America’s Dirty Little Secret: Sex Trafficking Is Big Business

Guest Post by John W. Whitehead

“For every 10 women rescued, there are 50 to 100 more women are brought in by the traffickers. Unfortunately, they’re not 18- or 20-year-olds anymore. They’re minors as young as 13 who are being trafficked. They’re little girls.”25-year-old victim of trafficking

“Children are being targeted and sold for sex in America every day.”John Ryan, National Center for Missing & Exploited Children

The mysterious disappearance of 18-year-old Hannah Graham on September 13, 2014, has become easy fodder for the media at a time when the news cycle is lagging. After all, how does a young woman just vanish without a trace, in the middle of the night, in a town that is routinely lauded for being the happiest place in America, not to mention one of the most beautiful?

Yet Graham is not the first girl to vanish in America without a trace—my hometown of Charlottesville, Va., has had five women go missing over the span of five years—and it is doubtful she will be the last. I say doubtful because America is in the grip of a highly profitable, highly organized and highly sophisticated sex trafficking business that operates in towns large and small, raking in upwards of $9.5 billion a year in the U.S. alone by abducting and selling young girls for sex.

It is estimated that there are 100,000 to 150,000 under-aged sex workers in the U.S. The average age of girls who enter into street prostitution is between 12 and 14 years old, with some as young as 9 years old. This doesn’t include those who entered the “trade” as minors and have since come of age. Rarely do these girls enter into prostitution voluntarily. As one rescue organization estimated, an underaged prostitute might be raped by 6,000 men during a five-year period of servitude.

This is America’s dirty little secret.

You don’t hear much about domestic sex trafficking from the media or government officials, and yet it infects suburbs, cities and towns across the nation. According to the FBI, sex trafficking is the fastest growing business in organized crime, the second most-lucrative commodity traded illegally after drugs and guns. It’s an industry that revolves around cheap sex on the fly, with young girls and women who are sold to 50 men each day for $25 apiece, while their handlers make $150,000 to $200,000 per child each year.

In order to avoid detection by police and cater to male buyers’ demand for sex with different women, pimps and the gangs and crime syndicates they work for have turned sex trafficking into a highly mobile enterprise, with trafficked girls, boys and women constantly being moved from city to city, state to state, and country to country. The Baltimore-Washington area, referred to as The Circuit, with its I-95 corridor dotted with rest stops, bus stations and truck stops, is a hub for the sex trade.

With a growing demand for sexual slavery and an endless supply of girls and women who can be targeted for abduction, this is not a problem that’s going away anytime soon. Young girls are particularly vulnerable, with 13 being the average age of those being trafficked. Yet as the head of a group that combats trafficking pointed out, “Let’s think about what average means. That means there are children younger than 13. That means 8-, 9-, 10-year-olds.”

Consider this: every two minutes, a child is exploited in the sex industry. In Georgia alone, it is estimated that 7,200 men (half of them in their 30s) seek to purchase sex with adolescent girls each month, averaging roughly 300 a day. It is estimated that at least 100,000 children—girls and boys—are bought and sold for sex in the U.S. every year, with as many as 300,000 children in danger of being trafficked each year. Some of these children are forcefully abducted, others are runaways, and still others are sold into the system by relatives and acquaintances.

As one news center reported, “Finding girls is easy for pimps. They look on MySpace, Facebook, and other social networks. They and their assistants cruise malls, high schools and middle schools. They pick them up at bus stops. On the trolley. Girl-to-girl recruitment sometimes happens.” Foster homes and youth shelters have also become prime targets for traffickers.

With such numbers, why don’t we hear more about this? Especially if, as Ernie Allen of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children insists, “this is not a problem that only happens in New York and Los Angeles and San Francisco. This happens in smaller communities. The only way not to find this in any American city is simply not to look for it.”

Unfortunately, Americans have become good at turning away from things that make us uncomfortable or stray too far from our picture-perfect images of ourselves. In this regard, we’re all complicit in contributing to this growing evil which, for all intents and purposes, is out in the open: advertising on the internet, commuting on the interstate, operating in swanky hotels, taking advantage of a system in which the police, the courts and the legislatures are more interested with fattening their coffers by targeting Americans for petty violations than actually breaking up crime syndicates.

Writing for the Herald-Tribune, reporter J. David McSwane has put together one of the most chilling and insightful investigative reports into sex trafficking in America. “The Stolen Ones” should be mandatory reading for every American, especially those who still believe it can’t happen in their communities or to their children because it’s mainly a concern for lower income communities or immigrants.

As McSwane makes clear, no community is safe from this danger, and yet very little is being done to combat it. Indeed, although police agencies across the country receive billions of dollars’ worth of military equipment, weapons and training that keeps them busy fighting a losing battle against marijuana, among other less pressing concerns, very little time and money is being invested in the fight against sex trafficking except for the FBI’s annual sex trafficking sting, which inevitably makes national headlines for the numbers of missing girls recovered.

For those trafficked, it’s a nightmare from beginning to end. Those being sold for sex have an average life expectancy of seven years, and those years are a living nightmare of endless rape, forced drugging, humiliation, degradation, threats, disease, pregnancies, abortions, miscarriages, torture, pain, and always the constant fear of being killed or, worse, having those you love hurt or killed. A common thread woven through most survivors’ experiences is being forced to go without sleep or food until they have met their sex quota of at least 40 men. One woman recounts how her trafficker made her lie face down on the floor when she was pregnant and then literally jumped on her back, forcing her to miscarry.

Holly Austin Smith was abducted when she was 14 years old, raped, and then forced to prostitute herself. Her pimp, when brought to trial, was only made to serve a year in prison. Barbara Amaya was repeatedly sold between traffickers, abused, shot, stabbed, raped, kidnapped, trafficked, beaten, and jailed all before she was 18 years old. “I had a quota that I was supposed to fill every night. And if I didn’t have that amount of money, I would get beat, thrown down the stairs. He beat me once with wire coat hangers, the kind you hang up clothes, he straightened it out and my whole back was bleeding.”

As McSwane recounts: “In Oakland Park, an industrial Fort Lauderdale suburb, federal agents in 2011 encountered a brothel operated by a married couple. Inside ‘The Boom Boom Room,’ as it was known,  customers paid a fee and were given a condom and a timer and left alone with one of the brothel’s eight teenagers, children as young as 13. A 16-year-old foster child testified that he acted as security, while a 17-year-old girl told a federal judge she was forced to have sex with as many as 20 men a night.”

One particular sex trafficking ring that was busted earlier in 2014 caters specifically to migrant workers employed seasonally on farms throughout the southeastern states, especially the Carolinas and Georgia, although it’s a flourishing business in every state in the country. Traffickers transport the women from farm to farm, where migrant workers would line up outside shacks, as many as 30 at a time, to have sex with them before they were transported to yet another farm where the process would begin all over again.

What can you do?

Call on your city councils, elected officials and police departments to make the battle against sex trafficking a top priority, more so even than the so-called war on terror and drugs and the militarization of law enforcement.

Insist that law enforcement agencies in the country at all levels, local, state and federal, funnel their resources into fighting the crime of sex trafficking. Stop prosecuting adults for victimless “crimes” such as growing lettuce in their front yard and focus on putting away the pimps and buyers who victimize these young women.

Educate yourselves and your children about this growing menace in our communities. The future of America is at stake. As YouthSpark, a group that advocates for young people points out, sex trafficking is part of a larger continuum in America that runs the gamut from homelessness, poverty, and self-esteem issues to sexualized television, the glorification of a pimp/ho culture—what is often referred to as the pornification of America—and a billion dollar sex industry built on the back of pornography, music, entertainment, etc.

Stop feeding the monster. This epidemic is largely one of our own making, especially in a corporate age where the value placed on human life takes a backseat to profit. The U.S. is a huge consumer of trafficked “goods,” with national sporting events such as the Super Bowl serving as backdrops for the sex industry’s most lucrative seasons. Each year, for instance, the Super Bowl serves as a “windfall” for sex traffickers selling minors as young as 13 years old. As one sex trafficking survivor explained, “They’re coming to the Super Bowl not even to watch football. They’re coming to the Super Bowl to have sex with women and/or men or children.”

Finally, as the Abell Foundation’s report on trafficking advises: the police need to do a better job of training on, identifying and responding to these issues; communities and social services need to do a better job of protecting runaways, who are the primary targets of traffickers; legislators need to pass legislation aimed at prosecuting traffickers and “johns,” the buyers who drive the demand for sex slaves; hotels need to stop enabling these traffickers, by providing them with rooms and cover for their dirty deeds; and “we the people” need to stop hiding our heads in the sand and acting as if there are other matters more pressing.

Those concerned about the police state in America, which I document in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, should be equally concerned about the sex trafficking trade in America. It is only made possible by the police state’s complicity in turning average Americans into suspects for minor violations while letting the real criminals wreak havoc on our communities. No doubt about it, these are two sides of the same coin.

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17 Comments
dc.sunsets
dc.sunsets
September 29, 2014 5:16 pm

Perhaps this is real. Perhaps it’s the latest iteration of daycare satanic abuse narratives. I have no idea, but I’ve never seen anything fishy at any rest stop or truck stop I’ve visited. Maybe I live in a charmed area….

OTOH

All I know is that women need men.

Women are physically phenomenally weaker than men and most are blithely unaware just how vulnerable they are. If I were a young woman I would NEVER be in public, especially after dark, if unaccompanied by a man who would die to save me.

The average man can beat the typical woman into submission in, I’ll bet, one solid strike. Yes, it’s that bad, girls.

Women can only be victimized if they choose to be split off from men, or if men are unwilling to perform on their protective obligations. Either way, she’s vulnerable if there are no men ready to go to war to protect her.

There are some things civilized men must take very, very seriously or else we aren’t men and don’t deserve to survive. If our society coddles and enables the jackals among us, we must accept the need to go jackal hunting.

In the USA there’s no excuse. Everyone can acquire the tools necessary to confront evil. Of course, if they lack the testicles and backbone, tools are of no help.

I didn’t raise daughters, but had I done so, none would have hung out at the mall or cruised around unaccompanied. And any daughter would have gotten the same instruction in pistol and rifle as did my sons, and probably some extra instruction in the use of a razor-sharp blade.

Fred
Fred
September 29, 2014 5:17 pm

Its ISIS thats the treat doncha know.While this horror goes on and where are LEO’s I ask????????????

Why arent we cleaning up our own house!!??

Fred
Fred
September 29, 2014 5:20 pm

Threat.Not treat.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
September 29, 2014 5:29 pm

I’m immediately reminded of a news story about Jerry Sandusky of Penn State/Joe Paertno fame. One of his victims talked about how Sandusky had pictures of other little boys and he would make arrangements to bring desired boys with him on trips to other towns for the purposes of sex.

I had no idea this was so widespread and growing. I tend to avoid leaving the fort too much and when I do it’s usually in and out and back to the fort. There is a deli and a seed & pet store I frequent in a seedy part of town. They are mom & pop businesses and located on what used to be the main thoroughfare prior to the interstate highway system. The place is loaded with hookers day and night. The women I’ve seen look so rough I have no idea how they can even charge money to be honest. From the brief time I’ve spent down there the women are all in their thirties or older.

If the things this article talks about are happening in this city, and I have no doubt they are, they must be hiding it in plain sight and it’s just not on my radar.

Humans as a group, are the lowest creatures on Earth. We need an extinction level event just as bad as we need an economic/political reset. Humans are fucked up beyond repair.

MuckAbout
MuckAbout
September 29, 2014 5:33 pm

There is such a simple solution to the problem.

Legalize prostitution and regulate it (reasonably) and tax it modestly. Accept the simple fact that men will, up to a certain age, always want sex and when it’s not available, tend to do antisocial things to get it.

Beyond that “certain age” men still want sex just as much but a sense of desperation is added to the mix, only meaning that the older a man get, the worse the forces are that can cause sexual misbehavior and deviance.

It’s always been this way and short of actual or chemical castration, it will remain so.

MA

Marty Smith
Marty Smith
September 29, 2014 6:01 pm

I wouldn’t get too wound up over this article. Most of the “facts” stated therein are unsubstantiated hyperbola that have been dis proven previously. Case in point are the Super Bowl claims.
While there is human sex trafficking occurring, the incidence is actually much lower than presented here.

Whithead is a prostitute of the worst kind, preying on true victims and the uninformed public to further his own agenda and commercial enterprises.

Frankly, I am surprised to see this on the Burning Platform.

bb
bb
September 29, 2014 6:41 pm

IS ,are you admitting that you to are fuck up beyond repair.?*Are you admitting that you are selfish, sinful , evil and wicked before God’s eyes or His 10 commandmentsAre you admitting your Guilt before the Lord?….It so you need the gospel. ROMANS 3:21-26 read it

Glad you can see you for what you are .Maybe I’ve been wrong about you.Up to right now I thought you were just another prideful jerk.

Chen
Chen
September 29, 2014 8:50 pm

Whatever you can conceive and believe, someone has thought of before you and has made a business of it. When I was young, I could not fathom that the world was so, but now it does not surprise me. Marty, if you can’t stand the heat, this is not the place for you. You must’ve missed AWD’s magical mystery tour of a human colon. The time for touchy feely stuff was this weekend.

Muck, I’m sure you know, the law is made to curtail competition, not to curtail lucrative criminal enterprise.

Billy
Billy
September 29, 2014 9:35 pm

Why is this article deliberately vague about who is behind all this?

Something this widespread? Has to be run by one or more large organizations. Street level scum are relatively stupid. Which is why they’re used as soldiers, enforcers, gophers, etc..

Hundreds of thousands of kids snatched off the streets and forced to work as sex workers? An organization is behind this… this shit just didn’t spring up, whole cloth, all across the US at the same time…

I might be an asshole and stone cold sometimes, but there’s just some shit you don’t do. Women and children are OFF LIMITS. Untouchables. You don’t mess with them.

Part of me wants to hunt down the sick fucks doing this shit and… well… it would be “unpleasant”… You fuck with women and children? You’ve gotten my complete attention…

Chen
Chen
September 29, 2014 9:53 pm

Long before the runaway abductions of young women in Juarez, there was a small but scary trend in El Paso, missing girls. It became an urban legend that young men were drugged in bars across the border and would wake up with a missing kidney. If you want to read a real horror story, read up on Las Poquianchis, a group of murderous sisters who ran a whorehouse. You will see man’s inhumanity to man has no limits. If the business is moving north, it means it ha saturated the south, that or the great Mexica tribe has revived and is spreading its Aztec empire farther than it was in pre Columbian times.
I use the term Mexica to distinguish the Indians that subjugated all the surrounding tribes. Of course it is all conjecture but there are some Mexicans who have no soul to speak of, they commit the most heinous atrocities in the name of profit and market share (territory).

As a percentage of the population the ratio may not have changed much but owing to the increase in population, crime will increase.

Chen
Chen
September 29, 2014 10:15 pm

Who would you dispatch first, the johns or the pimps? This article gives you a glimpse into the dark side of America but has it changed much from the past or has it come up to the surface since it is now safe to be perverted? Sickness and criminality being in vogue, the criminals come up to bask in the sunshine of America’s love. bb, like a modern day Lot, has to see this everyday and gets on his knees each night to pray for an end to the madness of this world.

LoKo
LoKo
September 29, 2014 10:45 pm

It’s not like this is primarily a Mexican problem. The stuff in Juarez gets a lot of press, but all that and a whole lot worse is happening in every city in America. This is a white, black, brown and red problem, and we must all join hands and come together to end this madness.

Chen
Chen
September 29, 2014 11:06 pm

Agree, but it makes good press. When you have ten kids and they are all troublesome, you beat the redhead. The mind prefers simple solutions.

TE
TE
September 29, 2014 11:09 pm

These girls – I would bet – are primarily runaways. Which is another of our dirty little secrets. Millions of kids go missing with no police report being filed, even in the cases where the parents are dumbstruck with grief and begging for help. Ignored. Of course they are being trafficked for sex, just exactly what is a 13 year old to do in the USSA if they need to make money to support themselves? We have made it illegal to hire them, then wonder why they enter illegal professions like drug dealing and prostitution? What would we expect them to do, go back to be beaten or raped again?

The number of missing kids is beyond most of our ability to comprehend. I understand peoples disbelief, as most of us have never knowingly met someone whom ran away from home and lived on the streets.

I have.

The vast majority of street kids are abused, starved, end up drug addicts and sex workers, which is why the “good” people don’t SEE them. They are everywhere if you know how to spot them. But, I will admit, the kids are sneaky. They know to fly under the radar lest they become a crime stat OR picked up and sent back to their old lives – and sometimes those lives are more horrid than living in a box, or being a sex worker.

Muck is 100% right. Decriminalize adult sex and watch a lot of this bullshit stop.

Why we think a “free” country has the freaking right to tell two consenting adults that they are not allowed to enter into a contract is beyond me.

We are beyond hypocritical and outright bi-polar. We have some of the most repressive, anti-human nature, intrusive, Draconian laws in the world, yet everything we do is touched by a marketing agent that knows sex and violence sells in the USSA. And boy does it. Just don’t show nipples.

Drug and prostitution laws – to name but two of many types – CAUSE the crime.

They have created massive tax-sucking operations that are funded FOREVER, with ever increasing budgets and not a ONE percent “success” in reducing drug use or prostitution. Ron Paul isn’t the only intelligent, freedom minded, individual, to point out the reality that the laws are some of the primary causes of the related crime.

Fuck we are stupid. We encourage our local cops to spend MILLIONS (of our kids’ money) setting up stings and busting both Johns and hookers. WHY? Then, shockingly (not), we don’t have the funds/means to do anything about human trafficking? Really?

And once more @bb jumps in to show us why.

Puritanical “higher” thoughts while fucking the dog, beating the kid and pimping out the wife. But we’re a Christian nation so we are “sorry” and are, according to our good book, forgiven.

If another country ever gains control over us “we” the people have a ton to atone for. As someone that has adamantly disagreed with nearly 100% of every new law enacted by state, local and federal governments for over 30 years, that is some sucky, scary, stuff there. We will pay. I will pay right along with all those that support this continued insanity.

Even Jesus knew hookers were human worthy of respect. Shame my fellow ‘murkins still don’t fully understand, nor respect, his message about that.

Really makes me sick on so many levels. So many.

dilligaf
dilligaf
September 29, 2014 11:14 pm

Bravo TE!

That is, at minimum, the post of the month!

TE
TE
September 29, 2014 11:28 pm

@Billy, my guess is these “rings” are being run by a lot of the same organizations as the drugs and illegal guns, gambling, etc., etc.

So, the FBI, CIA, and a few major cartels (with their secret, rich, overlords), with lots and lots of street thugs to do the actual crimes, and actual times.

For cripes’ sake we have been at “war” with these crimes for decades and it only gets worse. Not better.

Admitting a failure is verboten in this country.

We are failing in our “wars.”

Worst of all, we are not just failing our collective children, we are abusing them and then telling them it is for their own good.

bb
bb
September 30, 2014 1:27 am

Mr Chen , I do pray for our nation but it doesn’t seem to do any good. I think GOD has already made his judgment . In other words it’s to late.After we collapse maybe part of the nation can be restored. I think the United states is done for.