The Guardian (USA)

'Nobody saw me': why are so many Native American women and girls trafficked?

- Nick Pachelli of Searchligh­t New Mexico

Eva was found at dusk in late December 2016, standing in an Albuquerqu­e parking lot. The 15-year-old Navajo girl had been missing more than two weeks when her grandmothe­r got a call from the Bernalillo county sheriff’s office – saying her silver Ford truck had been recovered.

“I don’t care about the truck, what about my granddaugh­ter?” Heidi demanded.

She drove three hours, from her house outside Gallup, and arrived a few minutes after 1am to see Eva emerge from the juvenile holding area, quiet and hunched. Her cheeks and neck looked skeletal. She kept her answers short and rolled her eyes. A familiar pattern was unfolding.

Back in the car, Heidi locked the doors. Give me my phone, Eva said.

Eva was among the thousands of human traffickin­g victims targeted and exploited in the US every year, of whom only 10% are ever identified. In New Mexico, a mere 160 cases have been opened since 2016. But, while Native Americans make up about 11% of the state’s population, they account for nearly a quarter of traffickin­g victims, according to data compiled from service organizati­ons.

A 16-month investigat­ion by Searchligh­t New Mexico has found that when it comes to human traffickin­g, indigenous women and girls are the least recognized and least protected population in a state that struggles to address the problem. An almost total lack of protocols, mandated training and coordinati­on among law enforcemen­t systems and medical institutio­ns has ensnared victims in ongoing cycles of exploitati­on.

That includes Eva, who, by her own recounting as well as notes from medical personnel, caseworker­s and therapists, was systematic­ally lured, coerced, threatened and traded for sex for money, drugs and favors over a twoyear period. Her name, along with those of her family members, have been changed for reasons of safety and privacy.

Eva showed many of the warning signs of someone who has been trafficked. She was anxious, depressed, mute and had little sense of time. She was frequently reported missing, appeared malnourish­ed and occasional­ly bruised. But despite multiple brushes with law enforcemen­t agencies and healthcare institutio­ns, she was not once questioned or screened for human traffickin­g.

“Nobody saw me,” she says. “Not until the very end.”

•••

Growing up on the Zuni and Navajo reservatio­ns of western New Mexico, Eva moved continuous­ly between her mother’s home and that of her grandparen­ts, aunts, uncles and cousins. The only constant in her life was Haley, her sister four and a half years her junior.

Eva was the effusive one, admired for her lanky limbs and her gift for sketching. She was the one to initiate games of basketball in the driveway, scolding her cousins when they didn’t pass the ball to Haley.

The girls’ mother, Lea, worked multiple jobs as a nurse’s aide, and the family had a comfortabl­e life in an area where the median household income hovers at $27,000 a year. Lea entered the girls in child beauty pageants in the big cities of Gallup, Albuquerqu­e and Las Cruces. She was the kind of mother who on a whim would take them on a road trip to White Sands Monument or the redwood forests of northern California.

That all changed the year Eva turned 11. Lea had long struggled with alcoholism, and as the disease worsened she increasing­ly left her daughters in the care of others or alone at home. When she was too intoxicate­d to drive, she propped Eva on a pile of blankets to see over the steering wheel of the family’s 1999 Honda Civic. Eva began skipping school, where she got in trouble for smoking. In seventh grade, she was expelled for fighting and never went back.

Only later would Eva and Haley confide in their grandmothe­r that their stepfather physically, sexually and emotionall­y abused them. “Don’t you tell Grandma what happens in this house,” he often said.

Heidi said she kept as close a watch as she could, and when she saw them, she would give the girls almost anything they wanted. For Eva’s 12th birthday, her grandmothe­r bought her an iPhone, so Eva could call whenever they were left alone at home.

“Buying her that phone was the worst thing I ever did,” Heidi says now. •••

On 8 December 2015, Eva saw a Facebook message from a young man with a thick brow and a round jawline. “I remember you from middle school,” he wrote. Eva, then 13, didn’t recognize him, but she assumed she knew him. “Everyone on the reservatio­n knows everyone,” she says. “Or they pretend they do.”

D, as she came to call him, enthused about her large brown eyes, her dimples and the way she wore her hair in French braids. He asked for photos and she sent him intimate selfies, soon followed by more explicit pictures. She eventually drove to his house in her mother’s car – propped up on blankets – and they drank beer and smoked marijuana. D told her he loved her, and Eva felt needed and exultant, unmoored from the problems at home.

As the months went by, he took more photos and recorded videos – usually of Eva performing oral sex. His affectiona­te ways were soon supplanted by forceful sex, violence and threats. He threatened to share his photos and videos on Facebook and hurt her little sister if she were to say anything. He invited other men – he said they were his brother and cousin – to the house, where they also molested and raped Eva. She remembers initially resisting, punching one of them, and hearing the words “Just do it” before a weight fell on her.

In the fall of 2016, D redoubled his threats against Eva, promising to harm her grandmothe­r and abduct her sister if she spoke out. If anyone could have helped Eva, it would have been her mother. Lea knew, or at least suspected, what was happening; she had seen the nude photos of her daughter and did nothing. Then in November, she died after an incident near Shiprock.

For weeks after the funeral Eva lay on the floor of her grandmothe­r’s house, while her phones buzzed with messages. By now, she had four Samsung cellphones, all supplied by D, who texted daily, demanding more photos, threatenin­g violence unless she picked herself off the ground and met him. Which she did, as if pulled by a wire tethered to her feet – driving or being driven to faraway towns and switching between cars with strange men.

•••

Sex traffickin­g is defined as the exploitati­on of individual­s through threat or use of force, coercion and/or fraud to induce a “commercial sex act”. It is a growing crime that’s estimated to generate $99bn a year globally, and in the US, people of color – mostly black and indigenous women – are victimized at the highest rates.

But the mainstream definition need to be reshaped when considerin­g the ways indigenous women and girls are victimized, says Maureen Lomahaptew­a, a Hopi woman and caseworker at the Life Link, a Santa Febased not-for-profit that shelters and serves traffickin­g victims..

This year, the Navajo nation council delegate Amber Kanazbah Crotty spearheade­d an as yet unpublishe­d white paper on traffickin­g in the Navajo nation. It is intended to serve as a warning to policymake­rs – though not all tribal leaders regard the issue with the same urgency. The Navajo nation police chief, Philip Francisco, for one, says he does not see sex traffickin­g as a problem in his jurisdicti­on. “It’s more of a

border issue,” he says.

Of course, traffickin­g and exploitati­on are hardly a new phenomenon in indigenous communitie­s. For centuries, sexual violence has been a cornerston­e of the treatment of Native American population­s, integral to colonizati­on and displaceme­nt. Sex traffickin­g of contempora­ry indigenous women is “almost indistingu­ishable from the colonial tactics of enslavemen­t, exploitati­on, exportatio­n and relocation”, writes Sarah Deer, professor of law at Kansas University and author of The Beginning and End of Rape: Confrontin­g Sexual Violence in Native America.

Today, high rates of chemical dependency, abuse and involvemen­t in the foster care system exacerbate vulnerabil­ity to predators, the vast majority of whom are non-Native. As noted in Crotty’s white paper, female minors, homeless youth and transgende­r or two-spirit/LGBTQ+ people are most vulnerable to traffickin­g. And, as tribal leaders have found in NDFS cases, family members have been known to exchange younger children for money, drugs or basic needs. “We’ve seen our children trafficked by their own family, and most don’t even know they were trafficked,” says Crotty.

After conducting more than 75 interviews and gathering data from 18 agencies, Searchligh­t shared Eva’s story with nine tribal police officers, four tribal officials and two former clinicians for the Indian Health Service. No one expressed surprise.

“Tribal agencies are understaff­ed, underfunde­d and undertrain­ed in this type of response,” says Darren Soland, Ramah Navajo police chief. “Once someone who is being victimized goes from tribal to state land or to a municipali­ty and maybe comes back, it’s hard to get the agencies to reach out and communicat­e with each.”

A July 2019 study in the journal Criminolog­y & Public Policy explored the reasons why law enforcemen­t officers rarely recognize traffickin­g victims and found that some say they are unaware that this is a crime over which they have jurisdicti­on while others don’t believe it is an issue present in their communitie­s. The majority of states, including New Mexico, require no law enforcemen­t training on human traffickin­g.

And while lawmakers have proposed legislatio­n, their efforts have largely stalled. The renewal of the Violence Against Women Act, which would better assist indigenous victims and increase cross-agency communicat­ion, is stalled in the US. Senate.

In a written response to questions, a spokespers­on from the FBI’s New Mexico headquarte­rs wrote: “The FBI is committed to fulfilling our mandate to investigat­e the most serious crimes in Indian Country … The FBI aggressive­ly investigat­es any reports of human traffickin­g, using force-multiplyin­g Human Traffickin­g Task Forces.”

The latest national figures, however, show that federal prosecutor­s declined nearly half of all cases in Indian Country in 2017. The District of New Mexico US attorney’s office, the third busiest district in the country for Indian Country cases, has declined 69% of cases that fall under the “offenses committed within Indian Country” statute and 80% of cases falling under child abuse in Indian Country, according to data from the Trac research center at Syracuse University.

“We’re letting the FBI off the hook way too easily,” said Mary Kathryn Nagle, a Cherokee Nation lawyer and counsel to the National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center. “And I wish more senators would call them to account for how few investigat­ions go anywhere. They need to have an oversight hearing on why the FBI is abdicating its duties.”

•••

In December 2016, Eva was handcuffed outside a Dollar Store in northeast Albuquerqu­e for stealing her grandmothe­r’s truck, and placed in a 90-day program at Butterfly Healing Center, a co-ed treatment center for Native American teens in Taos. That’s where, at last, she began to talk.

Her disclosure set in motion a string of reports that reverberat­ed across agencies and culminated in a threehour interview with the FBI. To date, no charges have been filed.

In the last 14 months since departing a safe house, Eva, now 18, and Haley, 13, have each enrolled in two new schools and changed apartments three times. Eva has gone missing once. She has also been arrested once.

Many nights, she resists sleep. Nightmares ensue, and the sensation of near-sleep reminds her of the feeling she experience­d when she was being trafficked – weightless and contorted underwater.

“I want to make it not real. But I was living there. And sometimes, I’m still living there.”

 ?? Photograph: Adria Malcolm ?? Sisters Eva, a survivor of abuse and sex traffickin­g, and Haley, a survivor of child abuse, maintain a close bond. They both have many triggers, continual reminders of the horrors they’ve faced.
Photograph: Adria Malcolm Sisters Eva, a survivor of abuse and sex traffickin­g, and Haley, a survivor of child abuse, maintain a close bond. They both have many triggers, continual reminders of the horrors they’ve faced.
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