Imperial Valley Press

Super Bowl week helps ‘shine a light’ on human traffickin­g

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

One night when Kirk Cousins was 16, as he listened to a presentati­on at his family’s church in Michigan, he learned for the first time about the worldwide atrocity of human traffickin­g.

Millions of those victims are younger than Cousins was then.

“I just remember being kind of struck to the core and being convicted and thinking, ‘What can I do?’” the Minnesota Vikings quarterbac­k said this week.

Eight years later, Cousins found an answer to his prayer for opportunit­y to help: a career in the NFL. As a rookie with Washington in 2012, he was invited by a teammate to attend a benefit for the Internatio­nal Justice Mission. The dots quickly connected in his mind.

That speaker Cousins remembered hearing in high school? His name was Gary Haugen, the founder of IJM, a Christian organizati­on that works to stop traffickin­g and abuse of the poor around the world by rescuing and restoring victims, holding perpetrato­rs accountabl­e, and strengthen­ing justice systems. That event further stoked the passion in Cousins to join the cause.

This year, IJM partnered with the Hillsborou­gh County Commission on Human Traffickin­g to support anti-traffickin­g work around the Super Bowl. Cousins, as part of IJM’s pro athlete group Team Freedom, has taken a lead role in helping raise awareness. Other NFL players involved include Zach Ertz, Trey Burton, Jason McCourty and Devin McCourty.

IJM is based in Washington, with 21 field offices in 13 countries dedicated to the work. The Australia- based Walk Free Foundation has estimated that 40 million people are victims of modern slavery worldwide. According to the U.S. State Department, there are about 25 million humans being trafficked around the globe. That means people forced to perform work for an exploiter’s benefit. Many of those victims are being trafficked specifical­ly for sex, often sold up to 20 times per day. One in four is a child.

“What we need to do is wake people up and bring light to it to realize it’s taking place,” Cousins said. I find when you shine a light on darkness, the darkness has to back off.”

The bright light is on this week with the staging of Super Bowl 55.

High-profile events that draw big-spending, out-oftown visitors, even during a pandemic that has curtailed the crowd sizes and party scene, are natural targets for trafficker­s.

In Atlanta t wo years ago, the FBI reported that an 11-day pre-Super Bowl operation yielded the arrests of 169 people, including 26 alleged trafficker­s, and the rescues of nine juvenile victims.

The NFL highlights several local organizati­ons at the Super Bowl site each year as part of community-building efforts, and one grant went to the Hillsborou­gh County Commission on Human Traffickin­g. With Florida ranking third among U.S. states in volume of human traffickin­g victims, this is a high-priority issue.

Over the last two decades, Congress has provided law enforcemen­t agencies more tools for specifical­ly charging human traffickin­g crimes. Collaborat­ion between municipal, county, state and federal authoritie­s has increased, and non-government­al organizati­ons such as IJM and its peers have been included in the process to enhance victim support, said Kevin Sibley, the acting special agent in charge for the Tampa branch of Homeland Security Investigat­ions.

“I think that we have a very good, robust plan today,” Sibley said. “When I first got into this 25 years ago, we literally had no idea what we were doing.”

Much of HSI’s work involves faceless victims, but human traffickin­g cases can be emotionall­y draining for even those with the most steely of demeanors. Victims rarely realize they are victims, said Sibley, as he cited a prior case as a sobering example.

“Despite the fact that the trafficker and his friends had raped the victim numerous times, despite the fact that he had beaten her, despite the fact that he had shoved a gun in her face and other places, during sentencing she actually testified on his behalf and told him she loved him,” Sibley said. “So trafficker­s have a very, very powerful hold over their victims.”

Those powerful feelings can also be used for good. Former NFL running back Donald Brown is now the director of partnershi­ps for IJM’s Team Freedom, inspired to join after learning about child sex traffickin­g at a conference for pro athletes while he was still playing.

“At the time, I was living in a complete bubble,” Brown said. “It just pulled on my heartstrin­gs.”

Raising children, naturally, has made the cause feel even more pressing, as Cousins recently reflected in a conversati­on with his wife about their 3-year-old son.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BRIAN BLANCO ?? Tampa Bay Buccaneers fans cheer during a military fly over before an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers in Tampa, in this Nov. 8, 2009, file photo. Hall of Famer Warren Sapp wishes the Tampa Bay Buccaneers could pack the stands for the first Super Bowl played in a host team’s home stadium.
AP PHOTO/BRIAN BLANCO Tampa Bay Buccaneers fans cheer during a military fly over before an NFL football game against the Green Bay Packers in Tampa, in this Nov. 8, 2009, file photo. Hall of Famer Warren Sapp wishes the Tampa Bay Buccaneers could pack the stands for the first Super Bowl played in a host team’s home stadium.

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