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Human Trafficking

Human Trafficking. Emily Trussell, Sexual Assault Services Coordinator Kirstin Heydel, Youth Services Coordinator Mid-Valley Women’s Crisis Service. Sex Trafficking. Labor Trafficking. Human Trafficking Definition. Definitions.

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Human Trafficking

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  1. Human Trafficking Emily Trussell, Sexual Assault Services Coordinator Kirstin Heydel, Youth Services Coordinator Mid-Valley Women’s Crisis Service

  2. Sex Trafficking Labor Trafficking Human Trafficking Definition

  3. Definitions • Sex Trafficking: a commercial sex act that is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such an act has not attained 18 years of age. TVPA 2000

  4. Definitions • Commercial sex act means any sex act on account of which anything of value is given to or received by any person. - Prostitution - Erotic/nude massage - Exotic dancing - Escort services - Pornography - Phone sex lines

  5. Definitions • CSEC: Sexual activity involving a minor through buying, trading, or selling their sexual services. • DMST: Commercial sexual exploitation involving U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents who are under 18 years of age at the time of victimization.

  6. Common Terminology • Pimp • Boyfriend / Daddy • John • Tricks • Stable • Track • Bottom bitch • The Life • Squaring Up • Turn Out • Bodyguard / Looker

  7. Sex Trafficking in Numbers • Portland has the largest sex industry per capita in the country • Average age of entry to pornography is 12. • Average age of entry to prostitution for girls is12. For boys and transgender youth, the average age is 11 to13. • Portland police encounter an average of 5 sex trafficking cases a week

  8. Sex Trafficking in Numbers • There is an estimated 24,000 homeless youth in Oregon at any given time. • 1 out of 3 teens on the street will be lured toward prostitution within 48 hours of leaving home • Of the victims working with advocates in Portland from 2008-2009, only one minor victim did not admit to having a pimp.

  9. National Trafficking Routes

  10. Why Is There a demand?

  11. Who are the consumers or “Johns”? • Buyers can be all ages, ethnicities and represent a variety of social and economic backgrounds • Buyers are equally responsible for the crime of sex trafficking

  12. Who are the victims?

  13. Identifying Victims of CSEC • Runaways • Traveling / Transportation • Delinquency • Relationships • Tattooing • Material items

  14. Activity If someone were to brainwash another person, make them loyal to them, keep them from running away, what might a perpetrator do? • Keep them Dependent • Isolation • Fear • Manipulation • Provider (basic needs) • Make them think its their choice • Keep them sleep deprived • Violence • Taking away their identity • Creating a new world view • Drugs and alcohol • Convince them they have no options

  15. Pimp culture • Where pimps recruit • Tactics to gain a victim’s trust • Recruiting • Pimp/victim relationship • Breaking • Maintenance • “Why would she stay?”

  16. Pathways to Entry and Recruitment • Seduction and coercion • Violence or force • False advertising for modeling, acting, or dancing • Peer recruitment • Internet luring through chat rooms or profile sharing sites • Parents selling children

  17. Common Myths • Youth know what they are getting into • FACT: Youth are often seduced, coerced, tricked or forced into prostitution by pimps • The youth is a criminal • FACT: The minor is not a criminal, they are a victim of sex trafficking • The victim was paid for her services • FACT: All or most of the money usually goes to the pimp; the youth rarely gets to keep any money • The youth is free to leave • FACT: Victims are held in physical and/or emotional bondage and are not free to leave

  18. Common Myths • U.S. citizens cannot be trafficked • FACT: Anyone who is made to perform commercial sex acts or labor by force, fraud or coercion has been trafficked • It’s not trafficking when the trafficker and the victim are related • FACT: Anytime someone profits from the sale of a person for sex or labor, that is trafficking • It’s not trafficking unless the victims are moved across borders • FACT: Trafficking refers to the act of benefiting from the exploitation of a human, not the act of moving them • Victims trafficked within a state don’t qualify for federal victim assistance • FACT: All victims of trafficking qualify under federal law for victim assistance

  19. Trauma Informed • Hyperarousal- Symptoms can include: anger, panic and phobias, irritability, hyperactivity, frequent crying and temper tantrums, nightmares and night terrors, regressive behavior, increase in clinging behavior, and running away. • Hypoarousal- Responses can include: daydreaming, inability to bond with others, inattention, forgetfulness, and shyness. Physical symptoms include: eye widened, pale skin, complaints about being cold, and flat affect.

  20. What to do if you think someone is a victim of CSEC • Don’t expect them to admit or give details • Be non-judgmental and kind • Be flexible and willing to think outside the box • Have realistic expectations • Build trust and support • Call an advocate

  21. What’s happening in Marion County? • Community partners • Human Trafficking Task Force • Offender Accountability • Outreach/Awareness • Direct Services / Advocacy • Labor Trafficking • Coordinated community response

  22. Questions ? Emily Trussell, Sexual Assault Services Coordinator emily@mvwcs.com Kirstin Heydel, Youth Services Coordinator kirstin@mvwcs.com Mid-Valley Women’s Crisis Service Business Line 503-378-1572 24 hour hotline 503-399-7722 / 1-866-399-7722

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