![]() Frost also said that at the time of her booking, she had been wearing "feminine" clothes - high-cut shorts and a bra - the filing said. The move was "against her wishes," and Frost was "confused" as to why she was being transferred, given that her Department of Motor Vehicles records and driver's license both said she was a woman, the lawsuit said. When Kristina Frost first arrived at San Diego Central Jail on November 25, 2020, she was placed alone in a holding cell, according to the lawsuit, which was filed on Tuesday and reviewed by Insider.īut later that day, the deputies moved Frost to a "minimally monitored" cell with three men, the lawsuit said. She said deputies at the San Diego jail also repeatedly misgendered her, according to the filing.Ī transgender woman was forced to share a jail cell last year with three men, one of whom "viciously" assaulted her when she was asleep, according to a lawsuit against San Diego County and its sheriff's department. ![]() One of the men "viciously" assaulted her and broke her jaw, the lawsuit said. ![]() ![]() Kristina Frost was put in a jail cell with three men against her wishes in 2020, a lawsuit said. Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC.San Diego Central Jail. The Talking Heads Play CBGB, the New York Club that Shaped Their Sound (1975) The new (gasp!-Midtown) Max’s isn’t Max’s Kansas City in anything but name, but its website at least preserves the memory of the old club’s heady 70s days with more live audio and memorabilia from The Velvets, Sid Vicious, Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers, and many more “Max’s Icons.” Also don’t miss this Flavorwire gallery of classic photographs from 70s-era Max’s.ĬBGB’s: The Roots of Punk Lets You Watch Vintage Footage from the Heyday of NYC’s Great Music Sceneġ976 Film Blank Generation Documents CBGB Scene with Patti Smith, The Ramones, Talking Heads, Blondie & More Max’s closed down in 1981 with a headlining performance by DC hardcore punks Bad Brains, but it has since reopened in another location (1998). See the young Boss open for Van Ronk above with an acoustic version of “Growing Up” in 1972. In the early seventies, booker Sam Hood also secured sixties folk mainstays like Dave Van Ronk and newcomers like soon-to-be wildly famous Bruce Springsteen. ![]() Max’s didn’t only shelter punks and strung-out art rockers. ![]()
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January 2023
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