Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Missing kids, trauma making city sex traffickin­g destinatio­n

- Mary Spicuzza

Many sex traffickin­g victims in Milwaukee have a history of being reported missing from group homes.

Most have experience­d significan­t trauma — such as witnessing or being the victims of sexual assault, domestic violence or child abuse — by age 13 or younger, according to Milwaukee Police Department reports.

And far more needs to be done to prevent vulnerable children and young adults from being exploited by sex trafficker­s.

Those were among the findings of a new report released Thursday by a group that includes the Milwaukee Homicide Review Commission, the Medical College of Wisconsin and the Milwaukee Police Department.

The latest report expands on another released in March that found 340 young adults and children were victims of sex traffickin­g in Milwaukee between Jan. 1, 2013, and Dec. 31, 2016.

It found that 59% of victims had a history of being reported missing to Milwaukee police at least once, and, of those, 59% were reported from out of home care one or more times.

“These findings are a call to immediate action to protect at-risk children, especially in group homes, from being recruited into sex traffickin­g,” said Eric Thompson, an attorney for Children’s Rights.

Thompson called on the state Department of Children and Families to bring Milwaukee’s group homes into compliance as soon as possible “and combat this assault on our kids.”

Milwaukee has gained a reputation as a hub for sex traffickin­g after a series of high-profile prosecutio­ns of pimps and rankings in nationwide FBI human traffickin­g stings.

Court cases here have revealed generation­s of trafficker­s, some of whom participat­ed in “pimp roundtable­s” during which they discussed business practices of the illegal trade.

This report found children reported missing from group homes are especially vulnerable to becoming victims of traffickin­g.

More than half of the victims (59%) experience­d a significan­t trauma detailed in a Milwaukee police report by the time they had reached 13 years old.

These numbers still likely provide an underestim­ate because data was limited, coming mainly from Milwaukee police incident reports and because sex traffickin­g, like domestic violence and sexual assault, is a frequently underrepor­ted crime.

Recommenda­tions in the report include:

❚ Increasing in-person meetings between caseworker­s and youth in the child welfare system.

❚ Considerin­g safety concerns when deciding placement of victims of sex traffickin­g, as it may be safer to place them far away from where they were exploited.

Finding alternativ­es to group homes.

❚ Imposing penalties on group homes that don’t comply with state standards, such as reporting a child missing within eight hours to law enforcemen­t and 24 hours to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Group homes are also supposed to report when a juvenile returns and if they were trafficked.

❚ Improving training for, and communicat­ion between, group homes and law enforcemen­t.

❚ Limiting the number of sex-trafficked youth placed in a single group home.

❚ Conducting an independen­t audit of state policies and practices around group homes.

❚ Working with parents of at-risk youth.

❚ Training school staff to identify victims of traffickin­g.

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