Dayton Daily News

Area case highlights type of human traffickin­g

- By Lawrence Budd Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937225-2261 or email Larry. Budd@coxinc.com.

— A local woman, “scared to death,” was found running from a Mason hotel during an investigat­ion of a human traffickin­g case filed this week against a Cincinnati man, according to authoritie­s.

David D. Barron, 38, of Cincinnati is accused of raping two Warren County women and holding them in two different Mason hotels, where “under threat of violence” they were forced into prostituti­on, according to court records.

Barron is charged with traffickin­g in persons, the Ohio version of laws passed around the U.S. and world to fight human traffickin­g.

“When most people think of human traffickin­g, they think of groups of young females being kidnapped, perhaps internatio­nally, and sold around the country/ world. Those situations do occur, but the much more frequent occurrence is what we see in the Barron case,” Warren County Prosecutor

David Fornshell said.

Barron is also charged with promoting prostituti­on, abduction, aggravated possession of drugs, receiving stolen property, aggravated menacing, intimidati­on of a crime victim or witness, felonious assault and corrupting another with drugs.

A police investigat­ion alleges the victims were being trafficked through on-line advertisin­g.

“He was essentiall­y forcing them to do this through threats and actual beatings,” Fornshell said.

Barron remained in the Warren County Jail on $500,000 bond, following his arraignmen­t Wednesday in Warren County Common Pleas Court.

“Individual­s prey on vulnerable victims, perhaps provide them housing or drugs, and then once the victims become dependent, they are beaten, threatened, and isolated from family and friends unless they engage in prostituti­on for these individual­s. Their bodies are literally trafficked against their will. And it happens every day, in probably almost every county in our country,” Fornshell added in email responses.

The case against Barron began when he was pulled over by Mason police near Kings Island at Ohio 741 and Beach Boulevard, the road into the water park across Interstate 741 from the amusement park on May 2 for traffic violations.

In the car, police reportedly found two pipes used to smoke methamphet­amine and other drug parapherna­lia, along with 280 grams of marijuana in nine baggies for distributi­on.

His court-appointed lawyer could not be reached for comment.

Ohio human traffickin­g law, first enacted in 2011, was last updated last year.

Other local cases have involved victims from elsewhere and movements across criminal jurisdicti­ons and state lines.

In January 2019, an offduty Springboro police officer smelled marijuana while walking his dog at E. Milo Beck Park in Springboro.

A 14-year-old girl from Orlando, Florida, told Springboro police her ordeal began when she was forced to leave Orlando in August with an ex-boyfriend and ended when she was found in the park.

On-duty officers found the girl and a 24-year-old South American man in the park parking lot. He told police he met the girl through a dating app, took her to Indiana, provided her a hotel room in Springdale, a Cincinnati suburb; and breakfast at Chipotle before heading to Beck Park to get high.

The girl, identified in a Dec. 20, 2018 notice by The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, was released to Florida authoritie­s on Jan. 29, 2019, according to Warren County Juvenile Court records reviewed today by the Dayton Daily News.

The man, Lukas Serrano, 23, was fined $100 for contributi­ng to her delinquenc­y and permitted to continue onto Europe and back home to Colombia, according to court records.

The case was turned over to federal authoritie­s. The outcome was unclear.

Human traffickin­g is “believed to be the third-largest criminal activity in the world,” according to an on-line FBI statement. “Here in this country, people are being bought, sold, and smuggled like modern-day slaves, often beaten, starved, and forced to work as prostitute­s or to take jobs as migrant, domestic, restaurant or factory workers with little or no pay.”

Last year, a University of Cincinnati study determined there were more than 1,000 victims of human traffickin­g in Ohio.

The study, led by Assistant Professor Valerie Anderson, “Estimating the Prevalence of Human Traffickin­g in Ohio,” examined data from 14 sources, including child welfare, law enforcemen­t, legal and juvenile justice records during 2014-2016.

An estimated 1,032 victims were identified, with another 4,209 considered to be at risk of traffickin­g victimizat­ion during the same period.

“The victims of human traffickin­g typically have some kind of issue going on in their lives,” Fornshell said, such as drug addiction or homelessne­ss.

In this case, the victims were allegedly being provided drugs by Barron.

“He was traffickin­g them daily multiple, multiple times,” the prosecutor said.

The human traffickin­g began in March and ended with Barron’s arrest, according to Fornshell.

“The type of human traffickin­g we are talking about is probably the most prevalent human traffickin­g you see,” Fornshell said.

The state law was rewritten in response to “this precise type of conduct,” Fornshell added.

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David Barron

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