Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Patchwork of programs serve child sex-traffickin­g victims

- By Jamie Stengle and Emily Schmall

DALLAS » Not long after the last time Cecilia Roberts was sent to an Atlanta hotel to be sold for sex, the then-17-year-old was in a residentia­l facility for girls like her, recovering from the trauma of traffickin­g as she helped prosecutor­s convict two adults she had turned to when she needed a place to stay.

Roberts spent about a year in a 15-bed residentia­l facility for girls at Wellspring Living in Georgia, one of a number of places establishe­d in response to what experts call a growing population of child sex-traffickin­g victims.

Now 24 and working in purchasing for a health care system, Roberts said living in the safe house allowed her to focus on her education — and to heal.

“For the first time, I’m in a room full of people that I feel like understood me, and I didn’t have to explain myself,” said Roberts, who returned to Wellspring for the job training program after moving out of the facility. “As a child, it was all that I needed: just peace, and a little bit of attention and love. That’s all that I was looking for.”

The need for long-term and specialize­d care to treat child sex-traffickin­g victims is increasing. For decades, rescued children wound up being arrested and thrown into the juvenile justice system. But that’s changed in recent years, as states have moved to steer victims toward treatment. Twentyfour states and the District of Columbia have eliminated criminal liability for minors, with all but one state making the change since 2010, according to Shared Hope Internatio­nal , which works to prevent the conditions that lead to sex traffickin­g. Experts say some states are reluctant to follow suit due to a lack of services for the children.

“We need more safe spaces where survivors can heal and re-enter their communitie­s,” said Rebecca Epstein, executive director of the Center on Poverty and Inequality at Georgetown Law.

It’s impossible to quantify how many children are sold for sex in the U.S., but Polaris, which operates the National Human Traffickin­g Hotline, said the number of cases it’s handled in which it’s known that the sex-traffickin­g victim is a minor has more than doubled Michael K. Donohue, Supervisor over the last five years, from 1,020 in 2012 to 2,495 in 2017.

Advocates say specialize­d residentia­l care with targeted treatment in a home-like setting can be good for victims, but they also say it would be best if the response were tailored to each child.

“In the ideal world, we’d have a range of services. So that the kid who liked the long-term equine therapy could be treated there. Or the kid who didn’t want to be in any kind of shelter but wanted to get some kind of support in a foster setting or their family home could have that,” said Carol Smolenski, James L. Huf, Supervisor executive director of ECPAT-USA , an anti-traffickin­g policy organizati­on. “In an ideal world, there’d be a continuum of types of services, but we’re nowhere near that.”

Just this past week, the first girls began to arrive at the Refuge Ranch , a new

50-acre residentia­l community of four-person cottages near Austin.

The ranch offers traumainfo­rmed care, medical treatment, a school program, and group and individual therapy for girls ages 11 to 19, according to founder and CEO Brooke Crowder. The girls will have access to horses and pets. They will be able to take yoga and art classes, or work in a garden. Those over 16 can apply for paid internship­s to learn job skills.

The ranch was built entirely from donations. While government entities will refer girls to the program and pay for them to stay there, Crowder says that only one of those contracts so far will completely cover what it costs to care for them. Crowder expects to have at least nine children living at the ranch by the end of the year, with plans to eventually house

48 girls.

Kids who are vulnerable to traffickin­g include those who are homeless or runaways, or who have been neglected or abused. They can end up being trafficked by boyfriends or adults they view as parent figures.

“Whatever you need, they’ll be that person,” said Allison Franklin, who fell under the control of a sex trafficker in her 20s after being sexually abused as a child and a runaway in her teens. “Some of them are so adept at this that you might not even have vulnerabil­ity or a need and they’ll create it.”

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