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As the lights dim and people scramble to turn off their cell phones, a wiry Dan Hoyle walks onto the stage in jeans and a gray t-shirt. The lights come up on a sparse stage. Hoyle is helped only by a black chair, a hand towel, and a few hats. The rest of his scenes —tables full of food, football fields, truck stops—all come from Hoyle’s imaginative shaping of the space.
DAN HOYLE (as RON): Come on now Tommy, hit em low buddy, hit em low and he falls down. So you just touring around? Man, you ever been to New York? That place is freakin’ crazy. They got those meat sandwiches you know right on the sidewalk? Cuttin’ up the meat right there on the sidewalk. Prostitutes all over. Every day chasing girls, eating the meat sandwiches. The only problem? Traffic.
Later, after the woman had become a virtual prisoner at the Penzatos’ home, she asked Giuseppe Penzato for her passport back, Saurwein said. Penzato threw it at her and “taunted her to figure out her rights,” the affidavit said.
By then the woman was working at least 60 hours a week instead of the 35 hours promised in her contract with the Penzatos, authorities said. She wasn’t paid until fall 2009, when Giuseppe Penzato gave her $700 and said $500 was her salary and $200 was a loan that she would have to repay, the affidavit said.
The Penzatos later gave her a $600 check but also forced her to give back an undisclosed amount that she supposedly owed, authorities said.
Kesia Penzato berated the woman, “telling her that she was born to be servant, that she was a prostitute, that she was ugly and that even her birth mother did not want her,” Saurwein wrote.
Charges stand in serial killing case
Published: June 28, 2011 at 9:55 PM
SAN RAFAEL, Calif., June 28 (UPI) — A judge has refused to dismiss murder charges against a 77-year-old man accused of killing four reputed prostitutes in Northern California.
Joseph Naso submitted a one-page handwritten motion arguing police did not find any evidence linking him to the killings, the Marin Independent Journal reported. Two of the women were killed in the 1970s and two in the 1990s.
Naso was arrested last year after police found lists of women’s names, including the four victims, and other items in his home in Reno, Nev. Investigators have also said they found DNA from Naso’s wife on pantyhose used to strangle one victim.
“No photo’s found in the defendents home depict any woman who appear in forced posing, forced bondage or being deceased,” Naso said in his motion. “All photo’s found in defendents home of woman were/are under free will.”
See the full article from “UPI.com”
The mucous membranes of the penis and vagina normally lubricate each other during sex, ensuring a smooth and pleasurable experience for both partners. However, when a penis is circumcised most of its mucous membrane is removed and the head of the penis builds up a layer of scar tissue to protect it from the elements, making it harder and more abrasive. As a result, the toughened circumcised penis tends to chafe the delicate mucous membranes of the vagina.
If circumcision has so many adverse affects why has it been performed for so long?
In modern times, circumcision was introduced by Victorian doctors who wanted to stop boys from masturbating and stop men from committing adultery and going to prostitutes. The theory was to leave a man with the bare minimum amount of penis that would still be functional for procreation, thus trimming away all the excess lust that a fine upstanding Victorian man had no use for. Since then the rationale for cutting boys has changed with each generation. Circumcision has always been a cure in search of a disease.
Within weeks, Dab himself became HIV-positive and learned what it felt like to await death in isolation in 1982 as one of the first to have been diagnosed with what was then called GRID. He survived while most others died. Dab has one half of the chromosome needed for immunity. In addition to gene structure, cell receptors constitute the second front for defense against HIV, and when the disease was new and killing swiftly, there was no knowledge of receptors and certainly no medications to block them. At one point Dab had only four T cells and named them after the people closest to him, including the baby girl for whom he became foster parent during the 4.5 years of her life.
Born to an HIV-positive prostitute, who died soon after giving birth, facially deformed and with fetal alcohol syndrome, the baby girl desperately needed Dab who remembers that even the nurses in the hospital ignored her, assuming she would soon die. Dab, then 23 and …
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) — A judge will not dismiss the case against alleged serial killer Joseph Naso, charged with the murders of four Northern California women with matching initials decades ago.
The 77-year-old defendant filed a motion to dismiss the charges after he pleaded not guilty last month. Naso, who is serving as his own lawyer, argued that authorities failed to show probable cause to arrest him.
The Marin Independent Journal reports that a judge on Monday disagreed and denied Naso’s request, and set the preliminary hearing for Sept. 9.
Prosecutors say Naso murdered four prostitutes in the 1970s and 1990s throughout Northern California.
Investigators said Naso kept a list of 10 women and locations, including the four he is charged with killing. Prosecutors have not commented on the status of the other six.
SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (AP) — A judge will not dismiss the case against alleged serial killer Joseph Naso, charged with the murders of four Northern California women with matching initials decades ago.
The 77-year-old defendant filed a motion to dismiss the charges after he pleaded not guilty last month. Naso, who is serving as his own lawyer, argued that authorities failed to show probable cause to arrest him.
The Marin Independent Journal reports that a judge on Monday disagreed and denied Naso’s request, and set the preliminary hearing for Sept. 9.
Prosecutors say Naso murdered four prostitutes in the 1970s and 1990s throughout Northern California.
Investigators said Naso kept a list of 10 women and locations, including the four he is charged with killing. Prosecutors have not commented on the status of the other six.
Later, after the woman had become a virtual prisoner at the Penzatos’ home, she asked Giuseppe Penzato for her passport back, Saurwein said. Penzato threw it at her “taunted her to figure out her rights,” the affidavit said.
By then the woman was working at least 60 hours a week instead of the 35 hours promised in her contract with the Penzatos, authorities said. She wasn’t paid until fall 2009, when Giuseppe Penzato gave her $700 and said $500 was her salary and $200 was a loan that she would have to repay, the affidavit said.
The Penzatos later gave her a $600 check but also forced her to give back an undisclosed amount that she supposedly owed, authorities said.
Kesia Penzato berated the woman, “telling her that she was born to be servant, that she was a prostitute, that she was ugly and that even her birth mother did not want her,” Saurwein wrote.
Judge denies murder suspect’s dismissal request
Posted: 06/28/2011 10:19:41 AM PDT
Updated: 06/28/2011 10:19:41 AM PDT
SAN RAFAEL, Calif.—A judge will not dismiss the case against alleged serial killer Joseph Naso, charged with the murders of four Northern California women with matching initials decades ago.
The 77-year-old defendant filed a motion to dismiss the charges after he pleaded not guilty last month. Naso, who is serving as his own lawyer, argued that authorities failed to show probable cause to arrest him.
The Marin Independent Journal reports that a judge on Monday disagreed and denied Naso’s request, and set the preliminary hearing for Sept. 9.
Prosecutors say Naso murdered four prostitutes in the 1970s and 1990s throughout Northern California.
Investigators said Naso kept a list of 10 women and locations, including the four he is charged with killing. Prosecutors have not commented on the status of the other six.
Joseph Naso, 77, said Marin County sheriff’s Detective Ryan Petersen failed to show probable cause for arresting him.
“No where in any of the four statements is there evidence showing names, descriptions, nor the intended fate disclosed in any writings, notes, or lists found in the defendents (sic) home or person,” Naso said in the one-page handwritten motion.
“No photo’s found in the defendents home depict any woman who appear in forced posing, forced bondage or being deceased,” Naso added. “All photo’s found in defendents home of woman were/are under free will.”
Judge Andrew Sweet rejected the motion Monday morning but granted Naso’s request to delay the July 11 preliminary hearing so he could have more time to prepare, said District Attorney Ed Berberian.
Naso has pleaded not guilty to charges of murdering four reputed
prostitutes, two of whose bodies were found in Contra Costa County.