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America Has Human Trafficking Crisis
AP ^ | May 19, 2004 | Curt Anderson

Posted on 05/22/2004 5:36:27 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe

As many as 17,500 people each year are brought to the United States by human traffickers who trap them in slavery-like conditions for forced sex, sweatshop labor and domestic servitude, the Justice Department reported Tuesday.

"In the United States, where slavery was outlawed nationally more than 130 years ago, this tragic phenomenon should no longer exist. Yet it does," the Justice Department said in a report to Congress.

In separate testimony on Capitol Hill, a top Homeland Security Department official estimated that human smuggling and trafficking generate some $9.5 billion worldwide each year for criminal organizations that also deal in illicit drugs, weapons and money laundering.

"These untraced profits feed organized crime activities," John Torres, of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told a House Judiciary subcommittee on immigration.

Torres also said that terrorists could use the same smuggling networks "to gain entry to the United States to carry out their own destructive schemes."

A law passed by Congress in 2000 created a range of new crimes prosecutors could use to bring charges against human traffickers. Using that law, the Justice Department as of April 2004 had 153 open investigations, double the number as the same point in 2001.

From January 2001 through mid-May of this year, prosecutors have charged 149 individuals in trafficking cases and won 94 convictions or guilty pleas, about twice the number recorded over the previous three years, according to the report. The number of prosecutions since 2001 represents a threefold increase over the three previous years.

R. Alexander Acosta, assistant attorney general for civil rights, said the Justice Department hoped to increase prosecutions in the coming months by focusing resources on selected cities and joining forces with state and local police. Philadelphia, Phoenix, Atlanta and Tampa, Fla., are the first four cities getting intensified anti-trafficking attention.

"While we're gratified that we've tripled prosecutions, we need to do more. And we are doing more," Acosta said.

Some recent examples:

-Seven people pleaded guilty in 2003 in south Texas to charges they brought women across the Mexican border to trailer homes where they were forced to cook, clean and submit to rape. The ringleader, Juan Carlos Soto, was sentenced to 23 years in prison and the women were paid restitution.

-Two people pleaded guilty and one was convicted of illegally bringing more than 250 Vietnamese and Chinese women to work as sewing machine operators in an American Samoa garment factory. The women experienced food deprivation, beatings, physical restraint and were forced to live in guarded barracks. The main defendant, Kil Soo Lee, faces a June sentencing date.

-Ramiro Ramos was sentenced in March to 180 months in prison for illegally transporting Mexican workers to fruit harvesting fields in Florida, where the victims were threatened with beating and death if they tried to leave and were kept under constant surveillance.

The Justice Department report estimated that between 14,500 and 17,500 people are victims of human trafficking each year in the United States. About two-thirds of the cases prosecuted involve prostitution or sex slavery, with most of the rest involving forced labor.

The report also says that more than $8 million in Health and Human Services Department grants have been awarded to provide victims' services such as temporary housing, transportation, legal assistance and education. The agency also has certified 448 victims since 2000 for its refugee resettlement program.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; moderndayslavery
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1 posted on 05/22/2004 5:36:28 AM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Korea has been a source for girls in the sex trade here for many yrs.


2 posted on 05/22/2004 5:39:24 AM PDT by rrrod
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To: rrrod

I thought that was Thailand


3 posted on 05/22/2004 5:57:12 AM PDT by Crazieman
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To: Tailgunner Joe

Truly sad story, where is the outage of this from the rest of the world? You would think that those crusaders who a so intent on correcting human abuse in the Iraq prison scandal would be on top of this one too?


4 posted on 05/22/2004 6:11:22 AM PDT by seastay
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To: Tailgunner Joe

As bad as it is, 17,000 in a nation of 300 million, pales in comparison on a per-capita basis with the slave trade in Kosovo.

I guess that United Nations brothels, servicing German troops with white Slavic girls, just aren't as interesting.


5 posted on 05/22/2004 6:15:00 AM PDT by horse_doc
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To: seastay
This is far worse than the abuse in that Iraq scandal. Yes, where are those people who are outraged about the prison scandal?

We need an effective defense of our borders. Also, very little has been done about the Russian Mafia in this country -- they are also involved in this perversion.

6 posted on 05/22/2004 6:26:44 AM PDT by Dante3
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To: Tailgunner Joe
3 oxymorons in one article:

Justice Department
Homeland Security
Health and Human Services [actually, I guess some services were provided, albeit illegally obtained ones]

7 posted on 05/22/2004 6:27:32 AM PDT by DumpsterDiver
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To: Tailgunner Joe; All
The Justice Department report estimated that between 14,500 and 17,500 people are victims of human trafficking each year in the United States.


I really Beg to Differ on these numbers from this article. If you live in Arizona or Texas, you hear staggering numbers on how man illegals are being transported across the border by human traffickers. I would say be the influx that INS has seen in the past 6 months there is upward of 50,000 coming over the border and being held in drop houses in the valley and other locations until family or relatives pay for their release. Not to mention the number of dead that that find in the desert here. If that ain't human trafficking I don't know what is.
8 posted on 05/22/2004 6:30:11 AM PDT by Americanwolf (Former Navy AO3... IYAOYAS!!!! Population control and landscaping with a bang!)
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To: Dante3
Yeah both the Russian Mafia and the Mexican Mafia have been fighting with each other over trafficking here. And neither of them care who they bring into the country just the $$$$ that they are getting paid to do it. Heck the Russian Mafia could be bringing in Al-quedia by the truckload...I really wonder what the government is going to due when people living along the border states finally get fed up with all of this and start to take action themselves?
9 posted on 05/22/2004 6:35:09 AM PDT by Americanwolf (Former Navy AO3... IYAOYAS!!!! Population control and landscaping with a bang!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
American Has Human Trafficking Crisis

This country has a mass immigration crisis brought to us by politicians who refuse for one reason or another to recognize the huge negative impact of their policies. It's getting very close to that time where the American people sort of help them along a little at waking up to reality.

10 posted on 05/22/2004 6:42:39 AM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Tailgunner Joe

bump


11 posted on 05/22/2004 6:52:55 AM PDT by Centurion2000 (Resolve to perform what you must; perform without fail that what you resolve.)
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To: Americanwolf

You are 100% correct.


12 posted on 05/22/2004 7:18:45 AM PDT by taxed2death (A few billion here, a few trillion there...we're all friends right?)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
The report also says that more than $8 million in Health and Human Services Department grants have been awarded to provide victims' services such as temporary housing, transportation, legal assistance and education.

Victims? These near-slaves are just bringing their culture over to the USA --- this is they way they lived in Mexico and they prefer to live here because the government gives them money. The women mentioned would have been "forced" to clean houses and submit to sex if they'd stayed in Mexico --- so why do we have to give them money?

13 posted on 05/22/2004 7:25:34 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: FITZ

The government has turned them into victims because they support mass immigration. Notice they're doing little to stem the tide other than talk about it, all they really want from Congress is more money to keep funding the programs.


14 posted on 05/22/2004 7:35:37 AM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Tailgunner Joe

"While we're gratified that we've tripled prosecutions, we need to do more. And we are doing more," Acosta said.

Did they send a copy of the report to the White House and the Border Patrol?


15 posted on 05/22/2004 8:16:16 AM PDT by B4Ranch ( "Lady, I only speak two languages, English and Bad English!" - Corbin Dallas "The Fifth Element")
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To: Reaganwuzthebest

http://www.borderlandnews.com/stories/borderland/20040522-121317.shtml

Check out how well we take care of the victims --- these people come over from Mexico --- do what they've always done over there --- but our government has to come up with $15,000 taxpayer money to give one woman.


16 posted on 05/22/2004 8:16:42 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: FITZ

Professionals like doctors and lawyers are getting rich off of mass immigration, it's the middle class who are paying for it all.


17 posted on 05/22/2004 8:31:35 AM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Reaganwuzthebest

Imagine what other country could you go to as an American --- pay an American $600 to inject stuff into you, and then claim victim status and have that government take money from it's taxpayers to fix you up. $15,000 for cosmetic surgery just so our foreigners can feel beautiful.


18 posted on 05/22/2004 8:50:12 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: Tailgunner Joe
I have no sympathy. I live in a country where I am forced by my government to give them half of everything I earn, right off the top. No choice - give it to them or go to jail or be killed. And even at that, the politicians in my country hate me, calling me "one of the winners of life's lottery", and "rich" even when I'm NOT rich, as though that were a hateful thing to be.

I'm not totally enslaved. I am able to have a house, as long as I pay the government $4,000 a year to live in it. If I miss a payment, though, they'll take it away from me, at gun point if necessary.

I am at least free to move about as I wish. I suppose that's something. And I can say whatever I like, as long as I agree with the ruling elite. At least when I do that, they don't torture me. So far, they just call me names. I don't know how long that will last, though. They're talking about passing hate crime laws to punish me for speaking my mind.

They definitely don't want me to have weapons, although I am under the radar on that one. I just hope they don't find out.

19 posted on 05/22/2004 8:52:46 AM PDT by Hardastarboard
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To: Tailgunner Joe

America is going to the dogs.


20 posted on 05/22/2004 8:53:26 AM PDT by Saundra Duffy (Save Terri Schiavo!!!)
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