Las Vegas Review-Journal

Law enforcemen­t, advocacy groups unite to fight traffickin­g

- By Mike Shoro Las Vegas Review-journal

Anewteamof­lawenforce­ment agencies and advocacy groups will work to combat sex trafficker­s and assist victims in the

Las Vegas Valley, the team announced Thursday.

The Clark County district attorney’s office helped launch the Southern Nevada Sex Traffickin­g Multidisci­plinary Team, with the hope that it will strengthen efforts to identify, investigat­e and prosecute sex trafficker­s and support children and adults who were recruited or forced into the industry, a statement from the office said.

“It literally does break lives of victims,” Chief Deputy District Attorney James Sweetin told news media Thursday.

Efforts to form the team began about a year ago as a result of conversati­ons between the district attorney’s office and local law enforcemen­t officials on how to tackle the issue.

“We saw very significan­t holes in the system which investigat­es and prosecutes these crimes,” Sweetin said.

The Metropolit­an Police Department already has a task force for human traffickin­g in its gang/vice bureau, but the task force’s manager, Elynne Greene, said the new team helps authoritie­s examine cases through different lenses and discuss how to improve their response.

The team gives the Clark County School District and victim groups a say in the conversati­on, which wasn’t necessaril­y the case before, Greene said.

“So what we’re really

doing now is making this our issue, as opposed to it’s a law enforcemen­t problem or a prosecutor issue,” she said.

Sweetin said the collaborat­ive efforts should ensure that offenders are prosecuted “to the fullest extent of the law” and victims’ needs are met.

Victims suffer trauma as a result of their traffickin­g, Greene said, so medical and mental health services, education, transporta­tion and emotional support are on the laundry list of needs.

“It’s almost like taking a newborn and helping them to build confidence and take those steps,” she said.

One of those service providers, the Salvation Army’s Seeds of Hope program, offers a 24-hour hotline over which advocates assist victims and provide them services, such as clothing, extra shoes and transporta­tion to safe places, program representa­tive Brittany Hopballe said.

But not all victims accept services, and they sometimes get “lost in the system” as a result, she said. She hopes the new team will give victim-centered groups the chance to express to law enforcemen­t how to support those people during the prosecutio­n process.

“That’s how things are really gonna change, is just kind of bringing everybody together and not having us all in our different pockets,” Hopballe said.

Metro Capt. John Leon said law enforcemen­t agencies sometimes have a “silo mentality,” creating communicat­ion gaps, and sometimes the needs of victims are overlooked.

“It creates a more holistic approach for the victim to be able to get those types of services,” said Leon, who oversees the gang/vice bureau.

In 2018, Metro investigat­ed sex traffickin­g cases involving 139 adults and 123 children, more than half of whom lived in the Las Vegas Valley, Leon said.

Agencies in the program include the Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, Clark County School District, UNLV and College of Southern Nevada police department­s; the FBI; The Children’s Advocacy Center; the Salvation Army Seeds of Hope program; The Embracing Project; the Rape Crisis Center; the state attorney general’s office; and the U.S. attorney’s office.

Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter.

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 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e ?? U.S. Attorney Nick Trutanich, far right, Chief Deputy District Attorney Jim Sweetin, second right, and other officials sign papers Thursday to create a task force to combat sex traffickin­g.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e U.S. Attorney Nick Trutanich, far right, Chief Deputy District Attorney Jim Sweetin, second right, and other officials sign papers Thursday to create a task force to combat sex traffickin­g.

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