Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

A cause that should transcend politics

- By Chad F. Wolf

In the last several weeks, President Joe Biden has reversed — or put on hold — many of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n and border security policies. No one doubts that the new team is scouring the field, looking for other Trump administra­tion policies and initiative­s to cancel. But surely fighting the scourge of human traffickin­g is a piece of Trump’s legacy that should be spared the chopping block. Indeed, this is one area where Biden’s Department of Homeland Security should be looking to continue and build upon the work of the previous administra­tion.

There can really be no difference of political opinion about the virtue of dismantlin­g criminal networks that prey upon innocents. In the case of human traffickin­g, breaking up those networks is also a matter of national security. The same cartels that destabiliz­e Latin America and the U.S. with their multibilli­on-dollar trade in illicit narcotics also rake in enormous profits from traffickin­g in humans.

This is not just a sideline for them. Among violent Mexican cartels, people are the third most-trafficked commodity, trailing only drugs and guns, While it is impossible to know precisely how many people are trafficked into the U.S. annually, the National Criminal Justice Reference Service estimated the number to be between 14,500 and 17,500 — and that was 15 years ago. Surely the number is far higher today.

Activists estimate that 75% of those victimized by Mexican cartels are women and young girls trafficked for sexual exploitati­on. Central American criminal organizati­ons are deeply involved as well.

Last year the U.S. Department of Justice, partnering with several Central American and Mexican law enforcemen­t agencies, helped arrest more than 700 MS-13 and M-18 gang members throughout the Northern Triangle and Mexico — often on human traffickin­g charges.

ICE’s Homeland Security Investigat­ions team provided informatio­n critical to the success of those law enforcemen­t operations. But the DHS’s anti-traffickin­g efforts went broader than that. A year ago, DHS published its first official Strategy to Combat Human Traffickin­g. It was part of a larger Trump administra­tion effort to crack down on this form of modern-day slavery. Due to the organized nature of this criminal activity, its scale, the cross-border nexus and the horrible abuse and terror inflicted on its victims, I decided to make these crimes a DHS priority.

But making it a priority meant upsetting the apple cart. The department needed to get serious about devoting resources to this issue. In FY 2020, we ramped up our Victim Assistance Program by $21 million, enabling us to hire up to 100 victims’ assistants to help identify victims and get them safely on the road to recovery.

But that didn’t go far enough. In September 2020, we altered our organizati­onal structure to better counter organized crime. DHS opened its Center for Countering Human Traffickin­g, in which 16 DHS components and headquarte­r offices now pool their resources to, first, identify and stabilize victims and then to investigat­e and prosecute trafficker­s and others engaged in human exploitati­on.

And, the center does even more. It provides victim support, assistance and protection. It conducts outreach to law enforcemen­t, the private sector and NGOs. It provides education and prevention training to the community at large, and ensures that red-flag indicators of traffickin­g are channeled into one, central repository.

With its holistic, victim-centered approach and adequate resources, the center gives the DHS a powerful new weapon in the fight against human traffickin­g.

Now is the time to expand on these efforts, and for the department to be a leading voice in keeping other federal agencies engaged and dedicated to this mission.

In developing regions like Latin America, the pandemic-induced economic downturn has left millions impoverish­ed, creating vulnerable new population­s for human trafficker­s. Regional government­s cannot confront this challenge alone; U.S. leadership and support is sorely needed. The new DHS team should think twice before scrapping this important work simply because it was started under President Trump.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Joe Biden signs an executive order on immigratio­n Feb. 2 in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Joe Biden signs an executive order on immigratio­n Feb. 2 in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.

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