Members SolaceSoul Posted November 18, 2018 Members Posted November 18, 2018 10 hours ago, Badboy81 said: I asked two sauna guys who work at 117 and Pointe if they heard about this....No from both My buddy that lives in Rio but isnt big on the sauna scene but knows a lot of the guys said he hasnt heard anything about this... Have you gotten any other info? I independently spoke to 7-8 different sauna boys and 2 sauna employees, face-to-face. Of those, 4 sauna boys and 1 employee knew of this incident, and provided me with details, most of which match up to the story. The others either knew nothing or at least would not admit it to me. Because the story was independently verified by 5 different people who knew (or knew of) both the garoto and the client, I tend to believe it happened — although some of the details may be sketchy. Perhaps your survey sample size was too small or you just spoke to some of the ones who didn’t know. As for the photo that was posted of the “suspect”, no one I spoke to believes that it was he who was involved in the killing. The poster needs to explain in detail how he knows he is a suspect or the photo needs to be removed in its entirety. Quote
Members likeohmygod Posted November 18, 2018 Members Posted November 18, 2018 3 hours ago, Tomcal said: I talked to one of the sauna owners and he had heard the same story but no one I have talked to knew which guys were involved or who the client was, but assumed that they were trying to keep it quiet... 5 different sauna guys I know also heard the same story but unlike the incident that happened to the French guy 5 or 6 years ago, there has been no verification or names given What happened to the French guy? Did not know about this story Quote
Members Riobard Posted November 18, 2018 Members Posted November 18, 2018 Assuming the event is true, the relevant club's press secretary would likely be lodged between a rock and a hard place. On the one hand, a harsh lesson in the pros of keeping your play on the premises, thereby maintaining safety profit one side and profit margin other side. On the other hand, expanding the penumbra around the club-based sex trade enterprise and rousing far from dormant zombie-grade homonegativity among the fundamentalist rabble. Quote
TotallyOz Posted November 18, 2018 Posted November 18, 2018 3 hours ago, SolaceSoul said: As for the photo that was posted of the “suspect”, no one I spoke to believes that it was he who was involved in the killing. The poster needs to explain in detail how he knows he is a suspect or the photo needs to be removed in its entirety. The photo has already been removed from this site. axiom2001 and SolaceSoul 2 Quote
Members Popular Post Marcorjbr Posted November 18, 2018 Members Popular Post Posted November 18, 2018 I am American living and working for over 25 years in Rio. I have frequented the sauna scene for years. Over the years I have had friends drugged ( boa noite cinderella), beat up, tied to beds, chained to toilets, robbed and several murdered. Brasil and especially Rio are extremely dangerous. The police are poorly trained and paid very little. A very small percentage of crimes are solved and most likely the crime will not even be investigated. The judicial system is slow and inefficient. The boys and all of us who live here know this as it is constantly repeated in the press, on the news and portrayed inthe local novelas.... In Rio, often, nobody is who they seems to be. The gringo tourists often behave badly, in ways they would nerver conduct themselves at home. Many falsely allude to wealth or the possibility of taking the boy away to Europe or America. The boys must register with copies of ID to the suana...... but mostly the boys give false names (nome de guerra), ages, home locations, to the clients...... I've seen many foreign clients try to negociate lower prices and even refuse to pay afterward... claiming the boy did not provide the agreed service. Prostitution comes from lack of opportunity and poverty. That does not mean they are stupid or have no pride. Treat the boys with respect.... I recommend doing as the locals.... Never bring a stranger into your home or hotel room. And if you do not speak portuguese and know Rio de Janeiro well.......NEVER EVER BRING A STRANGER INTO YOUR HOME OR HOTEL ROOM. flipao, Badboy81, ferrar and 4 others 7 Quote
Members Riobard Posted November 18, 2018 Members Posted November 18, 2018 On 11/15/2018 at 5:22 PM, SolaceSoul said: ... “pequeno” not “forte” - meaning they were on the twinkish side, not muscular guys (yet another reason why I tend to avoid smaller guys — they tend to have tough guy / Napoleonic Complexes, but I digress) True 'nuf, but johns also bone a part of them typically linked to ignominy. Quote
Members Popular Post mvan1 Posted November 18, 2018 Members Popular Post Posted November 18, 2018 7 hours ago, likeohmygod said: What happened to the French guy? Did not know about this story Several years ago, I was at Clube 117 on a typical night with lots of clients and garotos. There was a friendly client there that I knew from the saunas and from occasional lunch meetings away from the saunas. He was originally from France. He had moved to Rio and had an apartment. The last time I saw the Frenchmen was at Clube 117. He was doing ordinary things people do at saunas and we were chatting about trivial things. After a while, a garoto I had never seen before, approached us and said hello. The garoto was not interesting to me but the Frenchman liked him. I stayed a minute talking with the two but excused myself after I realized the Frenchman wanted to get together with the garoto. A few minutes later, I saw the two go toward the front desk and I assumed they were going for a key to a room. Instead, the Frenchman and the garoto left the sauna together. I thought nothing of the Frenchman choosing to go off premises with a new garoto rather than stay at the sauna to get together. The Frenchman was quite familiar with Brazil and with meeting garotos. The next day, I did not see the Frenchman at the usual pro kilo place where he and I planned to have lunch. However, the next evening, when I went to Clube 117, I heard that the Frenchman had been strangled to death in his apartment. To my further surprise, there were two Brazilian policemen at the sauna and had asked to talk with me and with a couple of other Americans because various garotos said that the Frenchman and we had been talking just before the Frenchman left the sauna with a garoto. We were asked to look through many photos that were stored at the front desk of the sauna. The photos were copies of identification cards of garotos who were required to furnish their identification in order to work at the sauna. Sure enough, the photo of the garoto who left with the Frenchman was among the photos. The policemen thanked us and that was all I knew about the incident. We all agreed the photo was the correct person who left the sauna with the Frenchman. The police did not seem very interested because the only thing they knew about us was our first name (when you check in at the sauna they ask only for your first name) and that we were foreigners. I don’t know if the garoto was ever found or if the killing was ever solved. I later learned the only reason for police involvement was because the murdered man was not Brazilian. I was told that killings of gays is common in Brazil and does not even warrant a news report or investigation unless the gay is a foreigner. Not a pretty picture, by any means. flipao, floridarob, SolaceSoul and 3 others 4 2 Quote
Members Lucky Posted November 18, 2018 Members Posted November 18, 2018 On 11/16/2018 at 3:14 PM, docbr said: It is so sad to hear about a guy who was assassinated because he was doing what we all do... renting boys . We really should hear all that advices that are being written here. In the end I think it’s a matter of opportunity and unmet expectations ... there are many boys that cope with their work by thinking the clients are “viados” that they have the right to exploit to the max and expect to be paid without delivering. So they can turn to violence when they see you as weaker and vulnerable (and incapable of retaliation) or out of anger when they expect irreal rewards for their service. He was not assassinated. as·sas·si·nate /əˈsasnˌāt/ verb verb: assassinate; 3rd person present: assassinates; past tense: assassinated; past participle: assassinated; gerund or present participle: assassinating murder (an important person) in a surprise attack for political or religious reasons. synonyms: murder, kill, slaughter; More Quote
Members Riobard Posted November 18, 2018 Members Posted November 18, 2018 In Portuguese, the distinction is less important. If you want to research general murder (noun) in the news you look for assassinato or homicídio ... assassinado for past tense. Using 'assassinate' was but mildly assaultive linguistically. Besides, so many politicians are made to take a dirt nap, they are scooped into the generic 86ed category. Latbear4blk and mvan1 2 Quote
Members Lucky Posted November 19, 2018 Members Posted November 19, 2018 But we are not using Portuguese here. But, dead is dead, no matter the word used to describe it. It was a small point, probably best if I had ignored it. Quote
Members likeohmygod Posted November 19, 2018 Members Posted November 19, 2018 So it is the same story i was told about, but i was told the guy was spanish. Sad story. For sure i know about a guy who got beaten down from a sauna guy so hard that his face was far from the one on his ID card. I am not one of those who tell the users to don't take sauna boys at home... But for sure, it's not something you wanna do if you don't speak Portuguese. If you're a grown man you can understand by talking to a guy if he is trustworthy or no. And there's another thing foreigners tend to forget... Brazilians are strong people. A 20 yrs old magrinho could be much more lethal than a 40 yrs old muscle man with a knife, in a country where there's a strong martial arts culture. floridarob 1 Quote
Members flipao Posted November 19, 2018 Members Posted November 19, 2018 Claudio Nasco was the name of the cuban journalist murdered in a motel of Santo Domingo by very young men. Quote
Badboy81 Posted November 19, 2018 Posted November 19, 2018 14 hours ago, SolaceSoul said: Perhaps your survey sample size was too small or you just spoke to some of the ones who didn’t know. I wasn't taking a survey...I was asking people that I know and trust to confirm if the "story" was accurate I don't believe everything that is posted on this forum but I also like for details especially something as horrendous as murder to be as accurate/true as possible If somebody was murdered by sauna workers, that would be a huge scandal....the sauna scene is not that large that something like that wouldn't be known by workers at another sauna... Quote
Members Popular Post SolaceSoul Posted November 19, 2018 Members Popular Post Posted November 19, 2018 15 hours ago, Marcorjbr said: I am American living and working for over 25 years in Rio. I have frequented the sauna scene for years. Over the years I have had friends drugged ( boa noite cinderella), beat up, tied to beds, chained to toilets, robbed and several murdered. Brasil and especially Rio are extremely dangerous. The police are poorly trained and paid very little. A very small percentage of crimes are solved and most likely the crime will not even be investigated. The judicial system is slow and inefficient. The boys and all of us who live here know this as it is constantly repeated in the press, on the news and portrayed inthe local novelas.... In Rio, often, nobody is who they seems to be. The gringo tourists often behave badly, in ways they would nerver conduct themselves at home. Many falsely allude to wealth or the possibility of taking the boy away to Europe or America. The boys must register with copies of ID to the suana...... but mostly the boys give false names (nome de guerra), ages, home locations, to the clients...... I've seen many foreign clients try to negociate lower prices and even refuse to pay afterward... claiming the boy did not provide the agreed service. Prostitution comes from lack of opportunity and poverty. That does not mean they are stupid or have no pride. Treat the boys with respect.... I recommend doing as the locals.... Never bring a stranger into your home or hotel room. And if you do not speak portuguese and know Rio de Janeiro well.......NEVER EVER BRING A STRANGER INTO YOUR HOME OR HOTEL ROOM. Thank you for posting this — because unfortunately, there are many posters here as well as onlookers and lurkers who will read glowing reports of Brazil and throw caution to the wind. Also thanks for chiming in about bad client behavior. I’ve witnessed it as well over the years, and even some posts at this board have alluded to some clients reveling in treating working boys like they are beneath them. I’m not suggesting that all sauna boys are perfect angels, but I certain have seen enough to know that some clients through their own behavior are just begging for trouble. mark123, Riobard, mvan1 and 2 others 5 Quote
Members axiom2001 Posted November 19, 2018 Members Posted November 19, 2018 On 11/18/2018 at 8:56 AM, Marcorjbr said: I am American living and working for over 25 years in Rio. I have frequented the sauna scene for years. Over the years I have had friends drugged ( boa noite cinderella), beat up, tied to beds, chained to toilets, robbed and several murdered. Brasil and especially Rio are extremely dangerous. The police are poorly trained and paid very little. A very small percentage of crimes are solved and most likely the crime will not even be investigated. The judicial system is slow and inefficient. The boys and all of us who live here know this as it is constantly repeated in the press, on the news and portrayed inthe local novelas.... In Rio, often, nobody is who they seems to be. The gringo tourists often behave badly, in ways they would nerver conduct themselves at home. Many falsely allude to wealth or the possibility of taking the boy away to Europe or America. The boys must register with copies of ID to the suana...... but mostly the boys give false names (nome de guerra), ages, home locations, to the clients...... I've seen many foreign clients try to negociate lower prices and even refuse to pay afterward... claiming the boy did not provide the agreed service. Prostitution comes from lack of opportunity and poverty. That does not mean they are stupid or have no pride. Treat the boys with respect.... I recommend doing as the locals.... Never bring a stranger into your home or hotel room. And if you do not speak portuguese and know Rio de Janeiro well.......NEVER EVER BRING A STRANGER INTO YOUR HOME OR HOTEL ROOM. Quote
Members Latbear4blk Posted November 19, 2018 Members Posted November 19, 2018 It is crystal clear experienced explorers advise against taking home/hotel boys from the saunas if you do not know them well enough. What about bringing to your hotel room escorts who advertise in the local Boytoy, Rentmen, etc.? Quote
Members Riobard Posted November 19, 2018 Members Posted November 19, 2018 I have not, and my big head suggests, it is hoped consistently, that if my little head absolutely must have a destaque GdeP wound around it we should rendezvous at one of the clubs with quarters. Maybe some exceptions: some listed providers are well known longtime acompanhantes with legit good reviews. Even then, a public drink or meal built in for solid additional vetting. I have booked sauna club guys at my apto or local short-term sex lodgings if we are really really well acquainted and have previously worked out and finessed the choreography smoothly, along with ironclad agreed donation arrangements. By then, they know my expectations and values and that, after the deal is struck, falar dinheiro ė igualmente homicídio meu pau. As close to 'boner killer' colloquialism as I can get. Alaskabear and Latbear4blk 1 1 Quote