Foamy T. Squirrel Posted February 14, 2019 Share Posted February 14, 2019 In the United States, this kind of law enforcement action could be referred to as a "St. Valentine's Day Massacre." Somebody didn't pay off the right officials... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ze81 Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 Seven closed houses at same time its an big hit.I feel VH should had informed their users with at least some hours in advance.I understand the circumstances but still..my fear it's if the residents of those houses don't want change country(expected)that VH rushs to open fast half dozen bad houses.And there is always managers ready for that..would be an good time to rethink and have less houses and residents but..BETTER ones.Weither way..will continue pay and suport site as always. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maxfactor Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 10 minutes ago, ze81 said: Seven closed houses at same time its an big hit.I feel VH should had informed their users with at least some hours in advance.I understand the circumstances but still..my fear it's if the residents of those houses don't want change country(expected)that VH rushs to open fast half dozen bad houses.And there is always managers ready for that..would be an good time to rethink and have less houses and residents but..BETTER ones.Weither way..will continue pay and suport site as always. Yeah...those extortionists should have given notice well before they showed up 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jabbath1987 Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 @StnCld316 you can move all these places into offline section for now: https://voyeur-house.tv/blog/2019/02/14/temporary-apartments-shutdown-announcement/ Garik & Lyubava Viktoria & Adolf Hunter & Piper Chris & Dana Claus & Angelica Kathy & Molly Clara & Stas Viki & Kate 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
itsme Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 You'd think with all the stuff going on in Ukraine they'd have better things to worry about. Though this sounds more like a racket than a legit sting operation. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thestarider Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 13 minutes ago, itsme said: You'd think with all the stuff going on in Ukraine they'd have better things to worry about. Though this sounds more like a racket than a legit sting operation. Russian Mafia as it's best looks like to me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Robwin Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 35 minutes ago, jabbath1987 said: @StnCld316 you can move all these places into offline section for now: https://voyeur-house.tv/blog/2019/02/14/temporary-apartments-shutdown-announcement/ Garik & Lyubava Viktoria & Adolf Hunter & Piper Chris & Dana Claus & Angelica Kathy & Molly Clara & Stas Viki & Kate Well Dana was one of my most watched ones when subbing so glad I am not subbing now. You mean you have lost the bending wonder wow that is tragic 😁 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
maxfactor Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 5 hours ago, maitre197 said: I dont see any terrorists at the streets of the european capitals. But the nude and nymphomaniac girls can be very dangerous ( as jabbat 1987 at our forum). To be serious. I show that in any countries the forces of security may be armed and ready. You need to back to making sense 101 class 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
itsme Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 Found this on another forum from 2010: Sounds quite similar to what happened with VH-TV. Women in RussiaWomen in Russia Facts: Economic and political changes in Russia have left many Russians staggering under the burdens of rising unemployment, high rates of inflation, disappearing social services and the threats of corruption and organized crime. Women in particular are suffering the consequences of such change: they face widespread employment discrimination that is practiced, condoned and tolerated by the government. Government employers have fired women workers in disproportionate numbers--over two-thirds of Russia's unemployed are women--and refuse to employ women because of their sex. According to a 1992 report in The Guardian, "When factories take on workers they announce that they want men, and when women are rejected it is their sex which is entered on their application forms as the reason." When women challenge such discrimination, they either are ignored by their employers and by state agencies responsible for enforcing anti-discrimination laws or are told that priority should be given to men seeking jobs. Far from attacking sex discrimination, the government actively participates in discriminatory actions and fails to enforce laws that prohibit sex discrimination. When asked about the problem of women's unemployment in February 1993, Russia's labor minister, Gennady Melikyan, responded, "Why should we employ women when men are out of work? It's better that men work and women take care of children and do housework. I don't think women should work when men are doing nothing." In March 1994 the Women's Rights Project of Human Rights Watch sent a mission to Russia to investigate government participation in illegal discrimination against women. This is the second report by Human Rights Watch to examine how political and economic changes in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union have affected women's ability to exercise their rights. The assumption that the introduction of democratic processes and a market economy will improve the protection of human rights generally in Russia has proven to be true in some aspects, such as people's ability to exercise their freedom of association or speech. But women's human rights, far from being better protected in a rapidly changing Russia, are being violated and denied. As a result of this discrimination many Russian women are forced to work on the streets as prostitutes or in mafia held "public houses" as sex slaves. The situation in this sector in Russia is very dramatic and even tragic. Prostitution is controlled by mafia. Women are not protected by any means. Because of the huge work force of desperate women, prices for sex services in former Russian republics are not appreciated and the lowest in Eastern Europe. Women that work on the streets or individual prostitutes - call girls are often being abused, beaten, and raped by a starving crowd without pay. Very often they become victims of sick homicides and maniacs. The only safe places for work girls in Russia and Ukraine are considered web cam studios - where models perform the least risky and most discrete form of commercial sex work. However the situation in this field is also far from being perfect... More Facts: We have just learned of the raid on the web-cam Studio in Kyiv in the Ukraine which occurred last week. The women working on the night of the raid were held by the police from the Department of "Economic Crimes" for two days; had their personal effects (mobile phones etc) confiscated; were not allowed to contact any family or friends and were interrogated repeatedly by the cops. Apparently the Police threatened the models with prosecution on criminal charges for involvement in porn production. While all the models have since been released, and allowed to return home; a studio manager was still being held by the police at the time of this writing. This is second raid this year in the Ukraine - first one having occurred in Odessa in January closing down the studio there for two months. During the January raid the models were not only arrested and interrogated but some were reportedly physically "roughed up" and "slapped around." As though these young women - most them students between the ages of 18-20 and some barely out of High School - were not already frightened and intimidated enough ..??? These raids are apparently routine in Ukraine and Russia, where web-cam studios remain clandestine and illegal enterprises. This week's raid in Kyiv is the fifth that we have heard of in the past two years. After the raids, the studios are temporarily closed, but after the appropriate and necessary bribes and payoffs have been made, the studios usually relocate and re-open in new and secret locations. Given that we know of at least 55 web-cam studios operating in at least 11 Ukrainian cities - not to mention the much more dangerous forms of commercial sex work that are widely available all over the country - one must ask oneself what are these raids really about? So who benefits from these futile and ineffective raids? Is it the cops who can increase their take of studio profits in the form of bigger "protection rents?" The results of a police raid like this one provide all the evidence one needs to make the case for legalizing this industry in Russia and Ukraine - so that pay and working conditions can be better regulated and mafia influence over models reduced. This industry needs to be opened up - not driven further underground. Only corrupt cops and mafia who can use the clandestine nature of the industry and its illegality, to better exploit the women who work under their control can benefit from that. But the personal distress and pain that this exercise in police intimidation causes women working in this industry are not laughing matters. Isn't it time for some serious reflection about how to regulate the sex industry in former Russian republics? We demand legalization of the sex industry in Russia in order to protect the writes of the working women. We express our deep solidarity with working women in Russia by creating this web site which provides for them a safe place to earn decent living that they deserve: https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/camgirlnotesfr/recent-raid-in-dnepropetrovsk-t1974.html 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
StnCld316 Posted February 15, 2019 Author Share Posted February 15, 2019 On 2/14/2019 at 8:44 PM, jabbath1987 said: @StnCld316 you can move all these places into offline section for now: https://voyeur-house.tv/blog/2019/02/14/temporary-apartments-shutdown-announcement/ Garik & Lyubava Viktoria & Adolf Hunter & Piper Chris & Dana Claus & Angelica Kathy & Molly Clara & Stas Viki & Kate No Problem. I can move them to the Offline Category for the time being and place them back once they come back Online. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SKG Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 8 hours ago, groomy said: Here on February 7/19 - 20 girls - big webcam studio in Kiev. Technically - VH participation can also be interpreted under this article. So technically VHTV were doing illegal business in ukraine,right? And the website freetocam's apartment is in ukraine too,so they are illegal too? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SKG Posted February 15, 2019 Share Posted February 15, 2019 21 minutes ago, Amy3 said: Hmmm, I guess so. That’s gotta sting! Is it illegal in a Russia too? When the Russians build a sandbox internet are they going to put the vice on these voyeur sites. I guess the real issue is not so much the illegality of it so much as the corruption part. It’s legal as long as you pay the right people. Sounds like Mexico to me. Corruption all the way to the top. There is a reason these sites operate in this part of the world. Considering the amount of time voyeur cams have been running in Ukraine illegally,I think you are spot on with that. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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