Trafficking 101
The International Labour Organization estimates that the illegal profits made from forced labor in the private global economy amount to $150.2 billion per year.
Human trafficking victims can be of any age, race, ethnicity, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, nationality, immigration status, cultural background, religion, socio-economic class, and education attainment level. In the United States, individuals vulnerable to human trafficking include children in the child welfare, juvenile justice, and foster care systems; runaways and homeless; unaccompanied foreign national children without lawful immigration status; individuals seeking asylum; Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders, American Indians and Alaska Natives, particularly women and girls; individuals with substance use issues; racial or ethnic minorities; migrant laborers, including undocumented workers and participants in visa programs for temporary workers; foreign national domestic workers in diplomatic households; persons with limited English proficiency; persons with disabilities; LGBTQ2S+ individuals; and victims of intimate partner violence, other forms of domestic violence or sexual abuse.
Buyers may be anyone and may include the following:
- Business professionals
- Healthcare professionals
- Service providers
- Drug dealers
- Government employees
- Judges
- Law enforcement
- Legal professionals
- Professional athletes
- Sports coaches
- Tourists
- Transportation workers
- Truck drivers
- The promise of a loving intimate partner or marriage
- Familial recruitment
- Job offer or advertisement
- Posing as a benefactor
- Through other false promises or fraud
- Identifying and targeting the victim. Any child or teen may be a potential victim.
- Gaining trust and access through casual conversations.
- Playing a role in the child's life and filling a need - buying gifts, complementing, being a friend, starting a love relationship.
- Isolating the child from family and friends.
- Creating secrecy around the relationship – “don’t tell anyone”, multiple cell phones.
- Abuse begins.
- Introduction of drugs and/or alcohol - victim becomes addicted and dependent.
- Normalizing touch and sexualizing the relationship.
- Manipulating and controlling the relationship through threats, violence, fear and blackmail.
- Poverty
- Familial instability
- Homelessness and unstable living situation
- Runaways, throwaways
- Isolation
- LGBTQ2S+
- Low self-esteem or self-worth
- History of violence and abuse
- Family background in trafficking
- Risky sexual behaviors
- Lack of education
- Truancy
- Mental health challenges
- Disability
- Substance use
- Social minority
- Migrant status
- Language barriers
- Criminal records
- Involvement in the child welfare, foster care and juvenile justice systems
- Displaced by social/natural disaster
- Is restricted from coming and going
- Is under 18 and is providing sex acts for money or trade
- Is in the commercial sex industry and has someone who manages him/her/them, such as an exploiter/trafficker
- Is unpaid, paid very little or paid only through tips
- Employer is holding identity documents
- Works excessively long or unusual hours or is always available “on demand”
- Is not allowed breaks or suffers under unusual restrictions at work
- Owes a large debt and is unable to pay it off
- Was recruited through false promises concerning the nature and conditions of his/her/their work
- Living with an employer
- Poor living conditions
- Multiple people in cramped spaces
- High security measures exist in the work and/or living locations - opaque windows, boarded up windows, bars on windows, barbed wire, security cameras, etc.
- Is fearful, anxious, depressed, submissive, tense, or nervous and paranoid
- Exhibits unusually fearful or anxious behavior after bringing up law enforcement
- Disconnected from family, friends, community organizations or places of worship
- Increased school absences or not going to school
- Avoids eye contact
- Has no access to health care
- Appears malnourished
- Shows signs of physical and/or sexual abuse, physical restraint, confinement or torture
- Person has branding - tattoos on face or chest or tattoos about money or sex or trafficker phrases
- Has few or no personal possessions but could show signs of unusual wealth without explanation or without any known form of income – new jewelry, shoes, phones, hair and nails done
- Multiple phones or social media accounts
- Clothing is inappropriately sexual or inappropriate for the weather
- Overly sexual for age or situation
- Minor has an older “boyfriend” or "girlfriend"
- Individual may show signs of drug addiction
- Is not in control of their own money and has no financial records or bank accounts
- Is not in control of their own ID or passport
- Is not allowed or able to speak for themselves - a third party may be translating, victim may be deferring to another person
- Inability to speak to the individual alone - a third party may insist on being present
- Answers appear to be scripted and rehearsed
- Minor is unaccompanied at night or falters in explaining who they are with and what they are doing
- Claims they are just visiting but are unable to clarify where they are staying
- Lack of knowledge of whereabouts and/or does not know what city they are in
- Loss of sense of time
- Has numerous inconsistencies in their story
- Total reliance on the trafficker
- Lack of trust
- Hopelessness
- Stigma and discrimination
- Shame and self-blame
- Not seeing themselves as a victim
- False promises
- Previous and current trauma
- Fear for self and/or family
- Violence and threats to self and/or family
- Isolation
- Inside observers or captivity
- Lack of documentation
- Lack of support
- Lack of awareness of available services
- Unfamiliar places
- Debt owed to the trafficker
- Drug addiction
- Trauma bonds
- Language barriers
- Distrust of law enforcement or authority
- Lack of knowledge of legal system
- Fear of arrest, incarceration or deportation
- Prior unsuccessful attempts to escape