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“The ladies saw hell's slavery pit.” --Rick Casey

Human Trafficking – or. “The ladies saw hell's slavery pit.” --Rick Casey. Laura Blackburn & Ann Herbage League of Women Voters of the Houston Area. Defining Human Trafficking. Human trafficking is modern day slavery. It involves force; fraud; or

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“The ladies saw hell's slavery pit.” --Rick Casey

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  1. Human Trafficking – or “The ladies saw hell's slavery pit.” --Rick Casey Laura Blackburn & Ann Herbage League of Women Voters of the Houston Area

  2. Defining Human Trafficking Human trafficking is modern day slavery. It involves • force; • fraud; or • coercion to provide labor, services, or commercial sex acts against their will.

  3. HUMAN TRAFFICKING DOES NOT • necessarily mean movement or transportation • but rather • the buying and selling of people.

  4. SMUGGLING • The person smuggled is cooperating. • There is no actual or implied coercion.

  5. HOW PREVALENT IS IT? Today, trafficking of humans is believed to occur on every continent, and it’s believed that more people are enslaved now than in any other time in human history. (Bales, 1999.)

  6. WHY? • BECAUSE it is a $9 to $32 billion dollar industry. • Human trafficking is illegal in every country but it is happening in every country. • Cases have been investigated in 48 states in the U.S. • It is the second largest criminal industry in the world today and the fastest growing.

  7. HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE INVOLVED INTERNATIONALLY? • 12.3 million people are in forced labor, bonded labor, forced child labor, sexual servitude and involuntary servitude. (International Labor Organization). • Some estimates are as high as 27 million. (U.S. Department of State, 2006, 2007) • Approximately 14,500 - 17,500 individuals are trafficked annually into the United States. (Trafficking In Persons Report, 2009)

  8. Why Is Trafficking So Prevalent? • Economics. • Political instability. • Culture. • Consumer demand. • Victims seem invisible.

  9. WHO IS TRAFFICKED? • Women and children. • Men. • Both domestic and international. • For labor & sex.

  10. Why People Are Trafficked • Personal sexual exploitation • Begging/street peddling • Restaurant work • Construction work • Carnival work • Hotel housekeeping • Criminal activities • Day labor • Prostitution • Exotic dancing • Agricultural work • Landscape work • Domestic work and child care (domestic servitude) • Factory work

  11. Victim Issues to Consider • May not understand that they are victims. • May fear for their own and/or their family’s safety. • Likely to lie or use a rehearsed story initially. • May be behaviorally dependent on trafficker. • May feel shame in telling their story and what they have been through.

  12. Domestic Victims of Human Trafficking • Domestic victims are U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents. • Most domestic victims are children exploited for the commercial sex industry. • Estimated 199,000 incidents of sexual exploitation of minors occur each year in the U.S. (Estes & Weiner, 2001.)

  13. Domestic Trafficking – Continued • The typical age of entry into prostitution is age 12. (National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.) • May be younger. • 1 out of every 3 teens on the street will be lured into prostitution within 48 hours of leaving home. (National Incidence Studies of Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Throwaway Children.)

  14. Trafficking in and through Texas • Texas is hub of the U.S. trafficking • Houston is the hub of the hub. • Major airport. • Major port. • Near the border with Mexico. • 20 percent of U.S. trafficking occurs on I-10 between El Paso and Houston.

  15. Scope of the Problem 15

  16. Prosecuting Trafficking Cases – A Look at the Legal Tools

  17. INTERNATIONAL LAW • UNITED NATIONS • 1948 – Declaration of Human Rights prohibited slavery and servitude. • 2000 – Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime.

  18. INTERNATIONAL LAW -- • First protocol – Palermo Protocol: • Against trafficking in persons. • First global legally binding definition of human trafficking. • U.S. signed in December 2000. • Ratified in November 2005.

  19. Federal Law – 13th Amendment to the Constitution (1865) “…neither slavery nor involuntary servitude (except as punishment for a duly convicted crime) shall exist within the United States or any place subject to their jurisdiction….”

  20. Federal Law (continued) – Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA) • TVPA of 2000, Pub. Law 106-386 • Prevention • Economic assistance for vulnerable populations, micro lending funding for NGOs and international public education programs and mandates U.S. State Department's annual TIP report.

  21. TVPA -- • Protection and Victims Assistance • Victims assistance programs and decriminalization of victims. • Prosecution • Increase in sentence ranges, distinct crime for passport confiscation, defined coercion as physical and psychological.

  22. The TVPA Is a Victim-centered Law • Trafficking victims, even if they are in the U.S. illegally, are to be viewed as victims of crime. • Programs are created to assist victims, including immigration remedies.

  23. TVPA-- Benefits afforded refugees are given to human trafficking victims willing to assist in the prosecution of their traffickers.

  24. Federal Human Trafficking - Offenses

  25. State Law – Trafficking of Persons • Texas Penal Code, Section 20A.02 (Passed in 2003—just after Washington State) • A person commits this offense if: • The person knowingly trafficks another person ...

  26. State Law -- (continued) • … with the intent that the trafficked person engage in • forced labor or services; • conduct that constitutes an offense under Chapter 43 (public indecency/prostitution).

  27. State Law – (continued) • Trafficking of persons is a felony of the second degree; it is raised to a first degree felony if: • the person who is trafficked is younger than 14 years of age at the time of the offense.

  28. Identifying Trafficking CasesInternational

  29. Trafficking Hot Spots • Places of prostitution • brothels • spas • bars and cantinas • strip clubs • residences

  30. Mi Cabaña Sports Bar El Cuco Restaurant El Huetamo Night Club

  31. Trafficking Hot Spots (continued) • Labor camps and sweatshops: • Security intended to keep victims confined. • Only allowed to shop at “company store.”

  32. Potential Trafficking Indicators • Living/working conditions of victim: • live on or near work premises. • restricted or controlled communication. • frequently moved by traffickers. • large number in a living space.

  33. Potential Trafficking Indicators (continued) • Victims may lack • personal items or possessions. • knowledge about how to get around in a community.

  34. Potential Trafficking Indicators (continued) • Personal and physical indicators: • injuries from beatings or weapons. • signs of torture (e.g., cigarette burns). • brands or scarring indicating ownership. • signs of malnourishment.

  35. Potential Trafficking Indicators (continued) • Behaviors of potential victims: • signs of emotional distress or trauma. • Averted gaze. • Cowering.

  36. Identifying Trafficking CasesDomestic Minor Sex Trafficking

  37. Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking (DMST) Defined By Federal Law • Domestic minor sex traffickingoccurs when a U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident who has not attained 18 years of age is engaged in a commercial sex act.

  38. DOMESTIC MINOR SEX TRAFFICKING-- • “Commercial sex act” means any sex act on account of which anything of value is given to or received by any person. • This includes: • prostitution. • exotic dancing or stripping • pornography.

  39. Victims

  40. Who Are the Victims of DMST? • Youth of any ethnicity, race, or religion. • Youth of any socio-economic class. • Female, male, and transgender youth. • Youth of all ages, including teenagers. • Vulnerable youth. • Victims do not “just happen” – they are MADE

  41. Path to Victimization What is the main reason a child enters into prostitution? Love, Affection, and Attention

  42. Why Is It Hard to Identify DMST Victims? • Victims do not self-identify. • Victims are physically and/or psychologically controlled by pimps. • Victims are trained by pimps to tell lies and false stories.

  43. The only close social and emotional tie victims have is with the trafficker or pimp. • Victims distrust service providers and law enforcement. • Victims are frequently moved from place to place. • Technology can help disguise the real age of the victim. • It is easy to obtain fake I.D.s

  44. The Pimp: Methods of Control and Coercion • Masters of the art of seduction. • Able to identify the vulnerabilities of a specific child and exploit them. • Use torture tactics to control their victims after seduction, which • leads to complete obedience and a breakdown of personal autonomy. • includes both physical and psychological torture.

  45. When Excuses Do Not Work • Beatings • Verbal abuse • Humiliations • Threats to harm victim’s children, parents, or other family members • Restriction of movement (other than work-related).

  46. Future For the Victim • Victims have a limited useful life: • Poor physical health; disease, infection, or injury; emotional collapse; addiction St. Petersburg, FL Police Department

  47. Future For the Victim • Victims are also murdered. Tiffany Mason , San Francisco, murdered by “john” at age 15 (August 2001)

  48. LAW ENFORCEMENT IN HOUSTON • There are 2 Federal task forces: • Houston Trafficking Rescue Alliance (HTRA). • Houston Innocence Lost Task Force (HILTF).

  49. Houston Trafficking Rescue Alliance • Members: • U.S Attorney’s Office. 2. ICE. 3. FBI. 4. U.S. Department of State Diplomatic Security. 5. U.S. Coast Guard.

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