USA TODAY International Edition

Sex trafficking busts go on; 25 kids found

- Joel Shannon and Sean McDonnell

“If they were looking for kids every day, they would find kids every day.” Suzanne Lewis- Johnson

CEO at RAHAB Ministries in Ohio

Days after the U. S. Marshals Service announced the rescue of 39 endangered children in Georgia, similar operations are ongoing in two other states as authoritie­s target missing kids who may be victims of sex trafficking.

In Ohio, “Operation Safety Net“led to the discovery of 25 children ages 13 to 18 in less than three weeks, the Marshals Service said. The operation is likely to continue into October, U. S. Marshal Peter Elliott said.

A two- week operation is underway near Indianapol­is, Darby Kirby, chief of the Marshals’ Missing Child Unit, told USA TODAY in an email Tuesday.

These operations are part of efforts at the local level to locate missing children rather than a coordinate­d nationwide sweep, Kirby said. Since 2005, the marshals have helped recover 1,800 missing children.

Operations such as Safety Net allow agents to give undivided attention to finding endangered children, U. S. Marshals Public Informatio­n Officer Anne Murphy said.

“If they were looking for kids every day, they would find kids every day,” said Suzanne Lewis- Johnson, CEO at RAHAB Ministries in Ohio, who worked as an FBI agent and on a Child Exploitati­on Task Force running operations similar to the ones conducted by the Marshals Service.

The results of these operations will challenge widespread assumption­s about endangered children in the USA, Staca Shehan, a vice president with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, told USA TODAY on Tuesday.

The operation in Georgia – dubbed “Operation Not Forgotten” – is a prime example. Many of the 39 children recovered were found with a parent, kidnapped by a parent, had gone missing from child services or had fled juvenile justice, according to Kirby’s statement.

That’s in contrast to widespread fears about child abductions at the hands of strangers, Shehan said.

It is much more common for a child to become ensnared in human trafficking through the actions of a relative or after running away.

In the Georgia operation, 15 recovered children were victims of trafficking – most would be considered runaways “who fell into the human trafficking realm,” according to Kirby.

Some children who run away have been lured by predators online, according to Lewis- Johnson.

Human traffickers target vulnerabil­ities and recruit missing children or kids who can be lured away from home, Lewis- Johnson said.

They’ll often look for insecuriti­es, such as a poor home life, or even social media posts about needing money or feeling uncared for.

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