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Roamer
11-01-2009, 06:58 AM
http://www.ksat.com/news/21483323/detail.html

Young Girls Forced Into Sex Slavery

Rosenda Rios (rrios@ksat.com), KSAT 12 News Reporter


POSTED: Friday, October 30, 2009

UPDATED: 1:05 pm CDT October 31, 2009


SAN ANTONIO -- Young girls abducted or lured away from home and into sex slaves is no longer just an overseas problem but a concern in San Antonio.



KSAT 12 News uncovered the problem that has become so alarming that local leaders are looking at ways to tackle the problem.


It did not take long for human rights investigators, posing as buyers, to show just how easy it is to buy sex with a child.


"Now if you want something really young, that will cost you $200," said a man, who was captured on hidden camera by investigators with Shared Hope International, a nonprofit group working to rescue and rehabilitate young girls and boys who of are victims of human trafficking.


The video tape showed the investigator wheeling and dealing for a young girl and finding out if he could purchase a girl for as young as 14 years old.


"We have information on girls as young as 10 or 11," said Chris Burchell, who has helped to create a new statewide nonprofit organization called the Texas Anti-Trafficking in Persons and Child Sexual Exploitation Coalition.


Shared Hope International visited three Texas cities, including San Antonio, and discovered many prostitutes were forced into sexual acts at an early age and were being treated as criminals rather than victims of human trafficking.


According to Burchell, many of the girls were runaways or tricked into performing sex.


One recent case involved a local 13-year-old girl.


"The teenage girl went into a known crack dealer's home with a friend when one of the crack dealers locked her in the bathroom and told her friends she had left. Once the friend left, the 13-year-old girl was sexually assaulted and sold to everybody else buying crack that weekend," Burchell said.


Innocent girls and boys are tricked or forced into becoming sex slaves and it's happening almost everyday and Burchell said parents need to know this so they can teach their children what to watch out for.


Burchell said new human trafficking laws are helping authorities crack down on domestic human trafficking but more work is needed.


"These are our own locally raised born here kids that are being subjected to forced prostitution," said Burchell.


Helping a great deal is the Bexar County Sheriff's Human Trafficking unit.


They typically go out during the day or night to visit area prostitutes, not to make an arrest, but to find out ways to help minors who are working the streets into a better life.


The HT unit works closely with other agencies including Catholic Charities offering services to young victims who were forced into sex slavery and don't know how to get out of it.


The County's Human Trafficking Unit is the only one of its kind in the San Antonio area and according to Burchell, with the help of other agencies, they have been able to be one of the first in Texas to indict someone under the new Human Trafficking law.


Burchell is working to create a network of agencies across the state to provide services such as medical treatment and rehabilitation so that children who's lives were interrupted can get back on track.


"Hopefully those victims can be kids again," said Burchell.


"Just imagine a child, 12, 13 years old, being forced to provide sex services 30 to 50 times a day," said Burchell.


With the help of Shared Hope International, Burchell hopes the state is well on its way to tackling the problem of child prostitution and hopes parents as well as children are aware that human trafficking is happening in our backyard and we must all fight to protect our most innocent and vulnerable.


For more information regarding Human Trafficking:

Texas Anti-Trafficking In Persons And Child Sexual Exploitation Coalition
CHRIS.BURCHELL@TEXAS-ATIP.ORG
CELL: 210-563-6644

National Human Trafficking Resource Center Hotline
1-888-373-7888

LiveLaughLuv
11-01-2009, 08:19 AM
We think this happens only in other countries but it's happening right under our noses..:cray:

I wonder how many may have been kidnapped?

I do hope this will unravel many children who have been considered "vanished in to thin air", id'd and sent home...bittersweet, IMO..

Burchell is working to create a network of agencies across the state to provide services such as medical treatment and rehabilitation so that children who's lives were interrupted can get back on track.

"Hopefully those victims can be kids again," said Burchell.

"Just imagine a child, 12, 13 years old, being forced to provide sex services 30 to 50 times a day," said Burchell.

:1187603408.CR.Mothe

awakening2lite
11-02-2009, 02:45 PM
Human Trafficing is shocking by it very title and more so learning it's alive and well in America.

A simple google produced the following:

Excerpt:


Laws against trafficking

Laws against trafficking in the United States exist at the federal and state levels. Over half of the states now criminalize human trafficking though the penalties are not as tough as the federal laws. Related federal and state efforts focus on regulating the tourism industry to prevent the facilitation of sex tourism and regulate international marriage brokers to ensure criminal background checks and information on how to get help are given to the potential bride.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_trafficking_in_the_United_States


Now, why only half the states? :INhouseReading04:

Roamer
11-04-2009, 08:12 AM
http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2009/11/post_114.html



Billboards on human trafficking going up in New Orleans area

By The Associated Press (http://connect.nola.com/user/nolaap/index.html)

November 04, 2009, 6:43AM

Ten billboards paid for by the federal government are going up in the New Orleans metropolitan area to alert people to the existence of human trafficking (http://www.ice.gov/pi/nr/0911/091102washingtondc.htm).

The billboards are part of a campaign by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to highlight "the horrors and the prevalence of human trafficking," which the agency says is equivalent to "modern-day slavery."

The words "hidden in plain sight" are displayed on the billboards and there is a toll free number (866.DHS.2.ICE) people can call to report possible victims of human trafficking.

ICE says 800,000 men, women and children are trafficked around the world each year and that many of them end up in the United States.