What's new

Sex trafficking: The new American slavery. CNN reports

Muhammed45

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Oct 2, 2015
Messages
10,321
Reaction score
-18
Country
Iran, Islamic Republic Of
Location
Iran, Islamic Republic Of
Sex trafficking: The new American slavery

By Leif Coorlim and Dana Ford, CNN



Updated 1814 GMT (0214 HKT) March 14, 2017



The human traffickers you never even notice 01:00
Soon, Sacharay's trafficker began asking for "favors" -- asking her to help make some money for him, by sleeping with another man.
"He was like, 'I love you for that, I love you so much,'" said Sacharay. "Then he would slowly put two, three more guys. I got upset when I first realized what he was doing, but I kept doing it because he made me feel like I was special."
The exploitation continued to escalate. Sacharay soon was being sold to dozens of men a day. She would meet these sex buyers in motel rooms near a freeway, or even sometimes in the back of the barbershop.
"One day I was like, I can't do this no more. I was in pain. I had sex with almost 40 guys in one day, and I was so tired, and I said, 'I can't do this no more.'"
Her trafficker didn't care. He made sure she knew leaving was not an option.
"He went into the other room, came back with a gun, and he was like: 'If you go somewhere, we'll see.'"
Why Atlanta is a 'hub' for human trafficking[/paste:font]
150716095845-atlanta-infographic-exlarge-169.jpg


More than 3,500 sex trafficking cases were reported to the National Human Trafficking Resource Center last year alone.
Under federal law, anyone under 18 years of age induced into commercial sex is a victim of sex trafficking -- regardless of whether the trafficker uses force, fraud, or coercion.
Sacharay's exploiter eventually brought her and another teen to Atlanta, because he could command higher prices.
According to a 2014 study by the Urban Institute, some traffickers in Atlanta make more than $32,000 a week.
150716095849-traffickers-infographic-exlarge-169.jpg


The study also cited research findings from 2007 that Atlanta's illegal sex industry generates around $290 million a year.
"It's a big city. There's a lot to do in Atlanta. A lot of conventions, a lot of hotels, a lot of parties going on, a lot of events," said Sgt. Torrey Kennedy with the DeKalb County Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Unit. "So just like any businessmen, these traffickers know that."
A big part of Atlanta's draw is the airport, which is the busiest in the world.



It's #MyFreedomDay: All over the world, students are fighting slavery

"(A) man could get on that computer, anonymously, say, 'I'm coming in to go have sex with this child.' He'll fly in on a 3:00 flight, meet the child at 6:00, and be gone on the 8:00," said Dalia Racine, assistant district attorney for DeKalb County, which includes part of Atlanta. "How are we to ever find them? How are we to ever know who they are?"
Victims, not prostitutes
Racine and Kennedy often work together to identify and then prosecute human trafficking rings.
As part of an investigative series, the CNN Freedom Project followed Kennedy and his team on raids for more than a year. According to Kennedy, it's not unusual for a teen selling sex to deny that she's working for someone, even if it's against her will.
In June 2014, DeKalb County's ICAC and Vice Unit conducted an operation to find underage victims. The team went exit by exit along I-285, the perimeter highway, to hotels where undercover agents had arranged "dates" through an Internet escort site. In several of those meetings, the escort who showed up turned out to be underage.

150716181909-children-for-sale-call-to-action-1-00003719-medium-plus-169.jpg





Victims, not child prostitutes 01:01
Georgia law gives authorities the opportunity to grant leniency if a girl is willing to go to a safe home. But if she declines, their hands are somewhat tied.
Kennedy encountered this heartbreaking situation on the raid, when a suspected victim of trafficking didn't want any help.
"We don't want to arrest her. But she would rather go to jail than a treatment facility. She said she's 'happy being miserable."'
Investigators believe a local trafficker bought the girl in question a bus ticket from Detroit to Atlanta, gave her a puppy and paid for the hotel room where she was found.
"She has one tattoo on her knee, we've seen multiple times in this area, and it's likely it's a brand from a local pimp," said Kennedy. "That's one of the new things from pimps. They put their logo on their girl. ... The tattoo is fresh, which tells me that he just got his hands on her."
upload_2017-12-1_22-10-51.gif


Photos: Meet the people fighting to end sex trafficking
Kasey McClure uses her past experience working in the strip clubs, as motivation for her volunteer organization, 4Sarah. She visits Atlanta-area clubs, providing gift bags and a sympathetic ear to those who may be thinking of leaving the profession.
Hide Caption
5 of 9
upload_2017-12-1_22-10-51.gif


Photos: Meet the people fighting to end sex trafficking
Dalia Racine, the assistant district attorney for DeKalb County, east of Atlanta, was the lead prosecutor in the case against Darryl Curry, also known as "Pimp DC," a convicted human trafficker who posted videos on the Internet, instructing others on how to recruit and groom young victims.
Hide Caption
6 of 9
upload_2017-12-1_22-10-51.gif


Photos: Meet the people fighting to end sex trafficking
Brock D. Nicholson is the former special-agent-in-charge for Homeland Security Investigations of the Southeast Region. Nicholson is currently DHS/ICE Attaché for Australia, coordinating all U.S./Australia investigations for HSI.
Hide Caption
7 of 9
upload_2017-12-1_22-10-51.gif


Photos: Meet the people fighting to end sex trafficking
Mary Frances Bowley is the founder of Wellspring Living, an organization fighting child sexual abuse and exploitation. She has been a leader in bringing the fight against child sex trafficking to Atlanta and runs one of the country's largest safe-homes dedicated entirely to human trafficking survivors.
Hide Caption
8 of 9
upload_2017-12-1_22-10-51.gif


Photos: Meet the people fighting to end sex trafficking
Rachel McCool grew up in a small Georgia town. She says she was exposed to pornography as a child and later was prostituted out of a strip club. After going through a rehabilitation program at Wellspring Living, Rachel has a renewed faith in God and an optimism about the future.
Hide Caption
9 of 9
150714104445-02-human-trafficking-quotes-exlarge-169.jpg

150714104531-07-human-trafficking-quotes-exlarge-169.jpg

150720092416-lisa-williams-2-exlarge-169.jpg

150714104508-05-human-trafficking-quotes-exlarge-169.jpg
150714104500-04-human-trafficking-quotes-exlarge-169.jpg

150714104453-03-human-trafficking-quotes-exlarge-169.jpg

150721161351-gallery-brock-exlarge-169.jpg

150721134631-mfw-children-for-sale-exlarge-169.jpg

150721134833-rachel-mccool-children-for-sale-exlarge-169.jpg



Photos: Meet the people fighting to end sex trafficking
Jada Pinkett Smith is on a mission to educate the public about human trafficking in the United States. In partnership with CNN, Pinkett Smith is getting to the root cause of this heinous crime. She's exposing a growing billion-dollar industry, through the eyes of victims and those on the frontlines of the fight against modern-day slavery.

http://edition.cnn.com/2015/07/20/us/sex-trafficking/index.html
http://dare-think.com/2017/07/sex-trafficking-the-new-american-slavery/
https://storify.com/jess_blainlewis/sex-trafficking-the-new-american-slavery

 
. .
Lived in Atlanta for years and I never heard about it though does not necessarily mean the news is fake.
 
. .
It's true. Women here are so desperate to leave the country and escape this type of slavery. Long lines at airports to flights leaving USA, very long lines!
 
.

This is dejavu of another post of yours a few months ago.

https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/the-sex-trafficking-survivor-who-wants-to-end-the-game.518979/

It’s a small problem. Mostly it is runaways or uneducated women who unfortunately latch on to some guy to escape poverty.

But Iran has the same issue with women but on a much bigger scale.

Prostitution becoming increasingly commonplace in Iran, undoubtedly encouraged by soaring living costs
http://irantag.net/?p=1353&mobile=1

Large numbers of Iranian women in major cities such as Isfahan and Shiraz and Tehran are turning to prostitution for survival, left with no other option as poverty increases, while unemployment and living costs continue to rise. Facing shortages and unable to feed their families, Iranian women, who already face multiple problems and lower levels of education than their male counterparts, are driven to sell their bodies

seen driving through a popular unofficial ‘red light area’ in Tehran, where the average price for sex used to be around $50, although the surging numbers of prostitutes mean that prices have fallen sharply given the high levels of competition. Usually, the prostitute will go to her apartment or another location with the ‘customer’ before he drops her back at the location where he picked her up. Most of the street prostitutes in Iran are in their 20s, with some in their 30s.

According to Farahnaz Salimi, the head of the Aaftaab Society, a non-governmental organization (NGO) which aims to reduce, control and prevent socially damaging activities, the women selling themselves for money include married women and some who can’t make enough in their normal jobs to survive. The average price for sex is around 600,000 riyals (60,000 Tomans, which is around US$ 16.66). This can rise to around 1 million riyals for which a customer will spend the night with the sex worker, while the lowest price is around 50,000 riyals.

The exact number of sex workers in Iran is unknown, although, despite the illegality of the sex trade, prostitutes are clearly visible on the street corners in the major cities. Many of the young sex workers are runaways who fled poverty and dysfunctional or abusive homes. In 2002, the Iranian newspaper Entekhab estimated that close to 85,000 prostitutes were working in Tehran alone, with a report from the paper stating, “The streets are full of working girls… [who have become] part of the landscape, blending in with everything else.”
 
Last edited:
. .
.
@Solomon2 is on PDF for propaganda against Muslims in general and Pakistan in particular. I doubt he will be interested in this article. And there is one more person like him, no prize for guessing.
That's why i tagged him, this guy hamartia is just an other one. He is talking about something in Iran that is sanctioned by both law and religion whilst in US they have prostitution as a legal trade. This propaganda against Iran is out of their desperation
@Hamartia Antidote , you won't get my point, in US, people proudly talk about freedom of prostitution, and non of law nor religion have defined a barrier on it's way.

Prostitution in US, GAYness in US, moral corruption in US military and amongst it's citizens are proudly called freedom of American society. You are an strange dude, most of American dudes proudly talk about these issues on social medias, btw, i am sure that you are not originally American.

@Syed.Ali.Haider Moral corruption in US is called freedom. No one, cannot hide the truth about this society.

Prostitution and poverty in US caused by hunger : @Hamartia Antidote
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/a-re...tos-statistics-and-sources-in-english.519460/
However, feel free to change the truth, justify the poverty line in US etc.
 
. .
Is that freedom a good or a bad thing, in your opinion?
Look bro, they have an advanced country, that's right. But it is based on the oppression and massacring innocent lives all around the world.

In fact their freedom is based on corruption, they don't let you to criticize Holocaust/capitalism/Imperialism/etc but they allow you to violate moral laws. Our defenition of freedom is totally different.

US society is morally dead and corrupt.
 
.
they don't let you to criticize Holocaust/capitalism/Imperialism/etc

Wrong. You must be confusing USA with Europe, where many countries may have such limits, but there is no such ban on discussing or criticizing such topics in USA. If there are, can you please provide a source for your claim.

Besides, how can a morally dead and corrupt society function as such an advanced country?
 
.
Wrong. You must be confusing USA with Europe, where many countries may have such limits, but there is no such ban on discussing or criticizing such topics in USA. If there are, can you please provide a source for your claim.
Of course.

Please read these sources and watch the fate of a people who tried to criticize Holocaust :
Charny, Israel W. (1999). Encyclopedia of Genocide. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. p. 182. ISBN 9780874369281.

Levy, Richard S. (2005). Antisemitism : a historical encyclopedia of prejudice and persecution. Santa Barbara, Calif: ABC-CLIO. p. 225. ISBN 9781851094448.

http://www.radioislam.org/faurisson/index.htm

http://www.fpp.co.uk/Auschwitz/Faurisson/index.html

http://robertfaurisson.blogspot.nl/
http://www.revisionists.com/revisionists/faurisson.html

http://www.anti-rev.org/textes/VidalNaquet81b/

http://www.chomsky.info/articles/19801011.htm

http://vnnforum.com/showthread.php?t=145871&page=2

Perhaps there is no law to avoid it but what they would do to you matters in this issue. They will choke you to death until you deny your own words and finally they will call you terrorist/mentally ill.
 
.
Perhaps there is no law to avoid it but what they would do to you matters in this issue.

There is no law to ban such topics in USA. And if the law is on your side, no one can choke you to death here.
 
. .
Back
Top Bottom