This appeal is from a conviction on a charge of solicitation for the purpose of prostitution. 1
The testimony of the arresting officer was that at about 9:30 p. m. he was standing outside a local hotel when he was approached by appellant. She asked if he was looking for a girl to have some fun, and also whether he could afford $20. He asked what she meant and she replied “she would do anything, show him a good time, and make it worth his while.” He replied affirmatively and agreed to pay her $20. She asked where they could go, and he replied he had a hotel room and gave her its number. She left, saying she would go up the back way and meet him.
The officer then went to a fellow officer stationed nearby and received from him $20 in marked money, and then went to the hotel room where he was joined by appellant. In the room he gave her the $20 which she placed in her shoe, and she then partially undressed. The fellow officer, having observed appellant enter the hotel room, waited a short time and then entered. He found appellant partially undressed, asked her where the money was, and when she took it from her shoe he verified it as the money previously marked. Appellant was then arrested.
Appellant contends that the foregoing evidence was insufficient to support the conviction. Her argument is that if solicitation occurred, it took place in the conversation outside the hotel, and that because there was no mention in the conversation of a sex act, it is unreasonable to construe the conversation as a solicitation for the purpose of prostitution. She argues that the conversation amounted to “nothing more than frivolous banter and inconsequential flirtation,” citing Williams v. United States,
We cannot accept this argument. In Curran v. United States, D.C.Mun.App.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Code 1951, § 22-2701, Supp. VIII.
