Las Vegas Review-Journal

Study: Most traffickin­g not prosecuted

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Roe-Sepowitz said during a presentati­on and panel discussion at Metro’s headquarte­rs.

The cases involved in the study had 190 victims, and most of them were minors.

Roe-Sepowitz said most minors’ cases start when they are booked on suspicion of prostituti­on. Adult victims are more likely to come forward and ask for help, she said.

According to the report, about a fifth of victims were lured to town from out of state. This can complicate prosecutio­n when those victims cannot return to Las Vegas, Roe-Sepowitz said.

Almost a third of the pimps came from out of state. In many cases, trafficker­s used escort websites and social media to recruit victims. Roe-Sepowitz said pimps post photos with extravagan­t items to impress potential victims.

“The picture he puts up is with money and cars and things that that person is missing in their life,” she said. “It draws them in.”

Many of the cases involved pimps who used romance to manipulate victims. When those efforts failed, many resorted to violence.

“The level of violence was extraordin­ary,” Roe-Sepowitz said. “The level of psychologi­cal violence is something you couldn’t imagine reading over and over and over.”

Roe-Sepowitz said a missed opportunit­y for convicting trafficker­s comes from trying to prosecute them on human-traffickin­g charges and not a cluster of smaller charges, such as kidnapping and domestic violence with strangulat­ion.

Cindy McCain, who serves on the Arizona Human Traffickin­g Council and the McCain Institute’s Human Traffickin­g Advisory Council, said communitie­s need to work together to raise awareness, strengthen laws and bolster victim services to tackle the issue.

“We have a long way to go on this, but boy, let me tell you, Las Vegas has done a bang-up job on this,” said McCain, who is married to U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

The McCain Institute for Internatio­nal Leadership and the Amber Alert Training and Technical Assistance Program funded the study. Contact Blake Apgar at bapgar@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5298. Follow @blakeapgar on Twitter.

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