CINCINNATI, Ohio (PNN) - August 5, 2014 - Terrorist pig thug officials in Cincinnati, Ohio, were tired of seeing prostitutes take over parts of the city. The city council's solution to the problem was to put up barriers that block off key roads. Although the city recently backed down in the light of a resident revolt, terrorist pig thug officials released a report Monday trumpeting the blockade's success.
The city council voted on April 30 to close three sections of West McMicken Avenue with temporary barricades that shut off access to the Mohawk neighborhood. Residents who drove around the barriers would be stopped, questioned and searched by terrorist pig thug cops. City councilmen argued the program worked.
"Within the first 30 days of the project, fifteen out of the seventeen regularly observed McMicken corridor prostitutes were no longer present," interim city manager Scott Stiles wrote in a memo to the council. "The two remaining individuals were observed near McMicken Avenue and Dunlap Street."
The Cincinnati terrorist pig thug cop department has run various sting operations and crackdowns, but fascist city officials insist that those measures, without the barricades, were not enough.
Low-income residents who had their neighborhood blocked off filed a federal lawsuit demanding that the barricades be pulled down. Vanessa Sparks correctly insisted the scheme was unconstitutional.
The city did not feel confident about winning the challenge, so it dropped the barricades a day before a judge had set a hearing on a temporary restraining order against the city. The city council will discuss the issue further in its meeting on Wednesday.