The Oklahoman

QAnon-linked Save the Children movement is derailing local anti-traffickin­g organizati­ons

- By Jamie Landers and Richard Ruelas

On a sweltering August day, hundreds of people gathered in a concrete plaza near the Arizona Capitol united by the seemingly noble cause of wanting to “Save the Children.”

Though, scattered in the crowd were signs reading“Q Sent Me” and “WWG1WGA” and paper cutouts of Jeffrey Epstein and Hillary and Bill Clinton that showed other motives for their activism: adherence to the belief that child sex traffickin­g is the work of a global cabal of pedophiles.

“We as a people have all been blinded and lied to by the mainstream media, so we need to start keeping an open mind and searching within ourselves to better understand everything going on in the world,” said 21-year-old Lucas Howard, who held a sign that indicated he was a follower of the QAnon conspiracy.

Anti-traffickin­g advocates who have worked for years to get people to talk about the topic have over the past year seen it become widely discussed on social media and the subject of inperson rallies. The one in August in Phoenix was part of a string of #SaveTheChi­ldren rallies nationwide.

But the newfound passion for the topic is fueled by false informatio­n spread under the QAnon umbrella.

And as more Q followers remain captivated by unfounded tales of a global cab al ensnaring children to be raped and eaten, long time antitraffi­cking advocates fear there will be less concern and support to combat the all-too-real issue of women and girls being forced into sex traffickin­g or prostituti­on.

`Their whole point is to affect the election'

The subject came up in the September meeting of Gov. Doug Ducey's Arizona Human Traffickin­g Council, which is cochaired by Cindy McCain, the widow of U.S. Sen. John McCain. Cindy McCain has worked for years to raise concerns about sex traffickin­g in Arizona and across the country.

“It's despicable, in my opinion,” Cindy McCain said during that meeting, upset by how QAnon and t he #SaveOurChi­ldren movements have seemingly hijacked the issue. “It's very frustratin­g for all of us that participat­e in this.”

McCain said during the meeting that she and Sen. McCain were recently accused by some QAnon followers of being trafficker­s. “I had to remind QAnon my husband had been dead for two years,” she said.

At the meeting, members of the council discussed ideas to combat the misinforma­tion, a public awareness campaign posting videos on social media of women who were trafficked, discussing the reality of the problem to counter the myth.

McCain, though, said she thought the problem might be diminished by November.

“Their whole point is to affect the election,” she said. “It's the lowest common denominato­r. But that's exactly what's going on and they're doing it on the backs of trafficked children.

“As I said, it' s despicable.”

Trump, during a town hall event on Thursday, refused to denounce the QAnon conspiracy. “I do know they are very much against pedophilia. They fight it very hard,” he said. “But I know nothing about it.”

Organizer of Phoenix rally: `We are not conspiracy theorists'

Adel Belgaied, who organized the rally in August, said he saw himself pursuing the same goals as McCain and the governor's task force. All want to save children from traffickin­g, he said.

Belgaied, a selfdescri­bed entreprene­ur who runs a marketing company, said he became interested in the sex traffickin­g issue four years ago after hearing sordid tales from “powerful families” he wouldn't name.

Although the national Save The Children movement is tied to the QAnon conspiracy, he said his work in Arizona was not fueled by it. He said he did not know anything about the QAnon conspiracy and said he made that clear at the August rally.

Belgaied said that even if people are sharing false theories, they are helping prevent child sex traffickin­g. “Anybody fighting it is doing the right thing,” he said. “If you say two words, you're doing something.”

He said he did not want to be cast as a conspiraci­st, but he does think powerful entities — including cartels and Russian mafia members — are involved in a global network for traffickin­g children.

He said traffickin­g arrests generally only pick off those at the bottom. “It's not stopping,” he said. “Who are these people at the top?”

Belgaied said his passion comes from talking to victims of traffickin­g or people who have witnessed bad acts. He said he has heard from friends in powerful families who discuss how lawmakers are threatened if they propose laws that tackle the problem too harshly. Though, he said, he didn't want to name those involved, partly out of the fear of the informatio­n being twisted by the Republic, and partly out of fear for his life if he did.

“That's what's (messed) up about sex traffickin­g,” he said. “That's how powerful it is.”

`Q supporters feel they are on the side of good and the other side is completely evil'

The central conceit of the baseless QAnon conspiracy is that a global cab al of leaders and celebritie­s are involved in an operation traffickin­g children to be raped and sometimes eaten.

Adherents believe that an anonymous person with Q-level security clearance has been dropping cryptic clues about the nefarious plot in various online message boards. One central point of agreement, though one lacking in any evidence, is that President Donald Trump has been investigat­ing and mass arrests, discussed as a “storm” or a “great awakening,” are imminent.

It began with a post from anonymous user “Q Clearance Patriot” on the message board 4chan in 2017. It didn't become “mainstream” until summer 2018, when supporters began showing up at Trump rallies with “Q” shirts, hats and signs, said Kathryn Olmsted, a professor of history at the University of California, Davis.

In 2019, the FBI designated QA non as a domestic-terrorism threat, saying the group is filled with “conspiracy theory-driven domestic extremists.”

Two Republican candidates for Congress from Arizona, Josh Barnett and Daniel Wood, have posted about QAnon frequently on social media. Two Republican candidates for the Arizona Legislatur­e, Suzanne Sharer, of t he Ahwatukee Foothills area of Phoenix, and Justine Wadsack, of Tucson, are followers of Q.

The reason for the theory's rise is it empowers believers to feel like they' re part of a historic fight between good and evil, said Olmsted, author of “Real Enemies: Conspiracy Theories and American Democracy, World War I to 9/11.”

“Q supporters feel they are on t he side of good and the other side is completely evil — it is satanic, it is preying on children,” she said. “It's not just a pose to them on health care or taxes or regulation­s or something like that — it is the very embodiment of evil. It empowers them to think that they're part of a historical struggle.”

`Draw people back to the facts'

People who see themselves as part of that struggle have led to a surge of new volunteers at ALWAYS Arizona, a center that provides legal aid to human traffickin­g survivors and others.

January Contreras, CEO of the group, said the center saw as many as 10 volunteer inquiries a week, up from one or two. Though the center also works with foster kids and homeless youth, many would- be volunteers specifical­ly mentioned traffickin­g, leading her to believe the surge in interest came from QAnon-linked rallies.

“I think people were seeing so many different stories about human traffickin­g that they didn't quite know what to believe, so they came to us to get involved ,” Contreras said. “But it's not just about training volunteers anymore. We now have this new responsibi­lity to myth-bust like never before.”

Southern Arizona Against Slavery, located in Tucson, has posted “Myth vs. Fact” articles on its Facebook page to combat falsehoods with the truth about the sex-traffickin­g problem, said the group's vice president Sarah Herndon.

An example: A common myth, often perpetrate­d by QAnon supporters, is that trafficked victims are abducted or kidnapped. The reality, according to the group, is that most trafficked women and girls are coerced into selling sex for money by romantic partners or family members.

“Our goal is to always draw people back to the facts,” Herndon said.

But such work is timeconsum­ing, Herndon said, sometimes taking more than a week. She said that consumes time that should be spent on the group's primary education efforts.

“It derails the real work that is going on ,” she said. “But we have to do it because we need to make sure we're focusing on factual informatio­n rather than scandalous material.”

The reality of sex traffickin­g, longtime victim advocates say, is based on police reports and the accounts of women who have escaped being sold for sex.

It shows vulnerable women and girls often coming from the foster care system or runaways from abusive parents being preyed upon by people who lure them into performing sexual acts for money. Advocates say those lured into sex traffickin­g can become addicted to drugs to dull their senses and could become victims of violence should they attempt to flee the person controllin­g them.

Polaris, a national antitraffi­cking organizati­on, posted on its website that the misinforma­tion spread by QAnon could clog hotlines devoted to stopping traffickin­g, keeping actual victims from getting through, or preventing people from reporting valid informatio­n.

Polaris, on its website, wrote that QAnon misleads people into believing that the solutions and causes of “child sex traffickin­g have to do with politics, or entirely with law enforcemen­t, when the reality is far different.”

`Everybody is drowning in conspiracy'

Arizona has seen attention devoted to tales of traffickin­g that were at best unverified and worst patently false.

Tempe police in January were getting reports of the Arizona Mill small becoming a hotspot for human traffickin­g. But, a spokesman said, the department could not find any verified reports of that activity.

In July, multiple social media posts accused online retailer Way fair of selling high-priced furniture that included children. Mad die Thompson of Gilbert, a social media influencer who had 17,000 followers on Instagram, posted a video along with her husband trying to prove the theory was real by buying the products. Instagram removed the video days later. Thompson, as of Thursday, has 43,000 followers

In fall 2019, citizen advocates testified in front of several Arizona boards, including the human traffickin­g council co- chaired by Cindy McCain. Their charge: the state's child-protection agency was intentiona­lly taking children in order to funnel them to trafficker­s.

Following months of testimony from the grassroots DCS Oversight Group accusing the state of being officially involved in traffickin­g, the council ended public comment at its meetings.

Sen. David Farnsworth held hearing sat the Capitol with members of the DCS Oversight Group, bringing an official imprimatur to their beliefs.

Farnsworth said while he has no evidence, he believes rogue state workers might knowingly funnel children to sexual predators.

“If there's some pretty little 14-year-old girl that's put in a group home,” he said, “(and) if a caseworker were offered $5,000 just to turn their head, there are some people that would succumb to that temptation.”

 ??  ?? People march during a “Save the Children” rally Aug. 22 outside the Capitol building in St Paul, Minn. [STEPHEN MATUREN/GETTY IMAGES]
People march during a “Save the Children” rally Aug. 22 outside the Capitol building in St Paul, Minn. [STEPHEN MATUREN/GETTY IMAGES]

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