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From Harrison Idaho Creamery and Fudge Factory To The Loop Restaurant Florida Or No-Li Brewhouse WA

3 Visningar· 09/28/25
Publishing House

⁣(2) It is unlawful:
(a) To own, establish, maintain, or operate any place, structure, building, or conveyance for the purpose of lewdness, assignation, or prostitution.
(b) To offer, or to offer or agree to secure, another for the purpose of prostitution or for any other lewd or indecent act.
(c) To receive, or to offer or agree to receive, any person into any place, structure, building, or conveyance for the purpose of prostitution, lewdness...

https://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0700-0799/0796/Sections/0796.07.html

Jacksonville, FL – December 17, 2024: Dining Redefined: How The Loop Restaurant and Uber Eats are Thriving Together in a Post-Pandemic World
https://www.thelooprestaurant.....com/post/jacksonvill
https://www.facebook.com/TheLoopRestaurant

Thiele, a 21-year Army veteran, was convicted on two counts of lewd and lascivious conduct with small children. The incidents occurred in 2016 and 2017, according to county investigators who sought the help of an out-of-state children’s resource center to secure testimony from the victims.

https://cdapress.com/news/2018..../nov/07/former-harri

Remembering Carmen González, a powerful voice for Boyle Heights and its youth
By Alejandra Molina | Boyle Heights Beat
Published Aug 15, 2025 9:32 AM

Congress has cut federal funding for public media — a $3.4 million loss for LAist. We count on readers like you to protect our nonprofit newsroom. Become a monthly member and sustain local journalism.

Carmen González, who spent much of her youth uplifting her Boyle Heights community through activism, journalism, and student mentorship — and served as Student Journalism Manager at Boyle Heights Beat — died on Saturday from heart failure. She was 24.

“Carmen was the pride and joy of the family. A powerhouse,” her family wrote in an Instagram post announcing her passing.

“If people ever think about Carmen, I just want them to know that she was very loving, very giving, and also a very logical person,” Alejandra González, her sister, told Boyle Heights Beat. “She just loved life. She loved the community. She loved people.”

In her young life, Carmen filled several roles: the eldest daughter to her two siblings, a “Swiftie” with an encyclopedic knowledge of Taylor lore, a staunch activist for immigrant and LGBTQ+ rights, a photographer with Las Fotos Project, and a reporter, radio host and producer for Boyle Heights Beat, where she also mentored student journalists. She graduated from Felicitas and Gonzalo Mendez High in 2019 and earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Cal State Long Beach earlier this year.

https://laist.com/news/remembe....ring-carmen-gonzalez

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The journalist Carmen Gonzalez told the story of her community, LA's Boyle Heights
August 13, 20253:59 PM ET

Christopher Intagliata
The journalist Carmen Gonzalez died Saturday at 24. She worked for the Boyle Heights Beat, among other publications, and hosted podcasts, mentored student journalists, and appeared in reports on NPR.

I first met Carmen Gonzalez on a reporting trip to Los Angeles in 2018. She was 17 years old, a high school senior. And I caught up with her as she was riding a bus to her job at a community newspaper called Boyle Heights Beat.

CARMEN GONZALEZ: My first article was about a homeless community college student. And that was a story I don't think a lot of people, like, talk about. It changed my life. And seeing, like, someone else struggle in a different way, like, kind of solidified the fact that I wanted to be a journalist and tell these stories.

JESSE HARDMAN: Carmen had a beautiful mind. I haven't met too many people who were able to speak eloquently on everything from Taylor Swift to ICE raids.

SHAPIRO: Gonzalez was from Boyle Heights, a majority Latino, mostly working-class neighborhood with a long history of political activism. She grew up without legal status and just recently obtained her U.S. citizenship. Hardman says the people in the community motivated much of the reporting Gonzalez did.

HARDMAN: Her neighborhood, Boyle Heights, and the east side of LA often has its stories told by outsiders. And I think for Carmen, that never felt adequate or felt fair or felt like that's who should be telling these stories. And I really loved kind of her goal of giving a voice to those communities and giving space to people from those communities.

DETROW: Before she died, she had begun mentoring young student journalists. And at the top of her X profile, she wrote, student journalists have always held it down. Glad people are realizing how vital their work is to our industry. Journalist Carmen Gonzalez was 24.

https://www.npr.org/2025/08/13..../nx-s1-5500143/the-j

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