Human Trafficing

Homegrown Evil Exists in Our Own Communities.  [United States] Human trafficking is a crime involving illegal import, export, prostitution, pornography, slavery, drugs and a submergence of other crimes that we as a community have been trying to eradicate.  If you think these issues are hurting our communities now, traffickers will soon multiply the problem.  Thousands of women and children are being bought and sold every day, and it's happening here.  These victims are forced to do the most hellacious things imaginable.  You can see the scars on their bodies and worse, the scars deeply embedded in their minds.  Every day, traffickers sneak poverty-stricken victims into this country to sell their bodies in brothels, over the Internet and out on the streets.  Smuggling is not trafficking.  Trafficking is the illegal importation of individuals into this country and then forcing them to do things against their will.  I know many of you think better border patrol is the answer, but some of our own citizens are the criminals.  Yes, sex slavery is at the hands of some of our own American citizens.  Don't mistake this as being an immigrant crime.
No One Signs Up To Be A Slave.  [United States] Right now, thousands of men, women, and children in the tri-state area are forced to work against their will in households, sweatshops, construction sites, and adult clubs.   An estimated 20,000 people are trafficked into the United States every year (as many as 700,000 are trafficked internationally) — many through and into New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut.
From Russia with Fear: U.S. Mail-Order Brides Fight Back.  [United States] It took Natasha a day trip to Moscow to find the American husband she had dreamed of.  It took the next six years to get out of the nightmare that followed.  A music teacher from central Russia, she was one of 200 Russian women who patiently lined up at a Moscow restaurant to meet 10 American men at a gathering hosted by a mail-order bride agency.  She spoke no English but immediately caught the eye of one of the men, 16 years her senior.  He was handsome and said he wanted the same things she did: a loving family and children.  They went to museums and the theater with an interpreter, and he started the paperwork to bring her to the United States as his wife.  The fairy tale ended eight months later.  Natasha, who would only be identified using a pseudonym, had barely set foot in the United States when her new husband began to abuse her sexually, disappeared for weeks at a stretch, threatened anyone who tried to befriend her and forced her to sign a post-nuptial agreement.  Thrown out of their house after two years of abuse, Natasha was left to fend for herself in an unfamiliar country with minimal English skills and no legal documents to work.

Bulgarian Women Forced to Prostitute.  [Macedonia] Today’s issue of the British newspaper Sunday Telegraph published an article on the breaking of a women traffic ring during a police operation.  The operation was conducted in a cheap motel in the western part of Macedonia where 8 women were found.  They were held captives in the basement of the building with no heating or electricity.  The women were aged between 18 and 24.  They come from Eastern EuropeRomania, Moldova, Ukraine and Bulgaria.   They were promised to work as waitresses, babysitters and dancers.  Instead of the promised, they were held “in slavery”, the article commented.  The women were kept in the basement and went up to the motel to perform sexual favors for the motel’s clients who were often drunk and aggressive, Sunday Telegraph added.

Kept in a Dungeon Ready to be Sold as Slaves...the Women Destined for Britain's Sex Trade.   [Macedonia] Hidden below a shelf in the corridor of a run-down motel, a sharp-eyed police officer spots what appears to be a trap-door.  When he and his colleagues go down the concrete steps, shining their torches into the dark, damp cellar, they are scarcely able to believe what they encounter.  Cowering against a crumbling wall are eight terrified young women.  Strewn on the bare floor are stained mattresses, a pile of discarded clothes and a few empty boxes.  There is no heating, no light.  The women, aged 18 to 24, are from across eastern Europe, lured from Romania, Moldova, Ukraine and Bulgaria, with promises of good jobs as waitresses, au pairs and dancers.   Instead, they have been forced into modern-day slavery in western Macedonia, locked in the dirty cellar and only summoned upstairs by their masters to perform sexual services for customers who are usually drunk and often violent.  When they were found, the victims, some of whom had been "broken in" as prostitutes in other countries on the way to Macedonia, barely knew where they were.  They had no idea what the future held but knew that it was beyond their control.

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