They were half right. He was intending to know her.
Just when I begin to hate lawyers, a story like this one comes along.
I hope each victim sues the hotel in question for ten million dollars.
Obviously, sexually-frustrated heterosexual white businessmen are behind these malicious attacks.
Serious dumbing down of the work force.
At least call the guest (in room or on cell) before believing this.
I hope her bank gets a large infusion of cash!
GOOD.
Yeah, that's the way to do it!
Condign punishment immediately administered.
Number One: Use the safety lock on your hotel door at all times! They’re not just simple chain locks anymore.
Apparently, there is a hotel in DC where the hotel workers/sex traffickers break into the room of women who are traveling alone to sexually assault or rob them. It is well known and well documented on yelp.
I think it was this one -
This is simply awful! Unless you can travel armed, it’s best not to travel at all. Which, of course, is not possible for so many who have to do so for their jobs. A woman checking into a hotel should always ask for two key cards to give the indication someone else is with her. When the clerk asks “how many nights?” she should respond with “We will be staying for three”. Always use the security lock and never answer the door without knowing who is on the other side.
After reading that article, I got side-tracked by the article at the same site.
https://nypost.com/2023/03/05/doordash-driver-refused-to-hand-over-food-after-receiving-8-tip/
A DoorDash driver has gone viral when she refused to give a man his food after he only tipped her $8 for a delivery
I travel a lot and have left my key card in the room on occasion. It amazes me how easy it is to get a replacement at the desk with no proof of ID
You mean I can NOW book a woman’s room on Expedia if I want?(snarc sarc.)
He: "Come on baby, you know you want it!"
She: "I don't think so, you gave me the finger!"
" “I realized that the finger was still in my door underneath the security latch,” she recalled."
As John Kerry-Heinz would say “DUH”.
At Twin Arrows Navajo Casino Resort in Flagstaff AZ in 2016. Quiet and comfortable stay until one day at 6:00 a.m. when we were awakened to the sound of our door banging open against the little last-ditch latch/lock. I leaped out of bed thinking we were about to be robbery victims. Fortunately it turned out that it was just a little old man who was confused, drunk, or both after spending the night in the casino. He said that he had lost his key and didn’t have his wallet with him, and that the front desk had given him a new key to our room number, which he erroneously thought was his.
In other words, he was telling us that with no ID presented the front desk gave him a key to our room.
We immediately called the front desk, who expressed no concern whatsoever about someone having almost entered our room. Told us to call back later to talk to the desk supervisor.
So next we contacted security, who also didn’t seem too concerned, and said someone would come up to “check it out”. After 45 minutes nobody had come by, so we called security again. Their response was “Oh, nobody’s come by?”. Sorry to wake you up guys, but isn’t this the kind of thing that you’d be interested in?
An hour and a half after the incident a security guard moseyed by to recode the lock and have me fill out an incident form. Somehow that didn’t make us feel any safer. As far as providing any sort of effective response to the actual incident, there was none. Barney Fife would have done better.
Then we went downstairs to discuss the incident with the front desk supervisor, who again didn’t seem too concerned about it. I had to ask her if she realized what a big deal it was to have guests broken in on, because her completely lackadaisical attitude was infuriating.
She eventually said she’d comp us 1 night (seemed she was trying to shut us up because there were other guests nearby).