10/8/2012
ATA Joins Fight Against 'Sex Trade' Trafficking
of Young Girls
By TruckingInfo Staff
LAS VEGAS - The
American Trucking Associations says it has joined with Truckers Against
Trafficking to alert member executives and drivers about the "sex trade" and
train them to help fight against the crime.
"There are over 3.1
million truck drivers who travel over 408 billion miles each year," said ATA
Chairman Dan England, chairman of C.R. England Inc., Salt Lake City, during a
press conference at ATA's Management Conference and Expo in Las Vegas over the
weekend.
"We are asking our motor carriers to include this important
information in their training programs and to work with their customers and
communities to help combat the problem.
"These professionals are the
eyes and ears of the nation's highways, and with knowledge and guidance, they
can make a big difference and save lives."
ATA and TAT want drivers to
report suspicious activity they may see at truckstops, rest areas and other
places along interstate and main highways, said England and others who spoke at
the press conference.
They can call a toll-free number or, better yet,
punch 911 on their cell phones if they see people apparently in distress and
needing immediate help, said Lt. Karen Hughes, who heads a task force of the Las
Vegas Metro Police Department.
"It's OK to be wrong" when making a call
-- better than not calling and letting a girl remain in bondage, said Paul Enos
of the Nevada Trucking Association.
Most victims are young teenage
girls, typically 12 to 14 years of age, Hughes said. Often they are runaways
from dysfunctional homes who are enticed into the trade, then trapped in
it.
They are frequently moved by their handlers - pimps - to keep them
from forming relationships with people who might help them.
"One hundred
and thirty-one were rescued by our unit in 2011," she said. "That included two
boys."
The Department of Justice estimates between 100,000 and 300,000
children are at risk every year to traffickers in the United States and that
many children, teens and young women are sold into the sex trade.
"Traffickers are continually moving their victims from place to place,
for a variety of reasons, along our nation's highways and roads," said Kendis
Paris, national director of Truckers Against Trafficking.
"They 'sell'
their victims at truckstops, travel plazas and rest stops, because they're
convenient; transient populations frequent them who are less likely to 'rescue'
the victims; they have to use them anyway to buy gas and eat; and it's easy
money and a good way to break in their victims for other things."
A
number of ATA affiliates already work closely with TAT, including state trucking
associations in California, Colorado, Idaho, Minnesota, Nevada and Wisconsin,
the national group said.
TAT provides a number of resources for the
industry, including a wallet card with guidelines and a telephone number to
call. They provide a training DVD, webinars and other outreach materials.
The national trafficking hotline number is 1-888-373-7888, or in easier
to remember form, 888-3737-888.
TAT is a 501(c)3 organization dedicated
to educating, equipping, empowering and mobilizing the trucking industry to
fight human trafficking. Its resources include a website, a
trucking-industry-specific training DVD, webinars, posters, and
speakers/trainers. More information is available at www.truckersagainsttrafficking.com.
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