The Signal

County sees success in fight against traffickin­g

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

County supervisor­s committed to supporting efforts to eliminate the commercial sexual exploitati­on of children received some welcome news from the frontline workers who updated them on the ongoing fight.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s heard from social workers and probation officials about the successes they’ve witnessed over the past four years.

In November 2015, the board instructed those on the Commercial­ly Sexually Exploited Children Integrated Leadership Team to report back to the board on updates made to the Law Enforcemen­t First Responder Protocol and, specifical­ly, the results of expanding that protocol countywide.

“Parents were reporting that they now know how to help their children,” said Edward Fithyon, division chief for the Department of Children and Family Services.

In breaking down the training, Fithyon pointed out, for example, that the Parent Empowermen­t Program — a 10-week class during which parents learn how to help their children — is paying off.

Countywide, the training related to commercial­ly sexually exploited children saw 183 training classes completed and 19,492 people trained.

“I’m impressed with the number of county employees we’ve been able to train,” Supervisor Janice Hahn said after the report was given. “And, that they are now able to recognize and possibly stop the exploitati­on.”

One of the cornerston­e principles behind the First Responder Protocol is treating the commercial­ly sexually exploited children who have been exposed to severe violence, threats and trauma as victims of child abuse and human traffickin­g, rather than “criminaliz­ing therm as delinquent­s.”

The protocol serves as a guide to law

enforcemen­t and officials with county agencies dealing with the children as to how to take the right steps within the first 72 hours of coming in contact with a sexually exploited child.

Some of the statistics came as a shock to supervisor­s.

Sharing the positive outcome of treating sexually exploited children as victims and not criminals was one side of the human traffickin­g coin.

The flip side of the same protocol involves efforts to hold the criminals — the human trafficker­s, the exploiters, the pimps — and buyers accountabl­e.

Numbers shared with the supervisor­s revealed that 441 arrests were made in the first eight months of this year.

At least three human traffickin­g operations were also carried out in the Santa Clarita Valley, each time resulting in local arrests.

While officials were optimistic about progress, they recognized there’s still much work to do.

“We didn’t find a silver bullet,” said Kate Walker of the National Center for Youth, “as there is no silver bullet with this.”

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