Human Trafficking. Tracy McDaniel, MSW

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Human Trafficking Tracy McDaniel, MSW

IPATH Indiana Protection for Abused and Trafficked Humans Task Force PREVENTION, PROTECTION, PROSECUTION The Indiana Protection for Abused Trafficked Humans task force (IPATH) is one of 42 task forces nationwide funded by the Department of Justice s Office of Victims of Crime and the Bureau of Justice Assistance to address the issue of human trafficking. The Goals of IPATH are to: 1) Enhance law enforcement s ability to identify and rescue victims. 2) Provide resources and training to identify and rescue victims. 3) Ensure comprehensive services are available for victims of trafficking.

A COLLABORATIVE CLIENT CENTERED APPROACH VICTIM SERVICES Works with identified victims Providing legal & social services LAW ENFORCEMENT Collaborates with agencies on current/future investigations, provides officer trainings, & prevention tactics IPATH AWARENESS Community organizations partnering together to provide outreach and education to the community on human trafficking TRAINING Provides trainings to organizations that might come into contact with victims. PROTOCOL Creating and evaluating protocol or the task force & the procedure for handling human trafficking situations

IPATH Indiana Protection for Abused and Trafficked Humans Task Force Some of the nearly 60 groups that participate in IPATH efforts are : Indiana Attorney General s Office United States Attorney s Office for the Southern District of Indiana Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Homeland Security Investigations Federal Bureau of Investigation Indiana State Police The Julian Center Indiana Department of Child Services Neighborhood Christian Legal Clinic Many, MANY others

What is Human Trafficking? Sex Trafficking: When a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such act has not attained 18 years of age; or Labor Trafficking: The recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or services, through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery. (1) 1) Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000, Pub. L. No. 106-386 (2000), available at http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/10492.pdf.

Three Elements of Trafficking In order to be considered trafficking on both federal and state levels, all three of these elements must be identified: Recruiting Harboring, Moving, or PROCESS MEANS END Obtaining A person By Force, Fraud or Coercion (unless under 18 for sex trafficking) For the purpose of Involuntary servitude, Debt bondage, Slavery or Sex Trade

Human Trafficking Examples Sex Trafficking Example: A 17 year old girl* runs away from her abusive family for the second time. She meets a 20-something man at the mall who befriends her and offers to buy her something pretty. Their romantic relationship grows slowly as she becomes more dependent upon him and believes he loves her. He starts to ask her to do things for him, eventually leading to pimping her out for profit and resorting to violence and psychological trauma to control her. Labor Trafficking Example: After losing his factory job*, a 35- year old man answers a job advertisement in the local newspaper for skilled welders. The ad promises affordable, safe housing and good pay. However, after being coerced into signing a contract in English, which he does not speak, he is taken to his home: a 2-bedroom apartment housing 8 other men, costing him $600 per month. The men are transported to a restaurant where they work 15 hours a day and their living costs always outnumber their pay, causing them to become burdened by an ever increasing debt. *Stories are fictional and meant to be used for instructional use only. While they include common elements of human trafficking, these narratives are not taken from any one trafficking survivor.

Indiana Law IC 35-42-3.5 Trafficking: A person who, by force, threat of force, or fraud engages a person in: Forced Labor Involuntary Servitude Marriage Prostitution Participation in Sexual Conduct Prosecutors don t have to prove force when a minor under the age of 18 is being trafficked Any individual can be guilty of committing trafficking of a child; no specific relationship required Restitution is available to trafficking victims Trafficking victims may also have a civil cause of action to recover other damages from the trafficker

Federal Law: Trafficking Victims Areas of Focus: Prevention Protection Act of 2000 A Comprehensive Law: Public Awareness, Outreach and Education Protection T-Visa, Certification, Benefits and Services to Victims Prosecution Created Federal Crime of Trafficking, New Law Enforcement Tools and Efforts

Federal Crimes and Penalties Forced Labor Trafficking into Servitude Sex Trafficking Involuntary Servitude Peonage (Debt Bondage) Document Servitude Conspiracy Against Rights Up to 20 years Up to 20 years Up to life Up to 20 years Up to 20 years Up to 5 years Up to life if kidnapping, sexual abuse or death

BJA Funded Anti- Trafficking Task Forces Midwest/Indiana Statistics (1) Investigations in US Investigations in Midwest Investigations in Indiana 5,143 (2007-2012) 392 (2007-2012) 134 (law enforcement) and 123 victims served to date US Statistics- Fiscal Year 2012 (2) Number of Investigations in the US 26 DOJ-led taskforces over 753 ICE-HSI 894 FBI 306 pending (adults and foreign child victims) 440 (sex trafficking of children) 1) Information was obtained from the Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA). The BJA Task Forces in the Midwestern Region were located in the states of: Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. 2) U.S. Dept. of State Trafficking in Persons Report (2013), available at http://www.state.gov/j/tip/rls/tiprpt/2013/index.htm.

Who is involved in trafficking? The trafficker is the one who controls the victims. Making the victim fearful through abuse, threats, and lies the trafficker gains power over his/her victim. The victim could be anyone, the common denominator is vulnerability. The consumer funds the human trafficking industry by purchasing goods and services. Often s/he is unaware that someone is suffering.

The Trafficker The trafficker will likely be in a lucrative business enterprise as the heart of human trafficking is exploiting cheap labor. The trafficker may be part of a larger organized crime ring, or may be profiting independently. Benefits through Financial Gain, Power and/or Control

The Trafficked Person - VICTIM Human Trafficking reaches every culture and demographics. Regardless of their demographics, victims are vulnerable in some way, and the traffickers will use their particular vulnerability to exploit the victim. Victims can be: Foreign born adults US Citizen adults Foreign born children * US Citizen children *

The Trafficked Person - VICTIM VULNERABILITY IS THE KEY Some risk factors for youth include: History of childhood abuse, family conflict/violence Prior involvement in child welfare system Poverty Homelessness A need to be loved Feel misunderstood or that parents don t care Want independence and will test boundaries/take risks Are attracted to consumer goods

A Growing Problem Affecting Youth Human Trafficking is tied as the SECOND LARGEST and FASTEST growing criminal industry in the world, just behind the drug trade. (1) 27 million people are estimated to be victims of human trafficking worldwide. (2) 161 countries identified as being affected by human trafficking. (3) $32 billion dollars generated annually by the human trafficking industry. (4)

A Growing Problem Affecting Youth Nearly 300,000 American youths are at risk of becoming victims of commercial sexual exploitation, according to the FBI. (2) 12-14 is the average age of entry into commercial sex in the U.S. (3) 83% of sex trafficking victims found in the U.S. were U.S. citizens, according to one Justice Department study (4)

Child Trafficking Victims Experience High Levels of Adversity and Stress Jim Mercy, Division of Violence Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The Public Health Implications of Child Sex Trafficking (PowerPoint presentation).

The Adverse Childhood Experience Studies Jim Mercy, Division of Violence Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The Public Health Implications of Child Sex Trafficking (PowerPoint presentation).

Violence Against Children is Destructive Jim Mercy, Division of Violence Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The Public Health Implications of Child Sex Trafficking (PowerPoint presentation).

The Trafficked Person - VICTIM A Vulnerable Life Before Victimization * Of boys and girls recruited into commercial sex: 57% had been sexually abused as children. (1) 49% had been physically assaulted. (1) 85% were victims of incest as girls, and 90% had been physically abused. (2) 61.5% were frequently hit, slapped, pushed, grabbed, or had objects thrown at them by a member of their household. (3) 40% of the above were kicked, hit, beaten, raped, or threatened and/or attacked with a weapon by a member of their household. (3) Nearly half the participants in one study had been molested or raped as children or teenagers. (4) * These studies considered various forms commercial sex, not only sex trafficking. Due to the hidden nature of this crime, little research is available strictly on trafficking. However, it should be noted that anyone used in commercial sex who is under 18 or is being forced or coerced is a victim of trafficking. 1) Melissa Farley & Howard Barkan, Prostitution, Violence Against Women, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, 27 WOMEN & HEALTH 37-49 (1998), available at http://www.prostitutionresearch.com/prosviolposttraustress.html. 2) Hunter, S.K., Prostitution is Cruelty and Abuse to Women and Children, 1 MICH. J. GENDER & L. 1-14 (1993). 3) Jody Raphael & Deborah L. Shapiro, SISTERS SPEAK OUT: THE LIVES AND NEEDS OF PROSTITUTED WOMEN IN CHICAGO, CENTER FOR IMPACT RESEARCH (2002) at p.15, available at http://www.impactresearch.org/documents/sistersspeakout.pdf. 4) Jennifer K. Wesely, Growing up Sexualized: Issues of Power and Violence in the Lives of Female Exotic Dancers, 8 No. 10 Violence Against Women, 1182, 1192 (October, 2002).

How Are Youth Recruited? Parents selling children Grooming process, seduction and coercion Internet and social media Clubs On the street At malls Traffickers using girls to recruit other girls False advertising for modeling, acting, or dancing opportunities Kidnapping 1) U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OFFICE OF SAFE AND DRUG-FREE SCHOOLS, HUMAN TRAFFICKING OF CHILDREN IN THE UNITED STATES: A FACT SHEET FOR SCHOOLS 1 (June 26, 2007), available at http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/osdfs/factsheet.pdf. 2) FBI Assisting Commercially Sexually Exploited Children Presentation, 02/27/2014

Human Trafficking and Technology Social Networking Pimps hit social networks to recruit underage girls to engage in commercial sex The pimps "searched Facebook for attractive young girls, and sent them messages telling them that they were pretty and asking if they would like to make some money" If a girl expressed interest, a gang member would arrange to meet up. At that point, participation stopped being voluntary. Messages provided by U.S. Department of Justice. Visualization created by CNNMoney. http://money.cnn.com/2013/02/27/technology/social/pimps-social-networks/index.html

Human Trafficking and Technology Social Networking The pimp may have a collection of fake Facebook accounts. On one of them, for "Rain Smith" investigators found more than 800 messages sent out to potential targets. Messages provided by U.S. Department of Justice. Visualization created by CNNMoney. http://money.cnn.com/2013/02/27/technology/social/pimps-social-networks/index.html

Human Trafficking and Technology Social Networking Traffickers may pose as any of the following on social media: Escort Service Modeling Agency Dancing Opportunity Boyfriend Friend This kind of approach works more often than parents would like to believe. http://money.cnn.com/2013/02/27/technology/social/pimps-social-networks/index.html

1) Human Trafficking and Technology Online Classified Ads Craigslist.org and Backpage.com

Human Trafficking and Technology Online Classified Ads Craigslist.org and Backpage.com A study conducted by KLAAS KIDS Foundation found significant increases in Backpage escort ads leading up to the 2012 Super Bowl. (1) 1) KLAAS KIDS FOUNDATION, TACKLE THE TRAFFICKER OUTREACH AND MONITORING INITIATIVE (Feb. 3, 2011).

Who Might Identify Trafficked Persons? Local/State/Federal Law Enforcement Domestic Violence/Sexual Assault/Other Victim Services Programs Agencies involved with Child Protection or Juvenile Delinquency Health Services Labor Issue Complaints / Compliance Inspectors Schools Churches/Faith Based Services Tips to Local/National Hotlines via concerned community members Other Government Agencies or Social Service Agencies LEAST OFTEN: Victims self-report

Identification: Social Indicators Potential victim is accompanied by another person who seems controlling and/or insists on speaking for the victim Youth is involved in a relationship with significantly older partner, often including domestic violence issues Frequent relocation Numerous inconsistencies in his or her story Are not in control of their own money OR might have excess amounts of cash Lack of control of identification documents Individual is using false identification papers Restricted or scripted communication Rescue and Restore Campaign The National Symposium on the Health Needs of Human Trafficking Victims Shared Hope International

Identification: Social Indicators Not attending school or falling asleep in school Hotel room keys Chronic runaway/homeless youth Signs of branding (tattoo, jewelry) Lying about age Lack of knowledge of a given community or whereabouts Exhibits behaviors including hyper-vigilance or paranoia, nervousness, tension, submission, etc. Any minor involved in any sex industry Rescue and Restore Campaign The National Symposium on the Health Needs of Human Trafficking Victims Shared Hope International

Identification: Health Indicators Neglected healthcare needs Signs of physical abuse Bruises Black Eyes Burns Cuts Broken teeth Multiple scars Malnourishment Evidence of trauma Poor Dental Hygiene Frequent or Multiple STDs or pregnancies 1) POLARIS PROJECT AT A GLANCE FOR MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS (2010), available at http://www.cicatelli.org/titlex/downloadable/polaris%20project%20at-a- Glance%20for%20Medical%20Professionals%20Final.pdf. 2) FBI Assisting Commercially Sexually Exploited Children Presentation, 02/27/2014

Identification: Mental Health Indicators Symptoms of psychological trauma; (1) Extreme sadness and hopelessness; (1) Risks for suicide, memory loss, and presenting as withdrawn; (1) Difficulty concentrating, demonstrations of aggression and anger; (1) Trauma bonds; (2) Anxiety and mood disorders, panic attacks; (3) Substance-related disorders. (3) 1) UNITED NATIONS OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME, UNITED NATIONS GLOBAL INITIATIVE TO FIGHT HUMAN TRAFFICKING, AN INTRODUCTION TO HUMAN TRAFFICKING: VULNERABILITY, IMPACT AND ACTION 84 (2008), available at http://www.unodc.org/documents/human-trafficking/an_introduction_to_human_trafficking_- _Background_Paper.pdf. 2) LINDA A. SMITH, SAMANTHA HEALY VARDAMAN, & MELISSA A. SNOW, SHARED HOPE INTERNATIONAL, THE NATIONAL REPORT ON DOMESTIC MINOR SEX TRAFFICKING: AMERICA S PROSTITUTED CHILDREN 28-31 (May, 2009), available at http://www.sharedhope.org/portals/0/documents/shi_national_report_on_dmst_2009.pdf. 3) ERIN WILLIAMSON, NICOLE M. DUTCH, & HEATHER J. CLAWSON, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR PLANNING AND EVALUATION, EVIDENCE-BASED MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT FOR VICTIMS OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING (April, 2010), available at http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/07/humantrafficking/mentalhealth/index.shtml.

IPATH Screening Tool

IPATH Screening Tool Initial Screening Questions

IPATH Screening Tool Report

Victim Needs that Social Service Providers May Encounter Basic needs medical attention, shelter and safety, food, clothing, long term housing, etc. Safety planning Ongoing counseling and therapy that are culturally sensitive Treatment for substance-related disorders Life skills, educational, and vocational training Legal Services (immigration, expungement, protective orders, etc.) Child care and parenting support Transportation

Inherent Challenges Keeping in touch with victim Maintaining a trauma-informed response SAFETY ISSUES for victims Victims are often chronic runaways Absence of family support and stability Length of investigations Trauma bonding to and manipulation by Trafficker Limited resources and availability of services

A Key Part of Protection : Immigration Relief

Continued Presence Immediate relief that must be requested by Federal Law Enforcement One year of work authorization plus access to benefits granted under the TVPA Must be for an Open/Pending case but doesn t have to be prosecuted Applicable for a most likely victim of human trafficking and a potential witness Children do not have to agree to assist prosecution This exists to HELP law enforcement. It is POLICY to grant continued presence.

What is a T-Visa? Enables certain victims of human trafficking to live and work in the US for four years. May be eligible to apply for lawful permanent resident after three years. Can petition to have certain family members accompany them. Allows access to public benefits. Cap of 5,000 visas annually. From 2002 through October, 2012, only 6,482 visas were issued. The reason the number of issued visas is so low is believed to be because human trafficking victims are not coming forward.

Other Forms of Immigration Relief U Visa Person is a crime victim and are willing to assist in the investigation S Visa Person is in possession of information concerning criminal organization or enterprise Asylum Person has suffered or fears persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group in country of origin Special Immigrant Juvenile Status Children who are wards of the state due to their abuse, neglect or abandonment and return to home country not a viable option

If you believe someone is a victim of Human Trafficking: In emergency situations: Call 911 Indianapolis Trafficked Persons Assistance Program 24-hour hotline: 1-800-928-6403 National Human Trafficking Resource Center Hotline Number 1-888-373-7888 or send a text to BeFree (233733) In non-emergency situations, you may also email: Indiana Attorney General s Office, humantraffickingtip@atg.in.gov

Contact Information Tracy McDaniel, MSW The Julian Center tmcdaniel@juliancenter.org Cell: 317-225-7317 Office: 317-924-7027