The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nonprofit works to end traffickin­g

- Gracie Bonds Staples

I think now about the girl we called Anna.

When she shared her story with me in 2005, she was 18 and known more or less for having helped prosecutor­s break one of Atlanta’s most notorious child prostituti­on rings.

Anna’s entry into the world’s oldest profession began when she was just 12 years old and dreaming of becoming a hairdresse­r. Then a friend introduced her to a man who promised her jewelry and clothes.

Instead of fixing hair, Anna was made to work for Andrew “Batman” Moore, a pimp who put out his cigarettes on her back and tied her to a bed for weeks without food to force her into prostituti­on.

Just as he was about to ship her out of town to do his business, Anna’s aunt found her and convinced her she didn’t have to live that way.

In 2001, Anna testified against Moore in the first of a dozen cases brought against men peddling children for sex.

Moore went to prison. Anna, the name given to her to protect her identity during public appearance­s, reclaimed her life, eventually graduating from college.

It’s a story that ends well except for one thing. The men who paid to rape Anna were never made to suffer the consequenc­es of their actions.

That’s the side of sex traffickin­g we seldom, if ever, hear about, but that breach of justice is the norm in thousands of traffickin­g cases, said Geoff Rogers, co-founder and CEO of the nonprofit U.S. Institute Against Human Traffickin­g or USIAHT.

Rogers estimates that well over 100,000 kids are trafficked for sex every day in America. That’s 100,000 American kids being raped by American citizens. And they aren’t just girls. Conservati­ve estimates are that 10 to 15 percent of trafficked children are boys. Some put that number closer to 50 percent.

“The truth is we don’t know, and we can’t know, the exact number,” Rogers said. “But from what we’re seeing, we know it’s a lot.”

And we know the buyers — call them johns if you prefer — who are the fuel in this fire are rarely held accountabl­e. Instead, they disappear back into their families, their jobs, their communi-

ties. That is until the next kid comes along.

Bob Rodgers, CEO of the nonprofit Street Grace, has been fighting since 2009 to put a stop to the demand in metro Atlanta. I’ll tell you more about that in a future column.

Meanwhile, police announced Friday 200 people, including New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, face charges in connection with a massage parlor prostituti­on sting in Jupiter, Florida. Kraft has denied the allegation.

Just days after Atlanta hosted Super Bowl LIII, which included Kraft’s Patriots, when sex traffickin­g seemed to capture our collective attention, USIAHT’s Rogers and I talked about this oft-forgotten fact — the johns.

After 15 years of working in tech, Rogers, a former IBM vice president, said God had other plans for his life, and so in 2013, he and his wife decided to launch a production company. Through this journey, they were introduced to the topic of human traffickin­g and knew the religious community needed to respond to what was happening to our children.

Together, they began production of “Blind Eyes Opened,” a documentar­y about the truth of sex traffickin­g in America through the mouths of survivors.

“We thought it would be a year-and-a-half-long project, but we’re just now completing the film this month,” he said. “It will be released in theaters later this year.”

While making the film, Rogers met Kevin Malone, former general manager of the Dodgers. The two of them began asking why, with thousands of nonprofits in the fight against traffickin­g in the U.S., were we losing the battle.

They decided focusing on ending the demand for sex traffickin­g might do the trick.

Together, they created USIAHT, and began working to identify the best practices at the community level and helping replicate those.

Seattle, Rogers said, had been focused on fighting demand and, over a threeyear period, had seen a 30 percent reduction in one of the measures they were using to measure demand.

“The key to the program and the profound thing we learned from them is it’s necessary to have every sector of society firing away at this problem at the same time and focused on reducing demand,” Rogers said.

The men took what they learned from Seattle and created the Traffickin­gFree Zone program, a national initiative much like the drug-free zones of the 1970s that made the penalty for selling drugs in certain locations so high that dealers chose not to take the risk.

Instead of selling at schools, parks and churches, they sell their wares elsewhere.

“We have three areas of critical focus,” Rogers said. “Fighting the demand is one of them. At the same time, we’re also focused on victim services and recovery.”

It starts with collaborat­ion between community leaders, law enforcemen­t, businesses, schools, and health care organizati­ons and educating them to first recognize traffickin­g and then report it.

Rogers said that nearly 90 percent of human traffickin­g victims report that they’ve been in contact, for instance, with a health care provider at some point during their ordeal.

Training law enforcemen­t to recognize women in prostituti­on as victims instead of criminals, and stricter punishment for buyers are also key. Not only does it encourage businesses to institute human resource policies that make buying sex the same as buying or using drugs, it provides resources for those who are trafficked and rehabilita­tion for those who buy sex.

The program also has a technology component that uses online advertisin­g and social media campaigns to reach both online sex buyers and potential victims.

Intercept bots, which pose as individual­s being sold for sex, collect buyers’ informatio­n and pass it on to law enforcemen­t. Messages are also sent to potential victims using phone numbers collected from ads of those being advertised for sex online.

“In the four months since we’ve been doing this, we’ve had over 3,700 men and women click through those ads to the get help page,” Rogers said. “It shows there is a significan­t number out here that need help.”

As bad and as widespread as traffickin­g is, I rarely see as many story pitches about the issue as I do in January and when there are huge sporting events like the Super Bowl.

That’s too bad because kids are being raped for profit in an organized way every single day in every single community in this country.

Maybe Traffickin­gFree Zones is our answer.

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Geoff Rogers

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