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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Owners Of Cars Getting Hookers Are Sent Warning

Associated Press

Owners of cars from which people were seen picking up prostitutes are being sent warning letters, part of a campaign to rid this Navy town of hookers, police say.

Crime prevention officer Kent Boekweg proposed and drafted the letter, which has been reviewed and approved by City Attorney Ian Sievers.

“In the one letter we did send, it was received by a female head of the household,” Boekweg said. “She was extremely upset.”

The letter includes the date and time of the sighting and does not accuse the vehicle owner of any improprieties, saying the picking up of a prostitute could be “a random act of kindness.”

Boekweg said reports of hookers getting into cars will be taken from patrol officers and citizens who are block watch captains and know local prostitutes. Each report will be reviewed to make sure it is legitimate, he added.

“We are being very selective in how we send this out because we don’t want to cause undue stress in the family,” Boekweg said.

Also in the works is a proposed ordinance to bar convicted prostitutes and their customers from loitering in areas where prostitution is known to occur. Everett and other jurisdictions have similar bans.

The latest push follows two police sweeps that resulted in convictions of hookers and customers in the last year.

“It was obvious some of those same folks were just back again,” Police Chief Paul Du Fresne said.