ORAL SEX: One hour is not enough

By ROGER M. BALANZA

BRUCE SALAZAR, 50, of Paranaque, Manila, a tourist in Davao City in Southern Philippines, gifted himself with a young woman on the night of February 14 on Valentines Day, and picked a 23-year old commercial sex worker along Legazpi Street, the city’s red light avenue.

Salazar’s sexual adventure ended at the police station, after an hour of, aaaahhh, oral sex with the woman.

The man from Paranaque was invited by police to the Sta. Ana Police precinct, on complaint of the woman that she was shortchanged in the sex deal. She also moaned, showing to police her reddened face, that she was slapped by Salazar after she demanded payment after the one-hour sex duel.

At the police station, the woman—she remains anonymous to avoid fines under the Davao City Children’s and Women Welfare Code that bans media to name children and women in police-related events—Salazar picked her up around 11:00 pm at Legazpi and brought her to Garden Oases—an urban resort in Barrio Obrero—where they took a room.

The deal: P500 for a one-hour sex joust.

At the love nest, the woman said she did nothing but do a blow job—for one whole hour—on Salazar, who demanded an extended session.

The woman thought time is up, asked for payment that Salazar refused. At this juncture, the woman said Salazar raised his hands and slapped her on the face. Hurt, the woman wailed, catching the attention of the resort room boys, who called police to check the commotion.

But Salazar had a different story. He told the police desk that the woman forced him to cough up more than the P500 agreed price, on the claim one-hour blow jobs under her price list should cost more.

When he refused to give the incentive, the woman made a scene and cried loud catching the attention of the resort managers.

Salazar remains in the Sta. Ana Police detention cell on a formal complaint filed by the woman—not for being short-changed in the sex deal nor for the extended oral sx—but for slight physical injury.

A police desk officer said police would try to convince the woman to drop the case—or police may release Salazar if the woman would not pursue the case. After all, he said, the woman—even as she vowed to pursue a battery rap— took the P500 from Salazar while  police were settling the conflict at the police precinct.

HAPPY VALENTINES, Bruce!!! 

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