Wednesday, September 1, 2010

I want to take on the world

I was burdened for something HUGE last night. It's a problem. It's a sin. It's a crime. It's happening now. It's prevalent in Kansas City, St. Louis, Ohio, Tampa Bay, and many other cities in the USA and around the world. It's human trafficking.

It could be that girl in the nail saloon. The dish-boy in your favourite restaurant. Or the backbone to producing your fruit and veggies. Not that is always is, but it could be. Be on the look out. If someone is always avoiding you. Is not allowed to leave the establishment ever. Call the hotline. Don't take action yourself. But pray about it, and if you are concerned call it in. This is real.

Massage Parlours Raided in Kansas City, Missouri; Trafficking Suspected

May 17, 2007

Federal agents and local police in Johnson County, Missouri raided 12 businesses and four homes on 10 May 2007, rescuing 15 women from ‘massage parlors'.

The action came during a crackdown on human trafficking by 175 federal agents, police officers and support staff.

The women were receiving shelter, food, clothing and counseling. They also are being interviewed about activities at the businesses, FBI spokesman Jeff Lanza.said. “They are not being treated as suspects,” he said. Neighbors said the businesses raided on Thursday had drawn attention for some time. Businesses were open until 11 p.m., seven days a week. The clientele was almost exclusively men and the customers often didn’t park in front of the business. Witnesses also saw young women being dropped off at one business, as recently as this week, with suitcases and clothing.

A new law will require background checks for current and new massage therapists and companies employing them. Last summer, federal prosecutors in Kansas City established a human-trafficking task force similar to those in about two dozen other cities.

Adapted from: "Modern-Day Slavery: Human-trafficking investigation leads to 16 Johnson County raids." The Kansas City Star. 11 May 2007.

Human Trafficking Rescue Project: Operation Guardian Angel
Naval Recruiter Among Four Men Indicted for Sex Trafficking of a Child;
Undercover Sting Leads to First-Ever Human Trafficking Charges for Attempting to Pay for Sex with Children

KANSAS CITY, MO—Matt J. Whitworth, Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced that four men - including an active duty Naval recruiter, an insurance manager at a Plaza-area office, an out-of-state car dealership's finance manager and a truck driver - were indicted by a federal grand jury today, in four separate cases, on charges related to the sex trafficking of children.

Today's indictments are the result of Operation Guardian Angel, a unique undercover law enforcement investigation targeting the demand for child prostitutes in the Kansas City area. As a result of this investigation, a total of seven defendants have been charged within the past month in the nation's first-ever federal prosecution of the alleged customers of child prostitution under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act.

"Operation Guardian Angel was launched in response to the black market that exists in our community for child prostitution," said Whitworth. "The U.S. Attorney's Office and our law enforcement partners are committed to combating child sex trafficking by investigating and prosecuting the customers who create the demand for child prostitutes. These sexual predators can come from every walk of life and any socio-economic group."

Operation Guardian Angel was conducted by the Human Trafficking Rescue Project, a joint task force from the Independence Police Department, the FBI, ICE, and the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department. During the undercover operation, task force officers placed Internet ads for underage prostitutes. According to court documents, the ads clearly stated that the prostitutes were "little girls" and were "young." Those who responded to the ads were given directions to an undercover location that was outfitted with audio and video recording equipment. When they arrived at the undercover residence and paid cash for a child prostitute, they were arrested by task force officers.

This undercover operation began last Thursday and continued through Saturday. This marks the second time this year that an undercover operation was conducted in the Kansas City area as part of Operation Guardian Angel.

Last month, three Kansas men were indicted as a result of Operation Guardian Angel, marking the first time that the U.S. Department of Justice has utilized the Trafficking Victims Protection Act to prosecute customers who allegedly attempt to pay for sex with children. While the pimps who offer to sell children to others for prostitution have been prosecuted in the Western District and elsewhere, these indictments are the first in the nation to charge a "John" with attempting to pay for sex with a child.

Shane Allan Childers, 32, of Olathe, Kan., Christopher M. Cockrell, 33, of Armory, Miss., Steven C. Albers, 40, of Kansas City, Mo., and Richard J. Oflyng, 31, of Ottawa, Kan., were each charged with the attempted commercial sex trafficking of a child and with using the Internet and telephone to attempt to induce a child to engage in prostitution in a series of indictments returned this afternoon by a federal grand jury in Kansas City.

Childers, an active duty naval recruiter, and Cockrell, the finance manager for an Armory automotive dealership, were each also charged with traveling across state lines for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct, that is, a commercial sex act with a person under 18 years of age.

Albers is an insurance manager at a Plaza office. Oflyng is a truck driver who drove his tractor-trailer to the undercover residence.

Today's indictment replaces a federal criminal complaint that was filed against Childers on Friday, March 6, 2009. According to an affidavit filed in support of the original criminal complaint, on that day Childers paid $60 to have sex with an 11-year-old girl. He paid an extra $20 to have intercourse without using a condom. The affidavit alleges that Childers was wearing his Navy uniform, but had taken off his uniform shirt and was wearing a white undershirt when he knocked on the door of the undercover residence. Childers allegedly responded to the online ad from the Armed Forces Recruiting Station in Lenexa, Kan., where he works, and allegedly used his government-owned computer, Navy e-mail address and government cellular phone to arrange the transaction.

Today's indictment replaces a federal criminal complaint that was filed against Cockrell on Monday, March 9, 2009. According to an affidavit filed in support of the original criminal complaint, Cockrell paid $60 to have sex with a 15-year-old girl on Saturday, March 7, 2009. He paid an extra $20 in order to have intercourse without using a condom and tipped the pimp $20.

A forfeiture allegation contained in Childers' indictment would require him to forfeit to the government a 2002 Chrysler Sebring, which was used to commit the alleged offenses. A forfeiture allegation contained in Albers' indictment would require him to forfeit to the government a 2002 Volkswagen Jetta, which was used to commit the alleged offenses. A forfeiture allegation contained in Oflyng's indictment would require him to forfeit to the government a laptop computer, which was used to commit the alleged offenses.

Under federal statutes, a conviction for the commercial sex trafficking of a child would result in a mandatory minimum sentence of 15 years in federal prison without parole, up to life in federal prison without parole, for Childers, Albers and Oflyng. Due to the difference in ages between the intended victims, a conviction for the commercial sex trafficking of a child would result in a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in federal prison without parole, up to life in federal prison without parole, for Cockrell.

Whitworth cautioned that the charges contained in these indictments are simply accusations, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charges must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.


Sorry this is so long. But you get the point. This is disgusting and I wish I could do something about it!