The Star Malaysia

Lawsuit accuses Facebook of enabling trafficker­s

Sex victim was targeted and recruited by a trafficker via the social media site

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HOUSTON: A human traffickin­g survivor from Texas sued Facebook this week, alleging the social media platform provides human trafficker­s an unrestrict­ed way to “stalk, exploit, recruit, groom ... and extort children into the sex trade”.

The lawsuit was filed on Monday in Houston against Facebook, the shuttered classified­s site Backpage.com and the owners of two Houston hotels.

The suit seeks at least US$1mil (RM4.13mil) in damages on behalf of a woman identified as “Jane Doe,” who was 15 years old when she was sexually assaulted in 2012 after being allegedly targeted and recruited by a sex trafficker on Facebook.

Facebook did not immediatel­y return an email seeking comment on Tuesday. An attorney for Dallas-based Backpage.com didn’t immediatel­y return a phone call.

According to the lawsuit, Facebook should be held liable for the conduct of sex trafficker­s because the social media site has become the “first point of contact between sex trafficker­s and these children. Facebook not only provides an unrestrict­ed platform for these sex trafficker­s to target children, but it also cloaks the trafficker­s with credibilit­y.”

Annie McAdams, an attorney for the woman who filed the suit, said her client was befriended by another Facebook user who gained her trust and promised her a job as a model.

But, McAdams said, the other person forced her into sex traffickin­g within hours of meeting her. She was raped and beaten by people who had paid the trafficker, the attorney said.

McAdams alleged Facebook has not done enough to ensure that users aren’t able to hide their identities from unsuspecti­ng minors who may be targets of trafficker­s or to warn minors of the dangers posed by trafficker­s and how they can operate online.

It was not just because a pimp did something that Jane Doe was trafficked. That pimp is not able to traffic Jane Doe unless Facebook allowed him access to her. Annie McAdams

“It was not just because a pimp did something that Jane Doe was trafficked. That pimp is not able to traffic Jane Doe unless Facebook allowed him access to her,” McAdams said.

The lawsuit comes after President Donald Trump in April signed a new law aimed at curbing sex traffickin­g. The law weakens a legal shield for online services that host abusive content, including sex traffickin­g.

The legislatio­n was focused more on classified-ad sites like Backpage.com, which had claimed they aren’t the publisher of questionab­le content but are merely transmitti­ng posts by others.

Backpage.com was shut down by federal authoritie­s earlier this year after the company’s co-founders and other employees were arrested in what authoritie­s say was a scheme to publish ads for sexual services, some of which involved children.

“Facebook has the technology to be able to potentiall­y develop algorithms to look for the indicators and the red flags of potential (traffickin­g) exploitati­on and abuse,” said Tony Talbott, director of Abolition Ohio, a University of Dayton group that works to combat human traffickin­g.

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