Monday, June 9, 2014
Fighting human trafficking - SFGate
Friday, March 29, 2013
Bikes From Nonprofit Keep Cambodian Girls Safe - Face of Philanthropy - The Chronicle of Philanthropy- Connecting the nonprofit world with news, jobs, and ideas
Source: The Chronicle of Philanthropy
Nonprofit’s Gift of Bikes Helps Cambodian Girls Get to School Safely
For young girls in rural parts of Cambodia, the road to school is often not only long but also perilous.
Because girls risk rape or abduction by sex traffickers, many parents prefer to keep their daughters at home rather than exposing them to danger on the daily journey to school. Attendance figures bear out the result: Only 11 percent of girls in Cambodia reach secondary school.
But the number of girls making it to school is slowly increasing because of Lotus Pedals, a program to give bicycles to young Cambodian girls.
It’s hard to attack a girl on a bike, says Erika Keaveney, executive director of Lotus Outreach International, the San Francisco charity that runs the program.
“Lotus Pedals is a simple intervention but a terrifically effective one,” she says., adding, “And donors like it because a one-time gift can make such an enormous, direct difference in one girl’s life.”
The charity spends $80 to provide each bike, counting the costs for transport and delivery, a repair kit, and a pump, along with project management and follow-up.
Lotus Pedals distributed 500 bikes in Cambodia last year, and Ms. Keaveney says the goal is 2,000 in 2013. Lotus Outreach International was founded in India in 1993 by Khyentse Norbu, a Buddhist teacher who sought to serve the world’s most dispossessed people through education.
A decade later, the charity opened a U.S. office that serves as headquarters, coordinating affiliate operations in seven countries. The charity now serves 30,000 women and children, mainly in India and Cambodia, with a 2013 operating budget of $925,000. Contributions from individuals account for two-thirds of the budget, with most of the rest coming from foundations. This year the charity hopes to increase donations through marketing deals with bicycle manufacturers and retailers.
“We have seen how one bicycle is so much more than two wheels,” says Ms. Keaveney. “It is amazing how many Cambodians can fit onto a bike. Our girls often give their siblings or neighbors a ride to school on the handlebars and anywhere else they can hold on, so one bike actually enables multiple kids to get to school.”
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Editorial: Another way to stop human trafficking
Source: The Daily Journal
| March 20, 2013, 05:00 AM Editorial |
The rationale behind collecting such data is that it will help police in their duties should a problem arise. And more and more such problems seem to be related to human trafficking. Since 2005, the South San Francisco Police Department has investigated more than 160 cases of human trafficking involving 182 escorts and/or pimps. Just last month, two people were arrested in the city for allegedly prostituting four females, including one underage girl, at one of the city’s 27 hotels, motels or inns. Those hotels are in close proximity to San Francisco International Airport, and South San Francisco police conducted training recently to help clerks identify possible cases of human trafficking or prostitution. It was that training that helped the clerk identify the odd behavior in the February incident that led to the arrest. Another recent case involved a Windsor man who allegedly set up a sex date with minors at a South San Francisco inn. He was arrested after arranging a meeting with undercover officers who posed as the father of the minors. This case is unrelated, and is evidence of the need for a multi-pronged approach for a variety of crimes that find their way to areas of convenience such as by international airports. Training clerks is a step in the right direction in ensuring they know what to watch for when it comes to such crimes. Requiring basic information is another step in the right direction. These incremental steps amount to larger awareness of how criminals use local hotels for nefarious reasons. Without imposing on the privacy of hotel guests, clerks can use the training police provided to them to keep a watchful eye on suspicious behavior. And the city has taken the proper step in ensuring those clerks are collecting the proper information that will assist them in investigating a number of crimes, but specifically those that involve human trafficking. Human trafficking has received more attention lately, in part because of Proposition 35, which expanded its definition, imposed new fines and changed how evidence can be used against victims. It also required additional law enforcement training. However, it has also received more attention because it is growing and more needs to be done to stop it. While this South San Francisco ordinance is not the cure-all, it is one more tool police can use to stop this crime from taking place in our area and to capture those who exploit people for their own profit. It is also a good example of the business community working with law enforcement to stop illicit behavior. |
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Friday, March 1, 2013
Schools Can Help Combat Sexual Exploitation, Trafficking of Children - Rules for Engagement - Education Week
Source: Education Week
By Gina Cairney on February 8, 2013
By guest blogger Gina Cairney
Washington
The victims of human trafficking are often hidden in plain site, a fact that fuels a common misperception that this "lucrative industry" is a "foreign problem" that doesn't exist in the United States.
The truth, said Alice Hill, is that human trafficking is an everywhere problem, and is happening all across the United States.
Hill, a senior counselor to the U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security, spoke along with two other panelists yesterday at an event at the U.S. Department of Education to discuss the nature and extent of child trafficking within this country.
They also spoke about awareness raising, and offered preliminary guides on how schools can identify and help students at risk for being "picked up" by pimps and traffickers.

It is estimated that at least 100,000 children across the country are sexually exploited each year, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, but the real numbers may be significantly higher.
Hill estimated that, worldwide, there are close to 20.9 million victims, the largest number in recorded history. It's also estimated to be a $32 billion industry, coming in just behind illegal drugs.
School-aged children are often targeted because of their vulnerability and guillibility, according to Jenee Littrell, an assistant principal of Grossmont Union High School in San Diego, but the panelists made it clear that human trafficking does not discriminate.
Anyone can be a victim.
The average age of children taken by pimps and traffickers are 12 to 14 years old for girls, and 11 to 13
years old for boys, Hill said. The youngsters can be approached at school by friends or peers already in "The Life".
Traffickers also target minors at school-sponsored events, and on their way to and from school, Littrell said.
Littrell was inspired to combat the commercial sexual exploitation of children when her school district identified its first victim in 2009.
Listening to this young woman's experience, about how she ended up on the streets after changing schools and being bullied, ignited a passion within Littrell, she said.
"My school system, the thing we can control did not protect her and address her needs," Littrell told Education Week, "and further isolated her and pushed her away from us."
At that point, it was clear that if something wasn't done, the "stakes would be huge," she said.
San Diego is one of three "high prostitution areas" identified by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The other two are Los Angeles and San Francisco.
Grossmont Union was one of the first school districts to notice a pervasive pattern of students falling victim to pimps, according to San Diego County News Center.
Identifying Victims
Working with the vice unit in San Diego, Grossmont Union's staff and county social service workers underwent comprehensive training to be better able to identify students who may be at risk of, or have been pulled into, prostitution.
Littrell identified three levels of involvement into "The Life".
The "party crew" is where potential recruits are groomed into the life. These children still attend school regularly, but are invited to a party that unbeknownst to them is really a sex party.
At these parties female minors are often drugged and coerced into performing sexual acts for paying clients, Littrell said.
The other two levels include increased truancy with an eventual dropping out of school when the victim fully joins the track.
Educators have a unique opportunity to identify students involved in such situations, Littrell said, and have the responsibility to report to authorities any suspected exploitation of students.
"When this is happening, it's a huge safety issue not only for our young victims, but for the other students," she said.
Whether school districts realize it or not, schools are on the front lines for preventing child trafficking and exploitation.
If educators develop partnerships with local law enforcement and social child services, like Grossmont Union did, they can be trained to notice indicators of CSEC, and intervene effectively, said Eve Birge, the Education Department's liaison on domestic human trafficking and gender-based violence.
President Obama announced several initiatives last September to help combat what his administration has called "modern-day slavery."
In his remarks, the president said the issue of human trafficking should be a concern to every person, community, business, and nation because it is a "debasement of our common humanity."
It tears away at the social fabric, and endangers public health.
The initiatives, aimed at eliminating human trafficking, include:
- Strengthening the U.S. Government's existing zero-tolerance policy on human trafficking in government contracting;
- Providing training and guidance to federal prosecutors, law enforcement officials, immigration judges, and other sectors to better detect incidences of human trafficking, and to treat victims as victims, not as criminals;
- Expanding services and legal assistance to trafficking victims; and,
- Developing the first-ever domestic human trafficking assessment to better track trends within the country.
"Victims sometimes don't initially want help," Hill said, "and there's concern that our policies may put them at greater risk."
The ultimate goal, according to Hill, is to rescue exploited children and to get them to believe in the value of who they are rather than the sale of their bodies.
"It's a very complex psychological issue, lots of factors are at play that we still need to better understand," she said. "Part of this ... is just unfolding, we're just discovering this."
PHOTO: Jenee Littrell, assistant principal of Grossmont Union High School in San Diego, Calif., speaks at a U.S. Department of Education event on the trafficking and sexual exploitation of children in the United States. (Gina Cairney/Education Week)
Follow Rules for Engagement on Twitter @Rulz4Engagement.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Years Later, Human Trafficking Survivors at Risk of Re-Exploitation - New America Media
Source: New America Media

New America Media/SF Public Press, News Report, Ambika Kandasamy,
Posted: Aug 30, 2012
Photo by Jason Winshell / SF Public Press
When Lili Samad came to the Bay Area to work as a nanny for an Egyptian government official, she thought it was an ideal job. Instead, she said, she was forced to work long hours doing domestic chores and forbidden from contacting her family in Indonesia.
“First when I arrived there, they treated me like a prisoner,” Samad said.
After almost 3 1/2 years, for which she was paid just $1,000, she sought help from a neighbor she had met a few times. She said the neighbor concealed her in the back of a car and took her to a police station.
But after she escaped, Samad faced a whole new set of challenges: finding housing and a stable job to pay for it. Samad stayed with the neighbor for a few months before moving to the Asian Women’s Shelter, a San Francisco nonprofit that provides temporary housing for women who have suffered violence. There, case managers connected her to community rehabilitation services for victims. Still, the road to recovery was rocky. Over the course of six years, she lived in four temporary apartments before settling down in subsidized housing.
People trafficked into the country receive temporary government and nonprofit social service benefits after rescue or flight from captivity: shelter, health care, counseling, employment and legal help. But once these benefits term out, counter-trafficking specialists worry that victims, who generally have little work experience and weak social and family networks, could fall back into labor conditions as exploitative as the ones they fled.
As a victim of international labor trafficking, Samad received government help to stay in the U.S. But she is among hundreds of trafficking survivors each year who end up, months after getting help trying to build a new life, living in marginal housing and working in low-wage jobs.
Samad, who works part-time as a waitress at an elder care facility with her husband and lives in a low-income public housing unit in the Bay Area, said their combined income is only sufficient to pay for basic needs.
“We cannot spend on other things, so only food and rent,” she said.
From fiscal year 2002 through May of this year, the U.S. government issued 3,042 visas for trafficking victims, called T-1 Nonimmigrant Status visas, data from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services show. These provide temporary protection and a chance to apply for permanent residency for those trafficked from foreign nations.
Experts say it is difficult to identify and quantify the number of victims in this country or those who are re-exploited. Not all victims of sex or labor trafficking seek help from government agencies or community groups. And international trafficking incidents in the U.S. are diverse. They can involve the exploitation of farm laborers by contracting companies, the abuse of domestic workers by foreign diplomats and the coercion of people into prostitution by pimps.
Traffickers — anyone who brings people to the U.S. through force, fraud or coercion — often hide victims in their homes, brothels, boats or other clandestine locations.
Risk of re-exploitation
A recent in-depth academic study by researchers at the University of Texas, Austin and North Carolina A & T State University, looked at women in Texas who had been trafficked from other countries. It showed that victims need targeted, long-lasting and culturally sensitive services to help them rebuild their lives.
Almost all of the women interviewed for the study now work in restaurants, hotels and other service jobs. This presents a challenge for their rehabilitation, said Noël Busch-Armendariz, director of the Institute on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault at the School of Social Work at the University of Texas at Austin, and one of the authors of the report, published in the Journal of Applied Research on Children.
One of the long-term needs of trafficking survivors is acquiring new life and professional skills, so they can move toward jobs that give them more security and income, Busch-Armendariz said.
“If we don’t give survivors and their children ways to fully integrate, ways to be self-sufficient, they could continue to be targeted as somebody who could be exploited,” she said.
A 38-year-old single mother from the Philippines, who requested that her name not be used, said she came to the U.S. to work as a housekeeper for an ambassador from Africa more than three years ago. But as soon as she arrived in New Jersey, her employer seized her passport and work contract.
“The first thing that made me scared is they said their house is alarmed — if I open the door, the alarm will go off, and the police will arrive and take me away,” she said in her native Tagalog through an interpreter.
The woman said her employer paid her $1,000 per month for working 17-hour days, threw a fork at her in a fit of anger and made her scrub the kitchen when she was ill. “I was so scared,” she said. “I was always nervous. I was feeling sick.”
With the help of the ambassador’s driver, she contacted the Damayan Migrant Workers Association, a nonprofit group in New York City, which helped rescue her.
She said finding work has been difficult, and potential employers fear her trafficking background. She now works as a part-time nanny, but the pay is not sufficient to support herself.
“In truth, it’s short,” she said. “Not enough. My part-time work is just enough for the housing. There’s no health insurance.”
Community groups say survivors run the risk of re-exploitation if they work in sectors that are not properly regulated.
“This is especially true in the domestic worker industry, but any kind of informal sector where people are kind of more hidden from sight,” said Cindy Liou, staff attorney and coordinator of the Human Trafficking Project at Asian Pacific Islander Legal Outreach, a nonprofit organization in San Francisco that provides legal services for victims.
“It’s not uncommon that some of our clients sometimes come back to us with wage-and-hour questions, and we refer them out to the Employment Law Center and other places usually so they know their rights,” Liou said.
The benefits clock
County, state and federal governments offer a variety of temporary benefits to help smooth the way to rehabilitation for victims of international human trafficking.
Victims granted a T visa or continued presence status — a short-term immigration status from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security — receive certification from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to access public benefits at the same level as refugees.
Benefits typically last eight months, and include cash assistance, health care, food stamps, job training, English courses, transportation passes and other services.
Some states, such as California and New York, have approved short-term benefits to assist trafficking survivors in the process of qualifying for federal benefits.
The maximum benefit for single adult T visa clients in San Francisco is $422 per month, which includes a county supplement of $105, said Josef Bruckback, eligibility manager of the state’s welfare program CalWorks at the Human Services Agency in San Francisco. Clients with children receive benefits through CalWorks and are eligible for services for up to 48 months.
“The overarching problem is that once they time out of those benefits, they’re really left on their own,” said Denise Brennan, associate professor and chair of the department of anthropology at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. “It’s a very short time frame. It’s not likely that they have built a social network that could fill in where the government support leaves off.”
Survivors generally find work in the same labor sector they worked in when they were trafficked, Brennan said, and it’s usually low-wage work, limiting their economic mobility.
“What I think is really quite concerning is that over time, some of the first T visa recipients who now have green cards are just treading water,” she said. “Just in the past six months, I’ve heard about some folks who have lost their jobs.”
Some rescued trafficking victims struggle to pay rent. “I’ve found that there are formerly trafficked people who sometimes stay in romantic relationships even after they’ve fallen out of love, because they just can’t really afford to move out on their own,” Brennan said.
Hurdles in finding housing
Trafficking survivors often have difficulty finding an economical place to live in the long term. Some migrate from shelters to transitional housing until they can secure an affordable room or apartment. Others find temporary accommodations by working as live-in nannies.
A 64-year-old woman, who requested that her name not be used because she feared her former captor, said she came to California from Peru, because her brother-in-law offered her work as a nanny to take care of his granddaughter. But he made her cook, wash, clean, garden and do other domestic work for about 14 hours a day, and restricted her from getting in touch with her family, she said.
“He invited me to come over here with the promise of work, and that he would support me in everything, but it wasn’t like that. It wasn’t true,” she said in Spanish through an interpreter.
After he released her from his house more than a year later, she found work as a nanny for a family in the Bay Area, who provided a space for her to stay in their home. She said she has lived in low-income housing apartments and has worked low-wage jobs at stores and cafes in the region since then.
She now earns $11 an hour working at a chain supermarket and lives in a subsidized apartment with her son.
Community organizations that provide shelter and rehabilitation services for international trafficking victims say finding both short-term and long-term affordable housing is difficult, and without proper housing, they could be at risk for re-victimization.
At the Asian Women’s Shelter in San Francisco, case managers start looking for housing once the victim has stabilized and recovered from the trauma, said Hediana Utarti, the group’s community projects coordinator. For trafficking survivors in the process of applying for a T visa, they look for housing that meshes with the government benefits.
“It’s very, very tight, but we would look for a place where maybe they can share with other people,” Utarti said. “Usually we are able to find something like a live-in situation, like help with the elderly.”
Those situations often work as barter: trafficking survivors provide support for elderly people who give accommodations in return. Survivors sometimes find these work opportunities on their own through friends.
While most of the time this type of arrangement works, employers have been known to abuse the trafficking survivors by making them do more work than they signed up for, or not giving any breaks during their shifts, Utarti said.
When this type of re-exploitation occurs, case managers advise the trafficking victims to talk about the situation with their employers. “If need be, then we’ll do intervention,” she said.
In San Francisco, case managers also work with the city to identify space in single-room occupancy hotels, and if the clients have children, they look for housing in transitional facilities, such as the Compass Clara House, Raphael House and Hamilton Family Center.
Clients can stay for up to three months, but the Asian Women’s Shelter provides extensions for clients unable to find housing, to ensure that they do not find themselves on the streets.
“If they end up in a homeless shelter, then they’re going to go back to the whole cycle again — re-abuse,” Utarti said. “And we don’t want to do that.”
This story was made possible by a grant from Atlantic Philanthropies and was produced as part ofNew America Media’s Women Immigrants Fellowship Program.
Related articles
- Opinion: Anti-slavery law needs saving (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Q&A with Alden Pinkham on Summer Labor Trafficking (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Human Trafficking: A Global Problem with Local Impact (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
Thursday, May 10, 2012
Battling modern-day slavery
Source: smdailyjournal.com
| April 27, 2012, 05:00 AM By Bill Silverfarb Daily Journal staff | ||||
Modern-day slavery and human trafficking might seem like a faraway problem for those living in the Bay Area but a local nonprofit, Freedom House, is putting a spotlight on the problem locally. Formed in 2010, Freedom House is the first shelter in Northern California for adult female survivors of human trafficking. Since opening, it has provided services for 100 survivors of human trafficking, including housing for 25 women at a shelter in northern San Mateo County. The nonprofit’s mission is to bring hope and a new life to survivors of human trafficking by providing a safe home and long-term aftercare. “It’s about restoring the human dignity of these women and bringing them hope and a new life,” said Jaida Im, the Freedom House founder. The nonprofit holds its biggest fundraiser this weekend in San Francisco that will give its supporters an opportunity to hear survivor stories and see the faces victimized by modern-day slavery. Im and her staff work closely with law enforcement and other agencies to identify trafficking survivors and to provide them with the care and services they need to rebuild their lives. Many of the victims Freedom House assists were forced into the sex trade or to work for no money in hazardous situations. “Before I came to Freedom House I was in a very dark place. I had nothing. No direction and no hope. The people at Freedom House cared about me and became my friends. They helped me to build my self-esteem and have hope for my future,” said a human-trafficking survivor who will also be a guest speaker at Saturday’s fundraiser. Other survivors will also speak at Freedom House’s Third Annual Gala. Freedom House staff help meet the basic needs of survivors by providing them food, clothing and housing while connecting them to resources including social service, medical, legal, psychological, emotional and spiritual. The fundraiser, with about 500 already signed up to attend, is an opportunity to stand in solidarity against modern-day slavery, Im said. Many of the victims are often embarrassed or blame themselves for being victimized, she said. “When I was forced to become a prostitute, I saw the ugly my family warned me of, and I believed that the world no longer possessed good,” shared another Freedom House victim. “This home that the staff has worked so hard to create is a place for women like me to feel safe and see what beauty God has to give.” Im herself suffered terrible depression and was near suicide a few years ago as she suffered with severe migraine headaches for many years. A pharmacist for 20 years, she ended up leaving the profession as she was in pain every day and also heavily medicated. “I hit rock bottom. I was anxious and depressed. I was ready to give up,” said Im, married with one child. But in 2008, Im put her care into the hands of a renowned Christian faith healer from Korea who prayed over her. She had tried everything else so thought it could not hurt. Actually, it helped. “I asked God to please heal me,” she said. After her faith healing, Im had a miraculous recovery after about four days of what she described as physical and emotional purging. “I woke up one morning and my mind was crystal clear,” she said. Deciding to put her career as a pharmacist behind her, Im was looking for her next mission in life when she attended a human trafficking conference in San Francisco in 2009 and was inspired to help other women who were suffering even more than she was. “I felt like I was given a second chance in life and found my new life’s mission,” she told the Daily Journal. “For me, its about letting these women know to never give up.” The nonprofit is faith based but does not force religion on its clients, she said. It relies completely on donations to serve victims. Im’s hope is to raise awareness about the victims and the trauma they endure as they are trafficked for sex or labor. Freedom House is also a supporter of the CASE Act, the Californians Against Sexual Exploitation Act, a ballot initiative that would increase the penalties for human trafficking and increase protections for victims that is supported by U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-San Mateo. Victims need all the help they can get, Im said. State Sen. Leland Yee, D-San Francisco/San Mateo, will speak at Saturday’s fundraiser in San Francisco. Two years ago, the fundraiser attracted about 140 attendees but this year it is sold out, with more than 500 tickets sold. |
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Friday, March 16, 2012
Online Sex Trade Flourishing Despite Efforts to Curb It - NYTimes.com
Source: NYTimes.com
By SHOSHANA WALTER
March 16, 2012

For years, Mr. Surrell, 34, had profited by taking a portion of the earnings of his roster of women prostitutes. Then, like many Internet entrepreneurs, Mr. Surrell decided to capitalize on an expanding online community. On his Web site, which referred visitors to Mr. Surrell’s Facebook page and his instructional podcasts, pimps and aspiring pimps could post tips and swap advice about “the game.”
“It’s a good way to gather intelligence,” said Detective Vincent Repetto of the special victims unit. “You get this kind of information and it can dovetail with open investigations.”
- Sex traffickers prove harder to catch as they move online (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Saskatoon police hoping to keep tabs on online sex trade (cbc.ca)
- Lesson Plan | What Is Modern Slavery? Investigating Human Trafficking - NYTimes.com (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Shedding Light on Modern Day Slavery (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
Friday, September 16, 2011
Immigration Officials Come To SF To Talk Human Trafficking: News: SFAppeal
September 13, 2011 6:50 PM
Federal immigration officials are crisscrossing the country this month to spread the word about resources available to foreign victims of trafficking, violent crimes and domestic violence.
United States Citizenship and Immigration Services officials held a press conference at USCIS' San Francisco office Tuesday to discuss two visas available to such victims and to urge the public to be aware of potential human trafficking victims in their communities.
Immigration officials define human trafficking as a form of modern-day slavery in which victims are transported and forced into prostitution, hard labor or domestic servitude.
Unlike smuggling, which is "an arms-length transaction...with trafficking, you become an ongoing economic asset," USCIS Public Affairs Officer Sharon Runnery said Tuesday.
Often, traffickers prey on impoverished women and children, luring them into a life of slavery with promises of paid work in the U.S., federal officials said.
Once ensnared, many victims do not know how to escape, said Lynn Boudreau, assistant center director at USCIS' Vermont Service Center.
The federal agency is partnering with community groups, law enforcement and immigration officials in the Bay Area and nationwide to reach out to potential trafficking and violence victims and educate them about their options.
Foreign trafficking and crime victims can apply for a T or U Visa, created under the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, USCIS officials said.
The T visa is geared specifically toward victims of trafficking, while the U visa is meant to aid victims of violent crime or domestic violence, Boudreau said. Both visas provide victims with immigration protection, allowing them to remain in the U.S. for three years.
During that time, T or U visa holders may apply for permanent resident status, she said.
To qualify for the T visas, applicants must show that they have helped law enforcement arrest and prosecute their trafficker and that they would suffer severe hardship if forced to leave the country.
U visas are available to victims who have suffered physical or mental abuse that occurred as a result of having been a victim of criminal activity. Applicants must show they are willing to assist in the investigation and prosecution of that criminal activity, federal officials said.
Boudreau said the government issued all 10,000 available U visas last Fiscal Year, while issuing only about 800 of 5,000 available T visas last year, perhaps because the U visa application is less complicated to complete.
Yet officials said today that those numbers are up from previous years, largely due to USCIS' ongoing collaboration with police and community-based groups who reach out to victims in their communities.
Susan Bowyer, an attorney for the Immigration Center for Women and Children in San Francisco, said she has seen the visa process work for local trafficking victims who have fled their traffickers and found jobs and stability in the U.S.
"There are so many people who have gone from abject hopelessness and desperation to unlimited possibilities," she said today.
To report a potential trafficking victim in your community, USCIS urges the public to call a non-governmental, confidential help line at 1-888-373-7888.
"It's just about being vigilant," Boudreau said. "If something doesn't seem right, this is the number to call."
Laura Dixon, Bay City News
Related articles- Daily Journal - Feds work to increase use of special visa for human trafficking victims in Philly, around US (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- More crime, trafficking victims apply for visas (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- Trudie Styler: On Human Trafficking: The Whistleblower (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
- Kansas law falls short in combating human trafficking - KansasCity.com (trafficking-monitor.blogspot.com)
Friday, July 9, 2010
Anti-Sex Trafficking Protest, Sex Worker Counter Protest At Craigslist: The Alley: SFAppeal
July 8, 2010 11:49 AM
A large group of protesters is gathering outside Craigslist headquarters in San Francisco today to protest what they say is the facilitation of sex trafficking by the popular classified-ad website.
Dozens of human rights and anti-trafficking organizations will participate in the protest, scheduled for noon outside 1381 Ninth Ave.
The groups will be asking Craigslist to remove its "Adult Services" section, which they say encourages sexual exploitation.
Norma Ramos, executive director of the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, said Craigslist has "defied and defeated" state attorneys general, a lawsuit, and members of Congress who have tried to take on the company.
"Nothing seems to get the message to this company that they are contributing to human trafficking in a very significant way, so we are bringing this message to their doorstep," Ramos said.
A spokesperson for Craigslist was not immediately available for comment.
Ramos said the protest will feature picket lines, signs and a handful of speakers, including authors Aaron Cohen and Victor Malarek, and actress Terria Joseph, who is the mother of singer Alicia Keys.
She said she hopes the protest will convince the company to change its policy.
"It's a very simple request: stop hosting these ads, which are being used to facilitate human trafficking," Ramos said.
A group of sex workers is also headed to Craigslist headquarters today for a counterprotest, said Rachel West, a spokeswoman for the US PROStitutes Collective.
The human rights groups are asking for a change that West said would put more women in danger rather than save them from exploitation.
"It's pushing prostitution underground and making women more vulnerable to rape, violence and arrest," she said. "By closing down ways for women to be able to advertise, and working more safely indoors, we'll put women in more vulnerable positions."
Craigslist gets more than 20 billion page views per month, the seventh-highest total worldwide among English-language sites, and has more than 50 million users in the U.S. alone, according to the company's website.
Photo of protest: Tweetpic by Greg Dewar (@njudah)
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Solving Youth Trafficking: Educating "Johns" Curbs Demand (Series Part 4) | Oakland Local
Last updated on 02:29PM, Thursday, May 6, 2010
Kelly Tyne runs the Johns' School in SF. "Criminalizing the supply side of prostitution is ineffective." Photo by Alison Yin.
by Sarah Terry-Cobo
This is Part 4 of an eight-part, four-day Oakland Local investigative series on youth sex trafficking.
"I admit it: I'm a john."
The image of a john, "someone looking to pay for sex," often evokes the idea of a man in a car, trolling a street at night in a gritty neighborhood. But what most people don't realize is that johns are often just another face in the crowd.
One evening in early February, after a San Francisco panel on human trafficking in the Koret auditorium of the city's main library, an unnamed man confessed his story, disclosing his past to people who likely were strangers...
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As dozens of people filtered out of the auditorium, the man, who had shaggy salt-and-pepper hair and a bright yellow scarf, lingered at the back of the crowd.
"I admit it, I'm a john," he blurted out to the event organizer and MC.
He described his troubled childhood, living in group homes and being molested as a teenager. The molestation distorted his perspective on sexual relations, he said. Concerned this man might be looking for children to sleep with, the organizer found an FBI agent at the event and introduced him to the man in the yellow scarf.
SAGE School for Johns: Understanding the Demand
In San Francisco, the SAGE Project, or "Standing Against Global Exploitation," provides services to people trying to free themselves from commercial exploitation. It works with survivors of childhood sexual exploitation, and many employees identify as survivors of some type of exploitation. The group runs the First Offenders Prostitution Program, colloquially known as "the Johns' School," to help reduce exploitation.
"SAGE feels that if you make an effort to reduce demand, the need, or supply, will go down. Thereby sparing some individuals from being sucked into the matrix of hell that a life of prostitution looks like," said Kelly Tyne, director of men's services.
Tyne said SAGE employees acknowledge that criminalizing people who are involved in prostitution is counterproductive because it:
* Fails to promote public health
* Perpetuates exploitation
* Validates racism and socio-economic oppression
In particular, criminalization doesn't address what SAGE believes is at the root of the problem. Instead, the group focuses on reaching people who perpetrate the demand: johns, pimps and traffickers.
When Tyne talks about prostitution, he calls it exploitation. Sex is a commodity, and SAGE approaches the solution to sexual exploitation in economic terms. Simply put, if fewer people, "mostly men," purchase sex from exploited people, then fewer people, "mostly women," will sell sex.
Johns learn how they're part of the problem
The SAGE program allows first-time offenders who meet certain requirements to attend a daylong course at San Francisco's Hall of Justice and have their record wiped clean. Those arrested for soliciting sex from a minor are not eligible -- and upon conviction they are listed on the California sex offender registry.
Since SAGE launched the Johns' School in 1995, at least 12,000 individuals have attended the course. Attendees come from all walks of life -- there is no "typical profile" of a john, said Tyne. However, most attendees are men who tried to purchase sex from women.
A 2007 federally funded study showed that 95% of Johns' School graduates were not rearrested for prostitution in California.
"Yes. 95% of the individuals who attend the Johns' School are not rearrested in California for violating state prostitution laws." Tyne paused and emphasized, "It's a big deal."
Many SAGE employees are survivors of sexual exploitation, so they have a personal connection to the harm it inflicts, on individuals as well as communities.
Reducing demand: Not a typical solution
Elsewhere, much of the effort toward preventing the commercial sexual exploitation of children is a response to the crime.
Law enforcement agencies and several social service nonprofits offer basic services to victims, create tougher punishments for traffickers, and work toward regional collaboration among cities and counties. SAGE is the only local organization that directs its efforts to find what drives the demand for commercial sexually exploited people.
"The Johns' School is not about stopping prostitution in San Francisco. It's not," Tyne said with a shrug. "It's about reducing the demand for commercially sexually exploited individuals."
The role of SAGE, as Tyne puts it, is an educational focus on the demand: "Helping johns understand their role in terms of global systems of prostitution and exploitation, and putting money into services for directly affected prostituted individuals."
Many people begin the course feeling they were entrapped, Tyne says. But by the end of the day, they understand how their purchase of pornography is linked to child pornography rings flourishing on the other side of the globe.
Simply put, he said, individuals with power exploit those without it. Many of the clients SAGE works with do not "choose" a life of prostitution -- they are forced or coerced due to a lack of choices.
Representatives from SAGE say education is key to helping demonstrate that prostitution is not a victimless crime.
NEXT in this series: Part 5: Alameda County DA's Office: Crusade to Rescue Youth, Prosecute Pimps...
COMPLETE SERIES INDEX: Youth Trafficking in Oakland
This story was produced under a fellowship sponsored by the
G.W. Williams Center for Independent Journalism, a project of Tides
Center.
We also would like to thank Robert Rosenthal and California Watch for their support -- as well as our reporters Barbara Grady and Sarah Terry-Cobo, and photographer Alison Yin -- for their amazing work.
Support more independent quality reporting like this! Please donate to Oakland Local on Spot.us. We are seeking additional support for continued coverage.
About Sarah Terry-Cobo
Sarah Terry-Cobo's picture
Sarah is a freelance reporter and a 2009 graduate of the University of California, Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and Latin American Studies programs. She specializes in science and environmental policy issues, but also has a keen interest in immigration and Latin American affairs. Her work has previously appeared in The Oakland Tribune, Forbes.com and GreenBiz.com. She is currently reporting and blogging for Carbon Watch, a joint venture of the Center for Investigative Reporting and Frontline/World. She researched and wrote the stories in Oakland Local's youth trafficking series with the support of a fellowship from the G.W. Williams Center for Independent Journalism.
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Solving Youth Trafficking: Educating "Johns" Curbs Demand (Series Part 4) | Oakland Local
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Saturday, May 15, 2010
Victims of Youth Trafficking in Oakland (Series Part 2) | Oakland Local
Last updated on 07:08AM, Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Oakland police officers arrest young women from Pomona on suspicion of solicitation. Photo by Alison Yin.
This is Part 2 of an eight-part, four-day Oakland Local investigative series on youth sex trafficking. Continued from Part 1.
Who is this "commodity" being traded on the street? Statistically she is a 13-year-old girl who has run away from an abusive parent, guardian or foster home. Too young to fend for herself as a runaway, she ends up under the control of a pimp who promises to take care of her. Then the trafficker turns on her and, either by emotional manipulation or physical threat, gets the girl to work the streets to bring in money.
"These are children who have never known love, so they look for love in all the wrong places," said Alameda County Deputy District Attorney Sharmin Eshraghi Bock, who has directed 148 cases against people alleged to have sold teenagers and children for sex. "All the pimp has to say is, 'Baby I love you and some day I want to have a family with you but today I'm short of cash. Can you help me make the rent?'" Bock continued.
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In other situations, girls are kidnapped off sidewalks by traffickers who then threaten them into cooperation. That's what happened in the case of Vincent Turner, tried and convicted April 2 in Superior Court in Alameda County on seven felony counts including kidnapping, rape and trafficking. Prosecutors said Turner kidnapped a 15-year-old and a 16-year-old off the street in Oakland, brought them to Stockton and told them they had to work as prostitutes to raise money to win their release. Turner will be sentenced in June and faces 15 years to life.
National and local statistics say 80% of minors trafficked for commercial sex are runaways and most experienced sexual or physical abuse as young children. A 2008 study of 149 Bay Area kids receiving services after the trauma of commercial sexual abuse found:
* 82% ran away from home
* 70% were abused as young children
* 61% were raped before they were adolescents
* 55% ran away from a foster care or group home
(This study was conducted by the Sexually Exploited Minors Support Network, Safe Place Alternative program, in Alameda County.)
"A common trait is previous abuse. A lot of our children are sexual abuse victims, and children who have not had adults around to do basic things like enroll them in school," said Nola Brantley, director of MISSSEY, the largest organization serving commercially sexually exploited youth in Alameda County and the person who oversaw the survey. (MISSSEY stands for Motivating, Inspiring, Supporting and Serving Sexually Exploited Youth.)
"A lot of the girls were exchanged for drugs. Like their mother is a drug addict and she allows someone to have sex with her child in exchange for drugs. We get that all the time," she said, her voice rising.
Or they are kids living in poverty. "We have a girl coming in she has no food, she has no clothes. If she goes back home there is nothing in the refrigerator. We're not just providing her talk, you feel me? We're providing her socks, and underwear, and food and diapers for her baby," Brantley said.
In the United States, the average age of entry into prostitution is 13, noted Kelly Tyne of nonprofit advocacy agency the Stand Against Global Exploitation Project. This number is widely acknowledged by advocates and law enforcement.
"Those are children," he said of that age. "There is no such thing as a child prostitute. There are children who are raped. There are children who suffer molestation. There are children who survive sexual violence. But there is no such thing as a child prostitute," said Tyne, himself a survivor of a childhood of commercial sexual exploitation.
Not just poor kids
Some kids are from wealthy but abusive homes. One 16-year-old girl said she ran away from two abusive parents. Unable to figure out how to support herself on the streets, she took up with a pimp who offered her food and shelter but then abused her and forced her to sell herself. Counselors from Bay Area Women Against Rape (BAWAR) talked with her and discovered her pimp had burned her with cigarettes and broken her nose.
"These kids run away from being beaten by a parent or someone the parent knows and the streets become their family. Then they are abused again," said Patrick Mims, the BAWAR social worker who helped her.
The National Runaway Switchboard reports that 80% of girls who run away from home are fleeing physical or sexual abuse.
What it's like to be a sexually exploited teen
Saundra Domingue was prostituted in Oakland for many years starting at age 17, but now is a counselor with the Stand Against Gobal Exploitation Project, a San Francisco nonprofit for survivors of commercial sexual exploitation. She said her first pimp "painted this beautiful picture, this glamorous picture, that if I engaged in prostitution, I would have money in my pocket, I would have a roof over my head, I would have food and clothes, very beautiful clothes." Domingue's trafficker was a woman and among the first people she met after running away from home. "So I, not having any other means of supporting myself, adhered to this woman's wishes."
Unfortunately there are plenty of kids who need love and support in Oakland and the Bay. The Alameda County Social Services Agency receives 1,600 reports of child abuse or neglect each month. In those reports are many of the children who will become victims of commercial sexual exploitation.
This story was produced under a fellowship sponsored by the
G.W. Williams Center for Independent Journalism, a project of Tides Center.
We also would like to thank Robert Rosenthal and California Watch for their support -- as well as our reporters Barbara Grady and Sarah Terry-Cobo, and photographer Alison Yin -- for their amazing work.
Support more independent quality reporting like this! Please donate to Oakland Local on Spot.us. We are seeking additional support for continued coverage.
About Barbara Grady
Barbara Grady's picture
Barbara Grady, a freelance reporter, researched and wrote this story with the support of a fellowship from the G.W. Williams Center for Independent Journalism. Before her current stint of writing about social issues for various news and non-profit organizations, Barbara was on staff at the Oakland Tribune and, earlier, at Reuters News Agency. She received a national Society of Professional Journalists 'excellence in journalism' award for a series published in 2008.
Victims of Youth Trafficking in Oakland (Series Part 2) | Oakland Local
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