobia was financed entirely by orders placed before recording had begun, and in 2004 the group raised enough to record, distribute and market Marbles via an internet campaign that also spawned two top ten singles.


Given the demands placed on your typical Marillion fan, it’s perhaps surprising that the band have chosen to ask for yet more money up front: “Well, the last album (Somewhere Else) was more of a standard release for us because we thought people would have had enough pre-orders”, says Kelly, “but the feedback we received was overwhelmingly in favour of another.
The fans like to be informed of what’s going on, they like to have the involvement”.


And involved they are. With a constant stream of updates from the studio via blogs and e-mails, coupled with frank interaction from the band’s manager on the marillion.com web forum, Marillion are beginning to get the credit they deserve from a previously harsh media. Kelly agrees: “I think that there is definitely a respect for the band that there didn’t used to be ten years ago”, he says.

“The fact that we have been around for so long does make people take another look and think that maybe we are doing something worthwhile. That’s mainly because people are looking at Marillion as innovators and we are cited as internet pioneers. I think there is more respect for the band from within the industry and from the media”.

You can pre-preorder the album and get further information from here - http://www.marillion.com/