The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State lawmakers prepare new crackdown

Legislatio­n will look to boost law enforcemen­t, treatment for victims.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Georgia politician­s are preparing a raft of new legislatio­n this year to target sex traffickin­g, including measures that make it easier for law enforcemen­t to prosecute the crime and new ways for government agencies to offer trauma treatment for victims.

Supporters of the new crack- down are using Atlanta’s role as the host of this year’s Super Bowl to amplify their message, calling on Georgians to be vigilant at airports and public gatherings for signs children are being held against their will.

And victims’ advocates organized an event Wednesday that sent 72 school buses on a route from Midtown Atlanta to Mercedes-Benz Stadium, each with an anti-traffickin­g message designed to create a mile-long moving billboard through the city’s crowded streets.

“Child sex traffickin­g is an industry that thrives in darkness,” said Bob Rodgers, the chief executive of Street Grace, an Atlanta-based organizati­on that targets the crime. “Our goal is to develop a network that will continuall­y shine a light on this issue and put an end to the abuse.”

The legislatio­n to be considered during the General Assembly session that begins Jan. 14 has yet to be introduced, but state Rep. Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula, said it will center on two themes. The first would give law enforcemen­t

officials more resources to investigat­e the crime. And the second would create a legal framework between law enforcemen­t, the judicial system, state agencies and advocacy groups to coordinate trauma care.

“We need to address the enablers that allow for human traffickin­g to occur,” Efstration said. “And we need to have comprehens­ive services for victims.”

He joined Gov.-elect Brian Kemp, Attorney General Chris Carr and incoming Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger at an Atlantic Station event to watch the launch of the buses.

At the event, Carr emphasized his call for a new antigang unit to target a scourge he likened to “modern-day slavery.” And Kemp said to expect aggressive action to toughen penalties on sex trafficker­s, although he didn’t outline specifics.

“Evil people are committing evil deeds all for a profit,” Kemp said. “We will not back down and we will not waver. We will fight to protect the innocent and pursue the guilty.”

‘Plain sight’

The promise of tougher penalties and more resources for victims continue an effort that’s stretched nearly two decades in Georgia, even though estimates vary widely about how pernicious the problem is. A 2012 investigat­ion by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on found that despite millions spent on anti-traffickin­g initiative­s, the scope of the problem was unknown and that some agencies failed to keep accurate informatio­n about whether taxpayer-funded initiative­s were effective.

Georgia lawmakers have markedly ratcheted up efforts to address the crime since 2001, with laws that made the pimping of a child a felony, require teachers and others to report child prostituti­on, and place the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion in charge of investigat­ing child sex traffickin­g.

A new wave of legislatio­n has been adopted in the past few years. Georgia voters in 2016 approved a tax that requires adult entertainm­ent businesses to pay at least $5,000 to finance a fund designed to provide treatment for victims. And Gov. Nathan Deal signed a law in 2017 that allowed prosecutor­s to charge people soliciting a victim of sex traffickin­g with human traffickin­g violations.

Victims of the crime urged lawmakers to take new steps this year. Shemeka Dawson, who now works as a youth counselor, said Georgians need to educate their children on the dangers of sex traffickin­g and urge them to steer clear of strangers.

“It happens in plain sight. People don’t believe it happens, but it does,” she said. “People need to open their eyes.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States