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[QUOTE=Ctytek;2456352]Good report. Nice to use some actual Tijuana trip reports on the forum, instead of the pointless re-posting of COVID articles.
How much did you pay? Is it the usual $80/30 min deal?[/QUOTE]Yes still the usual. I got one of them to give me a BBBJ plus sex with condom and GFE for $100/30. The others where $80/30 minutes one with GFE the other without. Hopefully HK will open up soon. Maybe with COVID the clubs will have more women and less men once they open up.
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[QUOTE=Shefield;2457301]I thought there is a law that says if you leave the states with the intention of engaging in prostitution, you can be convicted of a crime in the states even though the acts did not occur in the states.[/QUOTE]There is no such law. Sex work is legal in parts of the US as well, namely in parts of Nevada.
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[QUOTE=Shefield;2457301]I thought there is a law that says if you leave the states with the intention of engaging in prostitution, you can be convicted of a crime in the states even though the acts did not occur in the states.[/QUOTE]There is no such law in the USA (you are not in North Korea) a long time ago a Republican Congresswoman from the state of New York Susan Molinari proposed such a law to punish every male US citizen who uses the services of prostitutes abroad but I think someone explained her that she is crazy and is impossible to do. So they also had to be arresting all customers visiting legal brothels in the US in Nevada? It did not make sense but such a law currently exists in Norway with every male Norwegian citizen if the authorities prove to him at the border that he used the services of prostitutes abroad, e. G. In the Netherlands or Germany he pays a fine of around $ 1000 US. BTW I live near the border always after visiting HK or Adelita I visit restaurants on Av. Revolucion (10-15 min. Walk from the zona) Tijuana is known to have good restaurants (not just tacos) and good craft beer (e. G. Border Psycho beer house) So answer to CBP officer: dinner at a restaurant or a visit to Hong Kong I watched the show on stage and the beer is perfect.
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[QUOTE=Shefield;2457301]I thought there is a law that says if you leave the states with the intention of engaging in prostitution, you can be convicted of a crime in the states even though the acts did not occur in the states.[/QUOTE]There is such a law in the USA but it only applies if you had sex with a minor. You can be prosecuted here it you do that abroad. Otherwise, no. This is not Sweden. Yet.
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Theres 2 problems with letting border patrol know you went to hk. 1- maybe you work for the fed government or will someday. With technology now everyone knows everything. I ordered heart medicine online at blink they doctor online said I see you picked up painkiller yesterday at cvs. Everyone is seeing everything now. 2- what if you lose the passport, or need it renewed, or visit Sentri sit down interviews. What if they say, this guy doesn't need a passport to be banging woman iij and mexico. Less they know the better. Theres a million things to do in tijuana. It's like saying anyone who goes to miami is going for those strip clubs up in hollandale beach. It's only a small %. They don't ask for your whole mexico itiniery. So leaving out HK is not illegal. And it's not required to answer anyway. It's your country and they have to let you in, don't be pushed around.
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[QUOTE=Dogers69;2457483]Theres 2 problems with letting border patrol know you went to hk. 1- maybe you work for the fed government or will someday. With technology now everyone knows everything. I ordered heart medicine online at blink they doctor online said I see you picked up painkiller yesterday at cvs. Everyone is seeing everything now. 2- what if you lose the passport, or need it renewed, or visit Sentri sit down interviews. What if they say, this guy doesn't need a passport to be banging woman iij and mexico. Less they know the better. Theres a million things to do in tijuana. It's like saying anyone who goes to miami is going for those strip clubs up in hollandale beach. It's only a small %. They don't ask for your whole mexico itiniery. So leaving out HK is not illegal. And it's not required to answer anyway. It's your country and they have to let you in, don't be pushed around.[/QUOTE]Maybe if you are seeking a fed job with top security clearance it could be an issue (I don't know the answer to that) but for the vast majority of fed jobs I'm doubting this is something that would be an issue or even looked into. With that said, I would look to be as discrete as possible without actually mentioning HK.
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Visiting friends
Before CoVid-19, everyday approx 50,000 persons cross the San Ysidro and Otay Mesa border check points on foot and in cars to work, shop, school, play etc.
If CBP keeps records of every one's crossing every time, they would need a computer the size of the moon to store data. So they target only suspicious people. Agents are trained to ask questions to detect signs of concealment and deception, like nervousness.
Make your answer general, simple and direct to avoid raising suspicion. Just say you "visited friends. " CBP does not need to know may be all your friends work in HK, Chevelas, Tropical or Adelita. Any specifics may be hard to back track later on.
I know a few guys who had repeat altercations and violations of rules / regulations at the border. They still had their trusted traveler status renewed under SENTRI / GLOBAL ENTRY. CBP agents have to do their jobs under the laws. If you feel violated or abused, make written complaints to the chain of command until your situation is resolved. Or you can file lawsuits in Federal court for damages.
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[QUOTE=CaptainSolo;2457507]Before CoVid-19, everyday approx 50,000 persons cross the San Ysidro and Otay Mesa border check points on foot and in cars to work, shop, school, play etc.
Make your answer general, simple and direct to avoid raising suspicion. Just say you "visited friends. " CBP does not need to know may be all your friends work in HK, Chevelas, Tropical or Adelita. Any specifics may be hard to back track later on.
.[/QUOTE]I returned to the USA from The Philippines at LAX, this February The male agent asked what I was doing in the USA. I said "I live here! I also want to eat some USDA steaks. ". he laughed, then asked what I was doing in The Philippines; I said I live there too!" he laughed again and said welcome back.
More going through the motions and friendly banter than adversarial. I'm always polite and dress in sport casual.
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Cbp
I really miss the Philippines and the freedom of traveling wherever I want before CoVid-19.
CBP has on line access to info on a lot of individuals. Identities of all airlines' passengers coming, going or transiting the US are automatically checked through a number of government databases. Terrorists, people with outstanding warrants, behind in child support etc are flagged and likely arrested at the airports. Interpol also runs its searches of passengers IDs and alert affected countries.
As you know governments at all levels can do a lot of shit to its citizens, cover their asses and get away with atrocities. Joe Blow citizens are welcomed to seek justice in the court, but to bring a suit in the federal court will likely cost $300-500 K before the case even go to trial, then they most likely lose against tricky government agencies with lots of resources and deep pockets. People just cannot have justice unless they have a lot of money.
I know a few people who get the Feds pissed off at them. They got seriously screwed over for years. Don't piss the government off.
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[QUOTE=CaptainSolo;2457507]Before CoVid-19, everyday approx 50,000 persons cross the San Ysidro and Otay Mesa border check points on foot and in cars to work, shop, school, play etc.
If CBP keeps records of every one's crossing every time, they would need a computer the size of the moon to store data. So they target only suspicious people. Agents are trained to ask questions to detect signs of concealment and deception, like nervousness.
[/QUOTE]Not really. 1 K of data per person per entry - 50 M of data per day. That's only 18 Gig per year. 100 years of info would fit on a 2 TB drive. You probably have one of those at home.
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[QUOTE=DickusMaximus;2457882]Not really. 1 K of data per person per entry - 50 M of data per day. That's only 18 Gig per year. 100 years of info would fit on a 2 TB drive. You probably have one of those at home.[/QUOTE]Exactly. I worked for the feds 15 years ago and that was. Before the surveillance police state was in vogue. The government had alot on people. They would call us, we would catch them in their lies all day long. Just going to get government subsidizes housing a few years ago the social services knew more about me then I did. And I know they keep track because when I'm away for a while they ask me when iblast went through the order and proceed to look it up. They also got cameras and take pictures if everything and can go look it up if they needed to.
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Dickus.
San Ysidro is 1 port. There are about 100 land and sea ports and 300 international airports.
It takes more than 1 K to store an entry. The federal government can't keep all that data on PCs.
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Hk open as restaurant
7 pm I am in hk first night it reopens.
You are supposed to sit down not wandering ordering food.
Three dozens girls, some very hot, party as hot as ever. Good deals are here.
Bun.
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Hong Kong is open (?)
This is from a HK VIP "host" on Instagram. Go check it out "HKTJ is back open tonight! Come make it a full house!! One appetizer minimum purchase per table. All customers must have a face mask to enter. ". I have the link.. it's on IG
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[QUOTE=CaptainSolo;2458005]Dickus.
San Ysidro is 1 port. There are about 100 land and sea ports and 300 international airports.
It takes more than 1 K to store an entry. The federal government can't keep all that data on PCs.[/QUOTE]The federal government maintains the tax return data (nearly line by line) from scanned & electronically filed tax returns. So do most states.
We are talking about over 100 million individual tax returns and tens of millions of federal business tax returns (corporations, partnerships, trusts, non-profits) filed each year.
Treasury computers maintain this data for many multiple years.
Certainly they can store & maintain records for the number of alcohol liters & cigarette cartons any John Q. Public wants to carry across the border.
Uncle Sam does not rely on a sea of PC's, but instead mainframes housed in Virginia and other states.