Las Vegas Review-Journal

Embracing traffickin­g victims

Nonprofit a leading advocate for youths

- By Brian Joseph Las Vegas Review-journal

Esther Rodriguez Brown saw panic in the young woman’s eyes. After about 10 years of serving victims of sex traffickin­g, it is a look she knows well.

Earlier that day, the 19-year-old had escaped her pimp and called a hotline for help. Rodriguez Brown and her east Las Vegas nonprofit, The Embracing Project, agreed to keep the girl safe while another organizati­on arranged to get her home to Minnesota.

Late in the afternoon, the other agency told the girl it would purchase her a Greyhound bus ticket. Rodriguez Brown instantly knew this was a bad idea: bus stations are a

prime recruiting spot for pimps.

The girl was wide-eyed with fear. So Rodriguez Brown said she dipped into her own pocket and bought the girl a plane ticket home. “She’s a godsend,” the girl’s aunt, Heidi Rivers, said in a phone interview. “There would be a lot of girls out there looking for answers” if The Embracing Project were not around, she said.

Today, Rodriguez Brown’s nonprofit is a leading advocate for sexually exploited youths in Clark County, which is one of the nation’s hot spots for sex traffickin­g, experts said. In a strip mall at North Pecos Road and East Charleston Boulevard, Rodriguez Brown and two staff members operate The Center 4 Peace, where teenage victims can drop in at any time, attend school, receive counseling and mentorship, or just hang out in a safe place. The organizati­on serves as many as 300 children a year, Rodriguez Brown said.

The Embracing Project is celebratin­g its 10-year anniversar­y Thursday, on the Internatio­nal Day of Peace. In the evening, it will host a silent auction, dinner and ceremony honoring U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto and plastic surgeon Dr. Julio Garcia for their work benefiting sexually exploited youths, at the Troesh Studio Theater at The Smith Center for the Performing Arts.

NONPROFIT

The Embracing Project is founded on what Rodriguez Brown, 48, describes as a John Lennon-inspired commitment to humanitari­anism. Unlike other programs, which sometimes lose patience with this notoriousl­y difficult population, Rodriguez Brown prides herself on always welcoming girls, even if they repeatedly run afoul of the law or resume destructiv­e habits.

“I don’t care how many times you go back to your pimp. I don’t care how many times you run away,” said Rodriguez Brown, a Spaniard and practicing Buddhist. “I’m going to be hereforyou.”

Her approach has won her widespread praise locally. The agency works with most traffickin­g victims who pass through juvenile court, and many come to rely on “Miss Esther” for guidance on everything from escaping their pimps to ordering their birth certificat­es to work applicatio­ns.

“They taught me not to give up onmyself,evenwheniw­asdown and I didn’t have any hope,” said 18-year-old Phenix King, an alumna of the program. “They never stopped caring for me.”

Rodriguez Brown said The Embracing Project operates “paycheck topaycheck”andcouldus­ealarger facility. The organizati­on has about 2,000 square feet of usable space, but Rodriguez Brown said she needs more than double that to comfortabl­y accommodat­e the children she serves. She’d also like a facility with a shower and kitchen, so her clients could have a place to get cleaned up and learn life skills.

The organizati­on is constantly searching for more resources. Its future is always in doubt. Rodriguez Brown admits the stress of it all has made her think about quitting. But then she remembers the girls she serves, and realizes she can’t give up — their needs are too great.

“I’m a hustler,” she said. “I’ll find a way.”

 ?? Erik Verduzco ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Clients at The Embracing Project June 15. Run by Esther Rodriguez Brown, the nonprofit helps victims of sex traffickin­g.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal Clients at The Embracing Project June 15. Run by Esther Rodriguez Brown, the nonprofit helps victims of sex traffickin­g.
 ?? Erik Verduzco ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Esther Rodriguez Brown, founder of The Embracing Project, on June 15 at her office. Rodriguez Brown prides herself on always welcoming girls, even if they repeatedly run afoul of the law or resume destructiv­e habits.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal Esther Rodriguez Brown, founder of The Embracing Project, on June 15 at her office. Rodriguez Brown prides herself on always welcoming girls, even if they repeatedly run afoul of the law or resume destructiv­e habits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States