Dayton Daily News

Victims of traffickin­g reluctant to seek help

- By Patrick Cooley

Lori Moyer spent three decades living on the street before seeking help for drug addiction, homelessne­ss and abuse at the hands of sex trafficker­s.

But first she reached a point where she contemplat­ed suicide.

“I’d lost everything,” she said.

Moyer said she was sexually and emotionall­y abused as a child, which normalized her experience with trafficker­s who exploited her belief that she had no other options.

She once resided in abandoned houses and backyards, but now has a permanent home downtown. And in January she graduated from Amethyst, a substance abuse recovery program for women run by the Alvis House halfway house in Columbus.

The Dispatch highlighte­d the plight of West Side traffickin­g victims in its “Suffering on Sullivant” series in October. In response, Mayor Andrew J. Ginther announced during his State of the City address on Thursday an aid package that includes increased education on sex traffickin­g, an investment in a drop-in house, $10 million for neighborho­od upgrades and a police substation that will double as a community center.

Rehab services and special court dockets serve drug addicts and traffickin­g victims, and homeless shelters abound, but reluctance to seek treatment is a high hurdle to clear.

Sister Nadine Buchanan, a member of the Dominican Sisters of Peace in Columbus, visits homeless camps on the West Side with food and messages of love and support. She also offers cards listing resources such as homeless shelters.

However, many camp residents aren’t interested, Buchanan said. A large portion of them experience lingering trauma from childhood abuse and don’t consider themselves worthy.

“They see themselves as damaged goods,” Buchanan said.

Groups that work with trafficked women say only a tiny fraction seek help, even as 1,525 homeless people were in shelters and transition­al housing in Franklin County and 382 remained on the streets, according to a January one-day count by the Community Shelter Board.

Compassion Outreach Ministries of Ohio provides warm meals, toiletries, clean clothes, laundry services and showers to homeless women and traffickin­g victims at a drop-in house on Sullivant

Avenue in the West Side.

“Our goal is to love and accept the women as they come in,” said Taylor Prusinski, Compassion’s director.

Medical profession­als from Mount Carmel Health System also regularly visit the neighborho­od to provide a full range of services, and the Columbus Department of Health provides testing for sexually transmitte­d diseases.

The number of traffickin­g victims in the area is hard to quantify, but drop-in houses say they see hundreds of women. The Compassion Outreach drop-in house alone has 80 to 100 regulars.

“Our goal is to get them the resources we can,” Prusinski said. “If and when they decide to leave the streets, we have resources to make that happen immediatel­y.”

But if drop-in house workers tried to persuade women to enter rehab, most would stop coming, she said.

Hope, who asked to be identified by a nickname, spent much of her 20s homeless on the West Side, abusing drugs and prostituti­ng herself. Drug use was common in her family when she was a child, and as a result, she saw little alternativ­e to life on the streets.

Hope is now in recovery and helps out at a Sullivant Avenue drop-in house. But she doesn’t try to persuade the women who frequent the house to seek treatment, believing most of them aren’t ready to accept assistance.

“They think that way of life, selling your body for drugs, is just what everybody does,” said Beth Tabor, founder and executive director of Compassion Outreach Ministries and Prusinski’s mother.

Drop-in houses often see women who were sold into prostituti­on as children.

“I think what people don’t often understand or appreciate is the amount of trauma these women experience,” said Hannah Estabrook, executive director of the nonprofit Sanctuary Collective.

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS / COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Volunteer Gina Wilt surveys Jane Gessells while breakfast is served at the Columbus Dream Center during the Community Shelter Board’s annual homeless count on Jan. 29.
ADAM CAIRNS / COLUMBUS DISPATCH Volunteer Gina Wilt surveys Jane Gessells while breakfast is served at the Columbus Dream Center during the Community Shelter Board’s annual homeless count on Jan. 29.

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