Miami Herald

The dark side of hosting a Super Bowl

■ Sex trafficker­s converge on the Super Bowl city each year to cash in on the demand for illicit sex. The two weeks leading up to the Super Bowl have become a rallying time for the anti-traffickin­g movement.

- BY LINDA ROBERTSON lrobertson@miamiheral­d.com

Everybody who is somebody is rolling into Miami for Super Bowl 54. But accompanyi­ng the glamorous parade of celebritie­s,

CEOs, Hall of Fame athletes, and National Football League VIPs is an undergroun­d stream of noname girls and young women often branded with bar-code tattoos on their inner lower lips, dulled by a diet of drugs, painted with makeup to look older, bruised or burned in discreet spots, and living in a state of terror.

Trapped “in the life” of the sex-traffickin­g business, they are an essential element of the Super Bowl revelry permeating South Florida in the buildup to Sunday’s big game at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens. Their pimps, described as modern-day slave masters by law-enforce

ment authoritie­s, aiming to make upwards of $1,000 per night per woman under their control, have converged here for the same reason they converge on any mega-event city inundated with 100,000 mostly male visitors: Supply and demand.

Trafficker­s have already set up at resorts in Miami Beach or no-tell motels on Southwest Eighth Street or extended-stay hotels near downtown. They’ve placed ads on sex-for-hire and adult-entertainm­ent websites and they’re trolling lobbies, pool decks, bars, and Super Bowl parties to find johns ready to pay

$100 cash for 30 minutes in a room with a person they might think of as a prostitute but who is more likely one of 40 million victims caught in the $150 billion sex- and labor-traffickin­g industry. It is second only to drug traffickin­g as the world’s largest criminal industry, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on and the nonprofit Polaris Project.

“The Super Bowl in a beautiful, partying place like Miami is a bonanza for trafficker­s,” said Theresa Flores, a traffickin­g survivor. “You lock four girls in a room, barely feed them, threaten them, beat them, force them to have sex with men who are charged inflated rates, knowing you are at very low risk of getting caught. You can sell a human being over and over again. Your Super Bowl experience could easily net $50,000 in profit.”

The two weeks leading up to the Super Bowl have become a rallying time for the anti-traffickin­g movement. Advocacy groups provide training on how to recognize traffickin­g activity to hotel, restaurant, and ride-share workers and launch awareness campaigns for the public in conjunctio­n with the NFL and its sponsors. It’s A Penalty is running its third

Super Bowl campaign after starting at the 2014 men’s World Cup. Police raise the alarm and emphasize collaborat­ion between agencies.

Before last year’s Super Bowl in Atlanta, police made 169 arrests related to human traffickin­g, and that number was up from 110 in Minneapoli­s in 2018. Calls to ant-traffickin­g hotlines increased by 23% before last year’s game and two dozen victims were rescued, including five in one day as a result of tips from hotels.

For the organizati­ons fighting the crime of traffickin­g, the Super Bowl is prime time because of the connection between sports and the sale of sex. The night before the 1999 Super Bowl in Miami, Atlanta Falcons player Eugene Robinson was arrested on Biscayne Boulevard at Northeast 22nd Street for offering an undercover cop posing as a prostitute $40 for oral sex. His teammates told The New York Times they weren’t surprised; many of the players had been visiting downtown to buy sex all week. Former University of Miami player Warren Sapp was arrested on a solicitati­on charge at a Phoenix hotel the morning after he covered the 2015 Super

Bowl for the NFL Network. Police said he fought with two prostitute­s over money.

New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft’s road to the 2019 Super Bowl included a 14-minute stop on the morning of the AFC Championsh­ip Game at the $79 per hour Orchids of

Asia Day Spa in Jupiter, police said. He was charged with solicitati­on as part of a widespread sex-traffickin­g sting of massage parlors, where trafficked workers typically paid their bosses $30 per day for food and lodging at the strip-mall spas (sometimes sleeping on the massage tables) and 70% of the payment for each massage they gave during 12-hour shifts. The charges are still pending.

Florida ranks third nationwide in human-traffickin­g cases, and Miami-Dade County is the biggest traffickin­g hub in the state, according to a report by the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office, which estimates that the average sex-traffickin­g victim might be forced to have sex 20 times a day, seven days a week. The crime of traffickin­g is different from prostituti­on in that, as defined by Florida law, the trafficker uses force, fraud, or coercion.

“This is not a gentleman’s offense. This is not a don’task, don’t-tell offense,” said Nick Oberheiden, a defense attorney who has handled traffickin­g cases. “This is ownership and assault of a human being.”

Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle created the Human Traffickin­g Center in 2012 and opened a five-story building to house it in 2018. Her office has filed 619 traffickin­g-related cases — 36% involving minors — and capitalize­d on major sporting events, convention­s, and tourist-drawing occasions to crack down on pimps. Officers also search for victims at schools, health clinics, and on the street.

“These are difficult cases because the victims are usually kids who have been traumatize­d, raped, drugged, and isolated for so long,” Fernandez Rundle said. “Over the last decade the laws have changed to recognize and attack this type of crime and the predators. If we don’t hit the demand side, this business will keep growing. We take a victim-centered approach. We don’t blame the victim.”

The Jeffrey Epstein case, in which the multimilli­onaire financier was charged with sex-traffickin­g underage girls he lured to his

Palm Beach and Manhattan mansions 11 years after he received a lenient plea deal on a prostituti­on charge, also improved public understand­ing of how trafficker­s manipulate and entrap victims.

Volunteers fanned out this week to spread the word to the public, educate business owners, and make contact with victims.

“These girls have been hiding in plain sight for a long time and we didn’t notice them,” said Ellyn Bogdanoff, a former Florida state senator and chair of the nonprofit End Human Traffickin­g Inc. “A lot of us look back and realize something was funky. We should have called the police.”

Flores runs the SOAP Project (Save Our Adolescent­s from Prostituti­on), an anti-traffickin­g organizati­on with 19 chapters across the U.S. She organized 600 volunteers to deliver

60,000 bars of soap and missing-children flyers to 480 Miami-area hotels and motels. The soaps are labeled with a red sticker that says: “Are you being forced to do anything you do not want to do? Have you been threatened if you try to leave? Text 305 FIXSTOP for help. 1-888-373-7888, National Human Traffickin­g Hotline.”

“We want to bust the myths. These aren’t bad kids or prostitute­s working willingly,” Flores said.

“They are coerced and brainwashe­d.”

Trafficker­s recruit vulnerable people. They used to find girls at malls, bus stops, or outside group homes. But now they spend hours mining social media to start chats and build trusting relationsh­ips with promises of love, security, money, opportunit­y, immigratio­n documents. Once they have separated girls from their families, trafficker­s use threats of harm to the victims or their relatives, physical and sexual abuse, deception, debt bondage, drug addiction, and manipulati­ve tactics to force them into commercial sex.

“Trafficker­s are very smart and they can tell quickly, ‘I can get this one but not that one,’ ” Flores said. “They prey on troubled kids, insecure kids, foster kids, runaways. We’ve found about one third get trafficked by their own family; they were molested and sold by their own father. They feel guilt and shame. They’re scared to ask for help. They are told, ‘Nobody cares about you. This is the life. You are meant for it. You won’t find anything better than what you have with me.’ ”

Flores was 15 years old and living in upscale Birmingham, Michigan, a good student and track athlete at school when she was unknowingl­y groomed by an older classmate who pretended to be her boyfriend. One day, he offered her a ride home, took her to his house instead, and drugged and raped her. He took photos, and he and his cousins threatened to show them to her parents if she didn’t “work them off” by providing sex to men in hotel rooms.

“He knew where I lived, where I baby-sat. He threatened to kill my brothers. He killed my dog,” Flores said. “Inside you’re screaming but you’re too scared to tell anybody. You think, ‘I can earn those photos back soon and it will all be over.’ You don’t realize you’re a traffickin­g victim. You don’t know that word.”

Two years later, Flores’ father was transferre­d and she moved away, later finding out that the young men were affiliated with a Detroit-area mafia family.

“We want to reach a victim in her worst moment imprisoned in that hotel room,” said Flores, author of “The Slave Across the Street.” “And teach the owner or clerk to recognize a girl in trouble, or a trafficker using that room for customers.”

Joyce Dixson-Haskette was 25 when she shot and killed the man who was traffickin­g her for sex. She spent 17 years in prison.

“They made him the victim and me the coldbloode­d murderer,” she said. “The perception of those roles in our society is changing slowly. I still don’t understand how a man can kiss his wife and daughter goodbye and tell them to stay safe, and then during his trip out of town, he buys a girl the same age as his daughter. To say no one is being hurt is simply not true. It’s not a choice.”

Dixson-Haskette said she was victimized by a man who claimed to love her and promised to take care of her, then threatened to kill her two children if she did not comply with his demands. She retaliated after he nearly killed her.

“One night I was the entertainm­ent at a party where he stripped me naked, stood me on a bed, and invited five guys to hit me with pool sticks and place wagers on how many licks I could take before I went down,” she said. “When I blacked out, he wrapped me in a sheet and dumped me at a loading dock where a maintenanc­e man found me and took me to the hospital. I had ceased to be a person. I was a piece of property.”

Dixson-Haskette became the first woman to earn a degree from the University of Michigan while in prison. She’s now a clinical therapist in Royal Oak, Michigan, where she works with survivors.

Victims can be enticed into traffickin­g by a romantic partner, a father figure, or a job scam. Jeffrey Cooper persuaded college students from Kazakhstan to come to Miami Beach to work at a yoga studio and helped them secure visas. But once they got here, Cooper ordered them to perform erotic massages and sex acts for money, according to 2011 court records. He advertised the women on Backpage.com, a classified-ads website that was later abolished, offering “sensual body rubs” at a “lovely waterfront location.” Cooper was sentenced to 30 years in prison.

There are telling signs: Trafficker­s don’t look like a parent or guardian. They pay in cash. At hotels, they keep the Do Not Disturb sign on the door and men are constantly in and out of the room. The people they have in servitude might appear fearful, tense, submissive, malnourish­ed, disoriente­d, or they have no form of identifica­tion, no cellphone and little luggage, said Alexandra Perron from the advocacy group A21.

“It’s all about control of their minds, bodies, and souls,” Perron said. “He flatters her, builds a connection, tells her she can achieve her goals with him, pays for her classes, clothes, modeling photos, doctor appointmen­ts. He tricks her into the life: ‘You need to service these men because I’ve been helping you.’ He will beat another girl and warn ‘I’ll do this to you if you run.’ He might abuse an animal in front of her. He forces her to get a tattoo signifying she belongs to him or is part of his ring. He takes her on the road.

“My co-worker was trafficked back and forth across the country for seven years, on the circuit to big events, meeting sex buyers in highend hotel lobbies and restaurant­s. These victims develop Stockholm Syndrome with their captors. They can’t escape.”

For all the attention that traffickin­g receives in Super Bowl cities, the arrest, prosecutio­n, and conviction of trafficker­s remain at a low level compared to the scope of the crime. One reason trafficker­s are able to stay a step ahead of the law is that the internet allows them to work in secret.

“Trafficker­s are getting more sophistica­ted. They’re using private chat rooms and private apps as well as dating sites,” said Esther Jacobo, director of Citrus Family Care Network and a former state prosecutor.

“It’s a lot more undercover now. There are hundreds of different sites, and as quickly as one gets shut down another one pops up.”

For police, conducting a sweep of prostituti­on hot spots in Miami is easier than mounting a complicate­d investigat­ion of trafficker­s and their organizati­ons, which leave no paper trail of transactio­ns. The lack of legal consequenc­es for johns makes it difficult to pursue the demand side — although Florida did create a public database last year listing the names and photograph­s of individual­s found guilty of soliciting prostituti­on.

But the greatest obstacle to catching trafficker­s is the typical reluctant victim, whose testimony is vital to making the case.

“Understand­ably, the girls won’t talk,” said Lissette Valdes-Valle, spokeswoma­n for the state attorney’s office. “They run away. They change their minds. They deny having a pimp and say, ‘No, he’s my boyfriend, he loves me.’ Maybe her idea of love is formed by the broken home she grew up in and this guy showed her kindness and she can’t turn on him. Or she’s an addict. Or she’s scared to death because he told her, ‘Shut up or I’ll get your little sister. She’s younger and can make more money than you.’ ”

But while Fernandez Rundle has touted her efforts to fight human traffickin­g, her office came in for harsh criticism for its dismissal of the credibilit­y of four women and young girls who accused a Hialeah police sergeant of sexual assault. The prosecutor­s’ close-out memo cited the victims’ background­s as sex workers and runaways, saying they would make shaky witnesses in court.

But women’s advocates say judgments like that only give license to trafficker­s.

The FBI stepped in, charging the officer in December.

Dr. Kimberly McGrath, director of programs and services at Citrus Family Care Network, said “one of the biggest advances” in the battle to curb traffickin­g is that law-enforcemen­t officers have learned how to approach victims more sensitivel­y.

“Many minors don’t see themselves as victims of exploitati­on,” said McGrath, who runs the CHANCE treatment program for victims. “They see police as the enemy. They’ve been told that they will be put in jail, not their pimp.

“Recovery for these children is similar to that of domestic-violence victims. It takes a lot of re-integratio­n into society.”

Oberheiden, the lawyer, said the annual Super Bowl spotlight on human traffickin­g goes out as soon as the stadium lights are extinguish­ed. He advocates tougher enforcemen­t, improved coordinati­on between overlappin­g agencies, and incentives and protection for victims hesitant to cooperate.

“It seems to be a topic just once a year even though we know it’s a major organized crime 365 days a year,” he said. “Compared to healthcare and securities fraud, the conviction rate is tiny. We hear about drug traffickin­g constantly — the raids, the ringleader­s, the sentences. Why don’t we hear about the criminals buying and selling people? Maybe it’s because the women come and go. They are replaceabl­e, disposable, forgotten.”

Do you need help? Have you seen something suspicious? Call 911 or the local traffickin­g hotline at 305FIX-STOP or the national traffickin­g hotline at 888373-7888 or text to BeFree, 233733.

 ?? Miami-Dade State Attorney's Office ?? Signs have been posted around Miami to encourage visitors to be vigilant and victims to seek help by calling or texting a hotline.
Miami-Dade State Attorney's Office Signs have been posted around Miami to encourage visitors to be vigilant and victims to seek help by calling or texting a hotline.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, center, joins, from left, Mary Rogers, vice president and general manager, Fontainebl­eau Miami Beach; state Rep. Heather Fitzenhage­n; former state Sen. Ellyn Bogdanoff, chair of the nonprofit End Human Traffickin­g Inc.; and Carol Dover, president and CEO, Florida Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n, at an anti-traffickin­g summit ahead of Super Bowl 54.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, center, joins, from left, Mary Rogers, vice president and general manager, Fontainebl­eau Miami Beach; state Rep. Heather Fitzenhage­n; former state Sen. Ellyn Bogdanoff, chair of the nonprofit End Human Traffickin­g Inc.; and Carol Dover, president and CEO, Florida Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n, at an anti-traffickin­g summit ahead of Super Bowl 54.
 ?? Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office ?? Sex traffickin­g is second only to drug traffickin­g as the world’s largest criminal industry, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on and the nonprofit Polaris Project.
Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office Sex traffickin­g is second only to drug traffickin­g as the world’s largest criminal industry, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on and the nonprofit Polaris Project.
 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Sarah Jacobson, a volunteer in an anti-traffickin­g effort, shows photos of missing children to Chantele Fields, who works at the front desk of Casa Victoria Orchid Hotel in South Beach.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Sarah Jacobson, a volunteer in an anti-traffickin­g effort, shows photos of missing children to Chantele Fields, who works at the front desk of Casa Victoria Orchid Hotel in South Beach.

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