Walker County Messenger

Georgia launches new hotline to report human traffickin­g

- By Beau Evans

report suspicious activity, all Georgians can play a role in advocating for those who are at risk and those who are exploited,” Marty Kemp said Wednesday. “All Georgians can help save lives.”

The state Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Council is funding the hotline via federal grants.

The hotline was announced during a roundtable meeting Wednesday with the Kemps, state and federal law enforcemen­t officials and traffickin­g victim advocates.

They discussed new Georgia laws aimed at curbing traffickin­g, efforts by police to rescue victims and federal funding meant to boost services like recovery housing.

Georgia saw more than 400 human traffickin­g cases in 2019, marking an increase from the prior year, according to the most recent federal data.

“It’s recent and it’s continuing,” said U.S. Attorney Byung J. “BJay” Pak, who attended the roundtable. “I would like to be out of this business where there’s no more cases and there’s no more victims, but we all know that’s not happening.”

State officials have handed the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion more funding this year to set up a task force for investigat­ing human traffickin­g cases. That funding, on top of a sharper focus on traffickin­g prosecutio­n brought by the governor, has already yielded dividends.

Last month, the agency worked with the U.S. Marshals Service, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr’s office and local law enforcemen­t to rescue nearly 40 missing children in Georgia, many of whom were considered at high risk for traffickin­g.

“You’re not going to sell a human being in this state,” said GBI Director Vic Reynolds. “If you do, we’ll find you, arrest you and prosecute you.”

 ?? AP-Brynn Anderson ?? U.S. Attorney General William Barr, center, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, right and a Georgia Center for Child Advocacy staff member listen during a tour on Monday, Sept. 21, in Atlanta. Barr said the federal government will award more than $100 million in grants to task forces combatting human traffickin­g, to victim services and victim housing.
AP-Brynn Anderson U.S. Attorney General William Barr, center, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, right and a Georgia Center for Child Advocacy staff member listen during a tour on Monday, Sept. 21, in Atlanta. Barr said the federal government will award more than $100 million in grants to task forces combatting human traffickin­g, to victim services and victim housing.

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