Children and women sex trafficking the strongest crime - in the USA

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Several news stories have appeared over the months to announce another sentence in children's sexual smuggling. Those frequently reported are the "unresolved" thousands of trafficked traffickers that are the fastest crime in the United States. A task force like Guardian Angel, a unique secret law enforcement agency aiming at the needs of child prostitutes, will help many people lead to justice.

Too many cases

Less common examples of recent talk:

  • A young woman was smuggled from Mexico to New York, became a sexual slave and a prisoner, forced to prostrate up to 15 people per day. When her child died because her prisoner of war refused treatment, the victim had to hide the bodies of the child by the abuser. Domingo Salazar and his wife Norma Mendes served.
  • Antoinette Davis is a prisoner of Andrette McNeill accused of child felony child abuse of trafficking after human trafficking and detention and a 5 year old daughter of Antoinette to Sanford's We brought it to the hotel.
Amazing number of victims

Given the nature of crime "underground", it may be difficult for figures to come out, but numbers are phenomenal. UNESCO's Trafficking Statistics Project, "For statistics, trafficking in girls and women is one of the most dynamic problems that seems to be overwhelmingly important.

UNICEF estimates the worldwide victims of women and children to be 1.75 million, but among the estimated 700,000 victims in 2001 the FBI is more modest. The most frequently quoted on various media coverage are 1.2 million women and children. This is halfway between these two extreme situations.

14,500 to 17,500 people are trafficked each year in the United States

According to the US State Department statistics (2005), the number of victims trafficked to the United States every year is 14,500 to 17,500 people each year, although victims of "trafficking victims" are cited the most in 300,000 people in the United States It is,.

The average age of trafficking and exploitation in the United States is fixed from 12 to 14 for girls and from 11 to 13 for boys. Internally, the criminal trend is young, and a 12 year old child prostitute is considered "too old" in a country like Cambodia.

Overseas, the problem may be getting worse - for example, at least 60% of prostitutes have HIV, but among disproportionate 1,200,000 victims worldwide, the disproportionate proportion is the United States It is estimated that there is a base in crime

The income resulting from this terrible crime is estimated at $ 9.5 billion. The cost of doing "business" destroyed human life, brought about long-term damage to abused children and millions of victims. According to the Women's Trafficking of Population Union (CATW), "The majority (95%) had been subjected to physical and sexual abuse by a survey of 207 women traded in European prostitution" (Zimmerman et al. 2006).

American trafficking

According to John Ashcroft Attorney General in 2003, the US Department of Justice presumed that 200,000 American children are at risk of trafficking in sex industries. Many of these victims came from East Asia and there are 5,500 victims from about 7,000 victims Europe and Latin America by the Ministry of Justice. Unlike many countries, the United States is aggressive in battle against the second fastest growing crime, hindering the difficulty of prosecution.

It is difficult to prosecute

Trafficking is often difficult to prosecute. According to Dorchen Leidholdt, a family center for female legal services, "victims of sex trafficking are often placed in situations where survival rates are dependent on external compliance by traffickers. In order to prove that the victim is a "voluntary prostitute", such as compulsion, fraud, extortion, etc., signed a prostitution contract and signed a prostitution contract, which will be used later by a lawyer instead of trading itself I will. Evidence will be treated as irrelevant or deceived evidence of sex trafficking. " Prosecutors are forced or forced to be compelled, and unwilling victims who are often at risk of being prosecuted themselves are difficult.

Definition

The most common "definition" of human trafficking is not wiser than the crime actually being portrayed. Victims of the 2000 Trafficking in Vietnam and Violence Protection Act (VTVPA) describe crime: "For the purpose of exploitation, people are recruited, smuggled, transported, forced to port forces, threats, frauds, deceptions or enforcement, It refers to criminal acts such as trading migration labor, sweat clothes, domestic labor, forced labor, enslavement, torture, or involuntary labor.





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