Authors: Kevin Bales,Ron. Soodalter
Tags: #University of California Press
department had been doing “show and tell” presentations on human
trafficking. Van Brunt got them to let him take some of their materials
out into the community. With a representative of a local faith-based
group, he began visiting the Hispanic churches in the area. After serv-
ices, antitrafficking workers and Van Brunt would speak to the congre-
gation. Van Brunt would ask—through a translator—if people knew of
trafficking situations or possible victims. Within a short time, he was
getting calls reporting possible trafficking cases.
Since Van Brunt’s unit doesn’t handle sex-related crimes, he “went
down the hall to the Vice guys, to partner up.” From then on, when the
Vice Unit raided a brothel, Van Brunt and his partner went along to
look for human trafficking. Soon he was recruiting informants to probe
both labor and sex trafficking. “Most people in that world,” he said,
“see trafficking and pay no attention to it. It gets confusing.”10
Van Brunt, who describes himself as “proactive,” joined a local
human trafficking task force. Funded by a Department of Justice (DOJ)
grant, it grew larger. Van Brunt also expanded his work doing antitraf-
ficking presentations at the obligatory annual in-service training for all
officers. In his presentation, he explains how to recognize the signs of
slavery and focuses on a crucial aspect of the process—the victim inter-
view. “Most law enforcement officers,” he observes, “are after admis-
sions or confessions. Interviewing a possible victim of human trafficking
is totally different. These are skills that have to be taught. I tell them,
‘Know your limitations. If it’s not in you, bring in someone else.’”11 He
welcomes the presence of a victim advocate to assist in an interview.
After his second presentation, an officer with a possible trafficking case
contacted Van Brunt.
By 2008, Van Brunt and his partner had uncovered and pursued five
slavery cases—two relating to sex trafficking and three to forced labor.12
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One involves a Tampa resident, Marcelino Guillen Jaimes, accused of
smuggling a Mexican into Florida for a transportation fee of $2,000
and then forcing him into a construction job working seven days a week,
ten hours a day, to pay off his debt.13 But Van Brunt expresses frustra-
tion with local prosecutors. “In my judicial circuit,” he explains, “not a
single prosecutor belongs to the trafficking task force. No one can pos-
sibly know all the laws; still it would be nice if at least one attorney was
familiar with the state trafficking statutes.”14
The International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) is commit-
ted to training and motivating law enforcement on human trafficking.
The IACP works to improve the standards and practices of over eighteen
thousand police departments nationwide. It offers training seminars, as
well as booklets and a handbook on how to recognize and approach
human trafficking cases. The challenge of human trafficking, according
to an official at IACP who asked not to be named, “is a fairly new one
to us. Most policemen believe slavery ended with the Thirteenth
Amendment. They feel it can’t happen here; it’s hard for them to wrap
their heads around.”
Local cops and their departments have broken big slavery cases, but
many in local law enforcement feel that trafficking is a federal affair and
that they lack local and state jurisdiction. With the passage of state
laws, the same IACP official explained, “it has now become their beat.
But still, the awareness and training are missing. Without adequate
training, they’re not seeing or understanding the crime.” And although
some city police departments—Houston, San Diego, Atlanta, Seattle, El
Paso are good examples—have dedicated significant resources to
addressing trafficking, most are “unaware. They frankly don’t know
what it is. And when they find out, they are easily overwhelmed with the
huge need for resources—money, manpower, and time—to wage a suc-
cessful campaign.” With training, however, police “often take it as an
opportunity to free people. It can be so satisfying. But the training needs
to get out there, and the feds simply aren’t putting it there.”
Many local police forces are scrambling to find—or invent their
own—antislavery training. But for every police department and sheriff’s
office trying to get a handle on the problem, there are perhaps thou-
sands that remain untrained and unmotivated. Unless local law enforce-
ment takes an active interest in detecting and eliminating human
trafficking, protecting the survivors, and punishing the bad guys, and
until the federal government beefs up and expands its training pro-
grams, the number of prosecutions will remain in the hundreds, while
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thousands of cases will remain undetected, and the victims will stay
hidden and enslaved.
T H E T H R E E “ R ’ S ” — R E S E A R C H , R E S C U E ,
A N D R E S T O R E
It may not be the first place you would expect to find them, but schools
and universities have also emerged as leaders in the fight against slavery.
In July 2007, Florida Gulf Coast University established the Esperanza
Center for Human Trafficking Research, Policy and Community
Initiatives, a “national human-trafficking center on campus to block the
flow of sex slaves and abused laborers into the country.” The center
aims to coordinate the several agencies that are “already active in pre-
venting and prosecuting what often is dubbed modern-day slavery.”
Both federal and grant funding support the center. Florida could use the
help. According to Fort Myers–based chief assistant U.S. attorney Doug
Molloy, “Southwest Florida has more trafficking cases than many
states.” He should know; in 2007 Molloy and his staff were working
eleven active cases, which ran the gamut from sex and domestic slavery
to indentured servitude in the workplace.15
It took the arrest of two people for the sex trafficking of two young
girls, aged thirteen and seventeen, to awaken Nashville, Tennessee from
its complacency—and move Middle Tennessee State University to
action. As trafficking cases go it was not unusual: physical force and
threats were used against the girls and their families to get them to
submit to prostitution. But it made quick work of the attitude that “it
can’t happen here.” A June 2007 newspaper article stated, “People
expect to read about it in magazines or watch a prime-time news show
special report. But human trafficking in Nashville? It seems unlikely at
best.” Responding to the case, Middle Tennessee State University hosted
a panel discussion on trafficking, featuring two local women who had
“long . . . been working to raise public awareness.” One was Amber
Beckham, coordinator for World Relief’s Network of Emergency
Trafficking Services, who had provided training to the Nashville police,
teaching them to spot cases they would otherwise have missed. Beckham
earned high marks with the police. Sergeant Brooks Harris of
Nashville’s Specialized Investigations Unit explained, “She’s bringing us
to a keen awareness of the problem and the indicators to be on the look-
out for. . . . She’s teaching us to take another four or five minutes to dig
a little deeper.”16
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One of America’s most innovative local antislavery groups is the
Rescue and Restore Coalition of Houston, Texas. The coalition has
brought together businesses, student groups, religious groups and
churches, and community service organizations such as domestic vio-
lence shelters. A broad base is important because Houston is not only a
well-known point of entry for human traffickers but the site of large-
scale slavery cases as well. One of these, the Mondragon case, had more
than one hundred victims, most trafficked into sexual exploitation. In
collecting information from the victims, the coalition discovered an
important fact. “We found that 80 percent of the victims reported being
in clubs, bars, or shops where alcohol was sold,” explained Stephanie
Weber of the coalition, “and we started thinking about how to reach
people in that way.”17 In a bold move, the coalition convinced the state
legislature to pass a law requiring every business where alcohol is sold
to post a bilingual sign listing the national hotline number and an assur-
ance of anonymity, along with a message stating that “obtaining forced
labor or services is a crime.” After the signs went up and all alcohol
beverage control agents received training, the national hotline reported
a sharp increase in calls from Houston. By late 2008, Weber reported,
“even restaurants and coffee shops that aren’t required to put up the
sign are posting it.”18
The coalition also faced the problem of law enforcement investiga-
tions that went nowhere. In the large Latino community, there was fear
that cooperation with police might lead to deportations, and good tips
would be met with stony silence. Six neighborhoods were identified
where trafficking cases were likely but underreported. To reach out,
the coalition designed a dramatic billboard message: “Stop Modern
Day Slavery in Houston,” read the headline next to a picture of a young
woman, then “Save a Victim of Human Trafficking Today,” followed by
the national hotline number. Thanks to a printing company in the coali-
tion and a discount from the billboard supplier, ninety large-scale bill-
boards went up in the Houston area, especially near the six
neighborhoods with the lowest response rate. In a follow-up effort, sim-
ilar signs are now being placed on the backs of taxicabs for the next
three years. The total cost of these efforts has been low because of the
breadth of the coalition; the impact, however, has been significant.
When students and staff at Denver University formed a Task Force on
Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking in early 2005, action against
human trafficking picked up rapidly. With a base in the university, the
task force expanded to cover other organizations, provided training to
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law enforcement, and moved new laws onto the books. A key player in
this work was Claude d’Estrée, a law professor and Buddhist chaplain at
the university. D’Estrée was used to hands-on work: with the Red Cross
he had coordinated the response at the crash site of Flight 93 on
September 11, 2001, and was later recognized for it in a Rose Garden
ceremony at the White House. Denver University students under his
tutelage became spark plugs, and with others they helped create a
Colorado Human Trafficking Task Force and a statewide Network to
Eliminate Human Trafficking, as well as to support and advise the
Colorado State Patrol’s new unit responsible for human trafficking.
These and other initiatives, including effective victim identification and
support, are carried out in Colorado in cooperation with the Polaris
Project.
The role of colleges and universities has been crucial in raising aware-
ness and helping to bring communities together. For example, Free the
Slaves, the international antislavery organization based in Washington,
D.C., sends speakers to dozens of universities each year, coordinating
workshops and advising local and state politicians. Students and teach-
ers are good at getting information before the public, but awareness is
just step one. Once achieved, knowledge needs to be put into action,
and other groups have been organizing and reinventing themselves to
fight slavery in America.
A N E F F E C T I V E W E B O F S E R V I C E P R O V I D E R S
We’ve seen how dissension and sometimes downright bitterness exists
among many antitrafficking groups. Profound and seemingly insoluble
issues relating to policy, philosophy, funding, religion, and the place and
performance of government keep organizations from working together,
in spite of their shared avowed goal to eradicate human trafficking.
Battle lines have been drawn around such questions as the nature of
prostitution, the conditions placed on the distribution of money and
services, and the very definitions of trafficking and slavery. Such infight-
ing hurts the efforts of these organizations.
This is why it is important to point to a nationwide group of inde-
pendent service provider organizations that have joined together as the
Freedom Network. Formed in early 2001, they are, by their own defini-
tion, a coalition of over thirty “non-governmental organizations that
provide services to, and advocate for the rights of, trafficking survivors
in the United States.” Formed not long after the passage of the TVPA in
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