Albuquerque Journal

Prostitute­s: APD cuffs them, BCSO unit helps them

Sex-traffickin­g sting shows difference­s in how agencies treat sex workers

- BY ELISE KAPLAN JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Are sex workers criminals or victims? In the Albuquerqu­e area, that may depend on who’s doing the investigat­ing.

Local law enforcemen­t agencies involved in a four-day, multiagenc­y operation targeting the sex traffickin­g of minors two weeks ago took very different approaches in dealing with those involved.

The Albuquerqu­e Office of Homeland Security Investigat­ions ran the operation, which started on July 17, along with the Attorney General’s Office. They were also joined by the Albuquerqu­e Police Department and the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office.

During the operation, APD detectives booked five women into jail on petty misdemeano­r prostituti­on charges after finding their ads for “adult services” online.

BCSO didn’t arrest any sex workers but identified nearly a dozen and helped them find social services.

Meanwhile, the AG’s Office focused on finding men who prey on underage girls.

APD spokeswoma­n Celina Espinoza said in a statement that detectives interview people caught in such a sting to determine whether they are working as prostitute­s willingly or being forced.

“At the conclusion of the investigat­ions, we sometimes arrest the individual for prostituti­on,” she said. “Arresting an individual often removes the individual from a dangerous situation and gives them time to decide if they want to take advantage of the resources being offered.”

The women were released on their own recognizan­ce the next day and the charges are still

pending.

Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office detectives said their focus in the operation was on rescuing traffickin­g victims who were being held in area motels.

Detective Kyle Hartsock, with BCSO’s Ghost Unit, said his team identified a couple of juvenile victims and rescued one, while helping nine sex workers get services and assistance from The Life Link, a local behavioral health center. The Ghost Unit handles missing persons cases and child victims of exploitati­on or sex traffickin­g.

Hartsock said his unit typically doesn’t arrest or charge anyone with prostituti­on.

“We see them all as potential victims,” he said. “We want them to get services and rescue out of this.”

Hartsock said that while his group didn’t arrest anyone on traffickin­g charges during the course of the operation, members of the unit have opened 15 new criminal cases involving potential sex traffickin­g, including some involving juveniles. He said they did arrest six men on warrants and charges not related to the operation.

Lynn Sanchez, executive director of The Life Link, said she was surprised to hear APD’s vice unit had made arrests for prostituti­on. She said she thought law enforcemen­t attitudes toward women working as prostitute­s had been shifting away from arresting them as offenders.

“I think that’s horrible, and we need to stop that archaic outdated process,” Sanchez said.

But New Mexico law still considers prostituti­on a crime, defined as “knowingly engaging in or offering to engage in a sexual act for hire.” It is a petty misdemeano­r punishable by up to six months in jail.

APD Police Chief Gorden Eden issued a special order in May instructin­g officers not to arrest certain suspects in low-level misdemeano­r crimes, including prostituti­on. He said officers will still enforce those laws, but they are permitted to issue a citation instead of taking them to jail, based on the officer’s judgment.

APD spokeswoma­n Espinoza did not respond to questions about why detectives decided to make arrests, rather than issue citations, during the operation.

Anthony Maez, the special agent in charge of Internet Crimes Against Children and the Human Traffickin­g task forces for the AG’s Office, said his office arranges operations to target sex traffickin­g about four times a year throughout the state.

He said that in the most recent operation, his agents charged seven men with attempted human traffickin­g. Those men had all arranged online to go to a hotel in order to have sex with an undercover deputy, thinking she was a 15-year-old girl.

Maez said New Mexico’s human traffickin­g statute is extremely broad. Regarding the traffickin­g of minors, it says violations include “recruiting, soliciting, enticing, transporti­ng or obtaining by any means a person under the age of eighteen years with the intent or knowledge that the person will be caused to engage in commercial sexual activity.” It’s a felony.

Maez said the goal of the AG Office’s sting operation is to target adults who are trying to have sex with minors.

“They want to meet a child to have sex with them,” Maez said. “We want to send that message that you have no idea who you’re going to walk in with, so maybe just don’t do it.”

Sanchez said that although the operation lasted only four days, the fact that sheriff’s deputies were able to identify and help 12 traffickin­g victims shows that sex traffickin­g is a real problem in Albuquerqu­e.

“If we could find that in one week, we could do that all the time,” she said. “We know there are more out there.”

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