Sunday, March 28, 2010

HUMAN TRAFFICKING: IF YOU SEE IT IN YOUR CITY, IF YOU HEAR ABOUT IT, IF YOU SUSPECT IT, REPORT IT.

SUCCESS STORY
  • Susie, 39 years old, was in high spirits at the airport in Mombasa. She boarded a plane on her way to Germany to spend a three-month holiday, courtesy of her 'boyfriend' who had lavished gifts on her. All hopes of an exciting, wonderful stay in a foreign land were shattered on arrival in Germany, when her boyfriend/trafficker confiscated her passport and denied her food for several days before informing her that she would work as a sex slave. She was raped repeatedly, beaten, and threatened with death. After enduring gross exploitation, Susie used a cell phone to call police.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

DID YOU KNOW: Human Trafficking

DID YOU KNOW:     In June 2003, the FBI in conjunction with the Department of Justice Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children launched the Innocence Lost National Initiative. Their combined efforts were aimed at addressing the growing problem of domestic sex trafficking of children in the United States. In the five years since its inception, the initiative has resulted in the development of 24 dedicated task forces and working groups throughout the U.S. involving federal, state and local law agencies working in tandem with U.S. Attorney's Offices.

Statistics (as of June 2008)
     Children Recovered: 433
     Seizures: Over $3 million
     Convictions: 308
     Task Forces and Working Groups: 24

Investigations have successfully led to the conviction of more than 300 pimps, madams, and their associates who exploit children and women through prostitution. These convictions have resulted in lengthy sentences including multiple 25-year-to-life sentences and the seizure of real property, vehicles, and monetary assets.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

YOU CAN HELP STOP HUMAN TRAFFICKING

KEY QUESTIONS TO ASK a possible trafficking victim:
  • What type of work do you do?
  • Are you being paid?
  • Can you leave your job if you want to?
  • Can you come and go as you please?
  • Have you or your family been threatened?
  • What are your working and living conditions like?
  • Where do you sleep nd eat
  • Do you have to ask permission to eat/sleep/go to the bathroom?
  • Are there locks on your doors/windows so you can't get out?
  • Has your identification been taken from you?

Sunday, March 7, 2010

HUMAN TRAFFICKING

Human Trafficking is the exploitation by force, fraud or coercion of vulnerable people for forced labor, domestic servitude or commercial sex operations.

Clues that may help you identify a possible trafficing victim:

1) Accompanied by a controlling person or boss: not speaking on own behalf

2) Lack of control over personal schedule, money, I.D., travel documents

3) Transported to and from work; lives and works in the same place

4) Debt owed to employer/crew leader; inability to leave job

5) Bruises, depression, fear, overly submissive