Las Vegas Review-Journal

Las Vegas safe house will shelter victims of human traffickin­g

- Story by John Sadler • Photos by Christophe­r Devargas A version of this story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com. john.sadler@gmgvegas.com / 702-259-4059 / @John__sadler

Rite of Passage received a $500,000 grant from the Department of Justice to get the new safe house up and running.

In a nondescrip­t house in a typical Las Vegas neighborho­od, the nonprofit group Rite of Passage has establishe­d a safe place for victims of human traffickin­g. Called Canyon View, it’s the type of transition­al living facility that has been desperatel­y needed in Southern Nevada, said U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, who toured the group home Thursday.

When she was state attorney general for two terms starting in 2007, Cortez Masto said, the only safe refuge available for victims many times was jail.

“The best we could do to keep them safe away from the pimps was lock them up; that’s not a place to address their needs as victims,” she said.

Rite of Passage received a $500,000 grant from the Department of Justice to get the new safe house up and running.

“We anticipate this being a model that can be replicated based on need,” said Lawrence Howell, chief administra­tive officer and executive director of Rite of Passage.

Residents, who will have 24-hour supervisio­n, will be able to stay at the shelter for up to six months with extensions granted on a case-by-case basis. The home — the location is not being disclosed for security reasons — is also set up for victims with children.

“Each victim is different on the services that they need, and so we have to understand that and then be able to place them,” Cortez Masto said.

In 2019, there were as many as 5,687 cases of child human traffickin­g in Nevada, according to the most recent report from the Nevada Coalition to Prevent the Commercial Exploitati­on of Children.

Cortez Masto said the problem was not unique to Nevada, and more federal funding was needed to help victims of human traffickin­g.

Cortez Masto is pushing Congress to pass the Violence Against Women Act, originally signed into law by President Bill Clinton and reauthoriz­ed multiple times until 2018.

The House passed the bill last month, and Cortez Masto said it was time for the Senate to do the same. There has been a hang-up in the Senate over what Cortez Masto labeled as “ridiculous” opposition to some expanded protection­s for tribes.

“They’ve been playing politics with it, unfortunat­ely,” Cortez Masto said. “It needs to pass in the form that it passed out of the House, on the Senate side.”

In the immediate future, there is still work to do, Cortez Masto said.

“We have to figure out how we address and stop the fundamenta­l reason why men are still exploiting and wanting these services from young girls … and we haven’t done it yet,” she said.

 ??  ?? U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev., second from left, tours the Canyon View transition­al living home Thursday. The Canyon View living home, operated by the nonprofi group Rite of Passage and The Embracing Project, will allow child traffickin­g and sexual exploitati­on victims to transition back to normal life in a safe and secure environmen­t.
U.S. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev., second from left, tours the Canyon View transition­al living home Thursday. The Canyon View living home, operated by the nonprofi group Rite of Passage and The Embracing Project, will allow child traffickin­g and sexual exploitati­on victims to transition back to normal life in a safe and secure environmen­t.
 ??  ?? Beds and plush toys are provided for children of traffickin­g victims.
Beds and plush toys are provided for children of traffickin­g victims.
 ??  ?? An inspiratio­nal sign adorns a door in the home.
An inspiratio­nal sign adorns a door in the home.
 ??  ?? A look at another bedroom in the home.
A look at another bedroom in the home.
 ??  ?? A room in the transition­al home.
A room in the transition­al home.

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