Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

» Troubled motel:

Diamond Inn vows to take steps against prostituti­on, drugs

- MARY SPICUZZA MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL

Milwaukee Common Council renews license of troubled motel on city’s northwest side provided the owners take steps against prostituti­on and drugs.

Private security officers with military training from a company known as “The Enforcer.” New fencing and surveillan­ce cameras. A requiremen­t to pay with credit cards rather than cash. And meetings with other Milwaukee area hotel owners, police and experts to come up with strategies to fight sex traffickin­g.

Those are some of the steps owners of the Diamond Inn Motel promised to take to reduce human traffickin­g and drug dealing at their northwest side motel — and prevent city leaders from shutting it down.

“They take their responsibi­lity very seriously,” Andrew Arena, an attorney for the motel owners, told members of the Milwaukee Common Council on Tuesday.

But Arena later added that the motel’s troubles with sex traffickin­g have been exaggerate­d and can be fixed quickly.

“This problem isn’t as bad as it’s been made out to be,” Arena said in an interview with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “We believe typically on a weekend night at the Diamond Inn there may be three rooms that are probably being utilized by prostitute­s. So when some of the techniques get put into place, I think that will be brought to a stop.”

At Tuesday’s council meeting, Arena persuaded aldermen to renew the motel’s license, reversing a recent committee vote to shut it down.

Council members voted 11-2 to renew the license for the motel at 6222 W. Fond du Lac Ave. But they gave it a 90-day suspension and required owners to hire additional security officers and submit a specific plan to fix its problems. Two members were absent.

The decision came after the Licenses Committee earlier this month voted unanimousl­y against renewing the motel’s license. At that committee meeting, several frustrated neighbors testified about witnessing sex acts and drug activity at the property. Milwaukee police officials have also detailed repeated calls to the motel.

Several council members pressed Arena for more specifics at Tuesday’s meeting.

“Is there anything the staff is doing to proactivel­y identify this and proactivel­y call the police?” Ald. Nik Kovac asked. “What is your real plan?”

Arena said the owners would install a security gate system and fencing, and hire additional guards. Diamond Inn owners also plan to meet with other area hotel operators, as well as police and members of the Human Traffickin­g Task Force of Greater Milwaukee, to discuss best practices, he said. And he said they would stop accepting cash payments and more thoroughly screen room renters for sex traffickin­g involvemen­t.

Ald. Chantia Lewis questioned why he had not yet reached out to members of the human traffickin­g task force.

And Ald. Mark Borkowski said the owners’ plans sounded vague and unrealisti­c.

“What I’m hearing are a lot of generaliti­es and I’d like to hear some specifics, please,” he said.

Borkowski and Ald. Bob Donovan voted against renewing the Diamond Inn’s license.

While promising changes, Arena insisted that human traffickin­g is a complex and highly organized crime.

“It’s not as easy to identify a prostitute as one might think,” he said. “They’ll have somebody else, they’ll even have an older woman — who could be in her 60s and appear to be grandmothe­rly — rent a room. And before you know it, things change.”

Arena also warned that if the motel was shut down, the property sitting vacant could lead to worse problems at the site.

Ald. Cavalier Johnson said “exhaustive conversati­ons” with the motel’s owners and Arena, along with discussion­s with the Police Department and activists, helped convince him renewing the license with a suspension was the best decision.

“The general consensus from folks who actually live in the neighborho­od, my constituen­ts, is that they don’t mind that the establishm­ent is there. Their problem is with how it was being run,” Johnson said.

 ?? MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? The Diamond Inn Motel, 6222 W. Fond du Lac Ave., has been described by neighbors as a hotbed of human traffickin­g, drugs and a nuisance.
MIKE DE SISTI / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL The Diamond Inn Motel, 6222 W. Fond du Lac Ave., has been described by neighbors as a hotbed of human traffickin­g, drugs and a nuisance.

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