Why do we continue to glamourize the Pimp lifestyle?

I was disheartened to see this post by TMZ.com. In this post, it talks about how some of the football players for the Baltimore Ravens recently held a charity event in where some of the football players came dressed up in Halloween costumes. So far so good. As you proceed to the rest of the story you will see that Baltimore Ravens player Sergio Kindle decided to dress up like a pimp. TMZ.com apparently thinks this was a great idea.

It is sad to see that many people in a position in where people tend to look up to glamorize the lifestyle of a pimp. Several months ago, it was Kim Kardashian tweeting about “Big Pimpin” during a girls night out. Now we see a football player dressing up like a pimp. And to top it off, this was for a charity event.

Our society has become complacent with the idea of pimps and pimping. We tend to look at pimps as ” protectors” and tend to blame the woman and criminalize her for something that she may not have chosen to be a part of. I am not aware of this Sergio Kindle guy but my hope is that if there are young children who idolize him, that they do not see this picture. We do not need our children continuing to think that “pimping” or “pimps” are ok. Too many children see nothing wrong with this sort of lifestyle. What is so frustrating is seeing young children pimp out their own friends. This has  to stop. So please take the time to educate our youth on what pimps really do. Let them know how manipulative and abusive a pimp can be. We need to stop applauding what pimps do and start letting them know that we have had enough of their abuse and antics!

So shame on you Sergio Kindle. Before you go and dress up like a pimp, understand what is that they truly stand for. Understand that young boys do look up to you and dream of being a star football player like yourself. Set an example but not letting our kids think that pimps are cool.

And to TMZ.com, please educate yourselves as well before you continue making light of a situation that has become detrimental to our youth!

We need to take a stand against people in a position in where they can influence our youth. Let’s reach out to them and educate them on the issue of sex trafficking.
http://photos.tmz.com/galleries/baltimore_ravens__pimpin_halloween#tab=most_recent&id=80069

Labor Trafficking doesn’t just happen in the Agriculutrual Industry

Restaurateur pleads guilty to human trafficking

Denver Business Journal
Date: Wednesday, October 27, 2010, 7:38pm MDT …A Boulder restaurateur has pleaded guilty to human trafficking and tax-dodging charges that could send him to prison for years before he’s deported to his native Thailand, the U.S. Attorney’s office said Wednesday.

Opas Sinprasong, 52, pleaded guilty to one count of harboring illegal aliens and one count of failing to pay taxes on work done by immigrants he brought to the country to work as off-the-books indentured employees at three Thai and sushi restaurants he ran in Boulder County, prosecutors said.

Sinprasong will forfeit to law enforcement $766,000 and two residential properties. He may be made to pay restitution to his former employees as well.

“Those who break our laws to take advantage of vulnerable alien workers in order to enrich themselves will face dire criminal and financial consequences,” John Walsh, U.S. Attorney for Colorado, said in a statement.

Sinprasong ran the Siamese Plate, Sumidas, and Siamese Plate on the Go restaurants in Boulder, Louisville, and Broomfield. A grand jury indicted him in February.

Between 2001 and 2008, prosecutors say, Sinprasong obtained speciality two-year occupation visas for workers he brought from Thailand. The workers were charged the equivalent of $4,500 to pay a “bond” and a fee for visa preparation, prosecutors said.

Workers were made to take shifts off-the-books for three or four months to work off a portion of the money before being made documented workers at the restaurants. Once the employees were placed officially on Sinprasong’s payroll — having Social Security numbers and payroll taxes withdrawn from their pay — he made them put in unpaid overtime, usually 26 to 32 hours weekly, to pay off the remainder of what they owed.

The contracts workers signed made relatives in Thailand liable to Sinprasong for penalties equalling about $18,000 if the worker left the restaurant before Sinprasong was repaid.

He avoided paying taxes on the off-the-books work; he also filed false immigration papers and harbored illegal immigrants through the scheme, prosecutors said.

“Ultimately, the details of this case show that Opas Sinprasong stacked the deck to make an illegal profit,” said Kumar C. Kibble, special agent in charge of the ICE Office of Homeland Security Investigations. “These investigations and prosecutions help ensure that America lives up to its reputation as the beacon of freedom to the rest of the world.”

Sinprasong was in the United States on an E-2 visa granted to investors who take a controlling interest in a domestic company.

He faces prison sentences of up to 10 years and 5 years, respectively, on the immigration and tax charges. Each count carries a fine of up to $250,000.

The investigation included Denver offices of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the IRS Criminal Investigations units. James Hearty, chief of the major crimes section of the U.S. Attorney’s office for Colorado, prosecuted Sinprasong.
..

Anyone can become a trafficker

Former Army Sergeant Sentenced in Washington for Sex Trafficking Juveniles

STERLING TERRANCE HOSPEDALES, 26, a former Army sergeant based at Fort Lewis, Washington, was sentenced yesterday in United States District Court in Tacoma to 11 years in prison and seven years of supervised release for sex trafficking of a child and attempted sex trafficking of a child. HOSPEDALES is required to register as a sex offender following his prison term. HOSPEDALES pleaded guilty July 20, 2010. At sentencing United States District Judge Benjamin H Settle acknowledged HOSPEDALES’ military service saying he had brought disgrace to the uniform.

“You elected to go down a road of service to a country that adopted you, but you also chose a very dark road to go down…Whatever sentence I give you won’t heal the scars your actions imposed upon these victims,” Judge Settle said. The investigation began on April 13, 2009, when Lakewood Police were alerted to a juvenile runaway from the Seattle area who was posting ads on Craigslist indicating she was engaged in prostitution. Investigators from the Innocence Lost Task Force, a federal task force targeting sex trafficking of children, followed up on the information, locating and interviewing the juvenile and a second juvenile. The first juvenile ultimately admitted that she worked as a prostitute out of an apartment that she shared with HOSPEDALES, that HOSPEDALES had helped her post advertisements for prostitution with pictures of herself on Craigslist, and that she provided the money she earned from prostituting to HOSPEDALES.

The second juvenile met HOSPEDALES on the internet social networking site MySpace. She had flown to the area from Wyoming with her plane ticket paid for by HOSPEDALES. The second girl stated that she had only been in town a week when HOSPEDALES had taken provocative pictures of her and posted them on Craig’s List for prostitution purposes, but that she had not started earning money for HOSPEDALES. According to the second juvenile, HOSPEDALES threatened to kick her out of the apartment and have other girls beat her up if she didn’t pay him back for the plane ticket by prostituting.

HOSPEDALES was arrested as he left the Lakewood apartment he had rented for the juveniles. In their memo asking for a long prison term, prosecutors described how HOSPEDALES preyed on those who were particularly vulnerable. “Hospedales intentionally sought out emotionally damaged, vulnerable victims—runaways who had no support system whatsoever and no idea of how to be in a normal, functioning relationship. He did so knowing that not only would they be more susceptible to his machinations, but also because he thought that the criminal justice system might be less likely to take them seriously or see them as victims,” prosecutors wrote in their sentencing memo.

Judge Settle was especially concerned about the victims in this case. Talking about one young woman the judge said, “Her life has been altered and changed in a great number of ways by your actions. To hear her, any one of us would have a broken heart for someone who went down that dark road with you.” The case was investigated by the FBI and Lakewood Police Department as part of the Innocence Lost Task Force. Substantial assistance was provided by the United States Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) and Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) Corps.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Kate Crisham and Bruce Miyake. For additional information please contact Emily Langlie, Public Affairs Officer for the United States Attorney’s Office, at (206) 553-4110 or Emily.Langlie@USDOJ.Gov.

Reported by: FBI

Arnotts to avoid child labour chocolate

BISCUIT company Arnotts will source ethical cocoa that has not been processed with the use of child labour for all of its chocolate-based products, World Vision says.

In response to a public campaign by World Vision earlier this year, Arnotts said it was committed to playing its part by sourcing sustainable cocoa that avoids the use of child trafficking and unacceptable forms of child labour by the end of September 2010.

World Vision chief executive Tim Costello said he had met with Arnotts today and was pleased to hear the company had now committed to ensuring its cocoa supply chains were free from child labour.

“Arnotts sources 24 per cent of its cocoa from Ghana in West Africa where there is widespread use of child labour in the cocoa industry,” Mr Costello said.

“World Vision understands that Arnotts has signed an agreement to source its West African cocoa until 2012 through Fairtrades independent certification scheme.

Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar.
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NEWS.com.au, 19 Mar 2010End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar.

“We are very pleased with Arnotts’ commitment to source ethical cocoa.”

A must read for anyone who is serious about the fight against sex trafficking

The real harms of prostitution
MELISSA FARLEY
WWW.PROSTITUTIONRESEARCH.COM
Before we decide whether to legalise prostitution, it is important to know what prostitution is and what it is not. It is not a job like any other job.

Stolen Away
Copyright © 1995 by Soon-Duk Kim

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In prostitution, men remove women’s humanity. Buying a woman in prostitution gives men the power to turn women into a living, breathing masturbation fantasy. He removes her self and those qualities that define her as an individual, and for him she becomes sexualized body parts. She acts the part of the thing he wants her to be.

A john who was guaranteed anonymity said prostitution was like “renting an organ for ten minutes”. Another man said, “I use them like I might use any other amenity, a restaurant, or a public convenience.”

As shocking as these men’s observations may sound to those who think prostitution is like the movie Pretty Woman, their descriptions closely match women’s descriptions of prostitution. The women explain to us how it feels to be treated like a rented organ. “It is internally damaging. You become in your own mind what these people do and say with you. You wonder how could you let yourself do this and why do these people want to do this to you?”

Women who prostitute have described it as “paid rape” and “voluntary slavery”. Prostitution is sexual harassment, sexual exploitation, often worse. His payment does not erase what we know about sexual violence, domestic violence and rape.

This understanding of the realities of prostitution by the john and the woman he buys is at odds with the notion of prostitution as slightly unpleasant labour that should be legalised. Whether or not it is legal, prostitution is extremely harmful for women. Women in prostitution have the highest rates of rape and homicide of any group of women ever studied. They are regularly physically assaulted and verbally abused, whether they prostitute on the street or in massage parlours, brothels or hotels.

Sexual violence and physical assault are the norm for women in legal prostitution. In one Dutch study, 60 per cent of women in legal prostitution were physically assaulted, 70 per cent were threatened with physical assault, 40 per cent experienced sexual violence and 40 per cent had been coerced into legal prostitution.

In nine countries, we found that 68 per cent of women, men and transgendered people in prostitution had post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a prevalence that is comparable to that of battered or raped women seeking help, and survivors of state-sponsored torture. Across widely varying cultures on five continents the traumatic consequences of prostitution were similar whether prostitution was legal, tolerated, or illegal.

Yet some who may not be familiar with the sex industry believe that legalisation will decrease the harm of prostitution, like a bandage on a wound. They ask: “Wouldn’t it be at least a little bit better if it were legalised? Wouldn’t there be less stigma, and wouldn’t prostitutes somehow be protected?”

Underpinning laws that legalise prostitution is the belief that prostitution is inevitable. Public statements by pimps emphasise that prostitution is here to stay, with Dennis Hof in Reno and Heidi Fleiss in Sydney repeating the mantra that “boys will be boys”. Although false, these stereotypes about men mainstream prostitution and they are also good business strategy, relieving johns of ambivalence regarding the social acceptability of buying sex while at the same time inviting men to spend like suckers.

Pimps do not suddenly become nice guys because prostitution is legal. Legal Amsterdam brothels have up to three panic buttons in every room. Why? Because legal johns are not nice guys looking for a normal date. They regularly attempt to rape and strangle women.

As Amsterdam began shutting down its legal brothels a few years ago, Mayor Job Cohen acknowledged that the Dutch had been wrong about legal prostitution. It did not make prostitution safer. Instead, he said, legal prostitution increased organised crime. It functioned like a magnet for pimps and punters. Trafficking increased after legal prostitution – 80 per cent of women in Dutch prostitution have been trafficked.

Do not believe what you see on Cathouse. They are acting. A colleague was telling the truth about her experience of prostitution on a TV talk show. During a break in filming, she was approached by a second woman who had been escorted in front of the cameras by her legal Nevada pimp. Whispering, the frightened woman begged for help, saying the pimp had coerced her to say on camera how much fun prostitution was. Leaving behind her purse and coat so the pimp would assume she was returning, they both ran and the woman was helped to escape.

The dilemma is not that there is no legal redress for coercion, physical assault and rape in illegal prostitution. There are laws against those forms of violence. The dilemma is that once in prostitution, there is no avoiding sexual harassment, sexual exploitation, rape and acts that are the equivalent of mental torture.

What do johns say about prostitution?

You get what you pay for without the “no,” a sex buyer explained.

Non-prostituting women have the right to say “no.” We have legal protection from sexual harassment and sexual exploitation. But tolerating sexual abuse is the job description for prostitution.

It’s a myth that johns are harmless.

Research shows that a majority of johns refuse condoms, pay high prices to desperately poor women to not use condoms, or rape women without condoms.

Research compared frequent and infrequent sex buyers. The men who most frequently used women in prostitution were the most likely to have committed sexually aggressive acts against non-prostituting women.

Do all women have the right to live without the sexual harassment or sexual exploitation of prostitution – or is that right reserved only for those who have sex, race or class privilege?

Although a majority of UK johns believe that most women have been lured, tricked, or trafficked into prostitution, they buy them anyway. This finding is consistent with another study showing that 47 per cent of US johns who responded to an online escort advertisement were willing to buy a child despite three warnings.

According to a john interviewed for a research study, “All prostitutes are exploited. However, they also have good incomes.” (Di Nicola, Cuaduro, Lombardi, & Ruspini, 2009, “Prostitution and human trafficking: Focus on clients”)

Some people have made the decision that it is reasonable to expect certain women to turn ten tricks a day in order to survive. Those women most often are poor and most often are racially marginalised. This neocolonial economic perspective is enshrined in a Canadian prostitution tourist’s comment about women in Thai prostitution:

These girls gotta eat, don’t they? I’m putting bread on their plate. I’m making a contribution. They’d starve to death unless they whored.

This john-sympathetic economic Darwinism avoids the question: Do all women have the right to live without the sexual harassment or sexual exploitation of prostitution – or is that right reserved only for those who have sex, race or class privilege?

Which laws work, and which laws fail to stop the harms of prostitution?

All women should have the right to survive without prostituting.

Women, men, children, and the transgendered in prostitution should not be arrested. There’s no debate on that important issue.

Let’s get to the facts, not the myths, about legal prostitution. There is lots of evidence about the negative consequences of legal and decriminalised prostitution.

Legal prostitution specifies where prostitution is permitted to take place, including municipal tolerance zones or red-light zones. Decriminalised prostitution removes all laws against pimping, pandering, and buying women in prostitution, and decriminalises the person who is prostituted.

Legal and decriminalised prostitution are similar in their effects. Pimp-like, the state collects taxes from legal prostitution. In decriminalised regimes, the old fashioned pimps become legitimised entrepreneurs.

New Zealand passed a law in 2003 that decriminalised selling sex, buying sex, and pimping. A Prostitution Law Review Committee (2008) reported what happened after prostitution was decriminalised in New Zealand. Seven years after the NZ law was passed, battles are still being waged about whose neighbourhood prostitution will be zoned into. No one wants prostitution next door. Prostitution is zoned into the neighbourhoods of people who cannot afford the legal fees to prevent it.

The regulation of prostitution by zoning is a physical manifestation of the same social/psychological stigma that decriminalisation advocates allegedly want to avoid. Whether in Turkish genelevs (walled-off multi-unit brothel complexes) or in Nevada brothels (ringed with barbed wire or electric fencing), women in state-zoned prostitution are physically isolated and socially rejected by the rest of society.

The social stigma of prostitution persisted five years after decriminalisation in New Zealand, according to the Law Review Committee.

After decriminalization in NZ, violence and sexual abuse in prostitution continued as before. “The majority of sex workers felt that the law could do little about violence that occurred” and that violence was an inevitable aspect of the sex industry, according to the Law Review Committee. After the law was passed, 35 per cent of women in prostitution reported that they had been coerced by johns. Women in massage parlour prostitution who were under the control of pimps reported the highest rate of coercion. Five years after legally defining prostitution as work, the New Zealand law was unable to change the exploitative quasi-contractual arrangements that existed before prostitution was decriminalised. Most people in prostitution (both indoor and street) continued to mistrust police. They did not report violence or crimes against them to the police.

Prostitution is legal in some Australian provinces. The Australian Occupational and Safety Codes (OSC) recommend classes in hostage negotiation skills for those in legal prostitution, reflecting johns’ violence.

Trafficking is most prevalent wherever prostitution is legal or decriminalised. When prostitution is legal, pimps operate with impunity and johns are welcomed. Trafficking of children has increased in New Zealand since decriminalisation, especially the trafficking of ethnic minority Maori children.

Reflecting increased organized crime since decriminalisation, Auckland gangs have waged turf wars over control of prostitution.

Since decriminalisation street prostitution has spiraled out of control, especially in New Zealand’s largest city, Auckland. A 200-400% increase in street prostitution has been reported.

After legalisation of prostitution in Victoria, Australia, the number of legal brothels doubled. But the greatest expansion was in illegal prostitution. In one year there was a 300 per cent increase in illegal brothels.

Staff at a NZ agency providing prostitution exit strategies observed that there were twice as many johns in the street since decriminalisation. The johns were more aggressive after prostitution was decriminalised, soliciting the agency’s women staff members. Similar post-decriminalisation increased aggression against women has been noted among Australian johns.

Is prostitution a choice?

Arguments for legalising prostitution depend on the strength of two arguments: that prostitution is a choice for those in it and that the harms of prostitution are decreased if it is legalised. There is little evidence that either of these arguments are true. But zombie theories about prostitution never seem to die no matter how many facts we beat them down with.

Only a tiny percentage all women in prostitution are there because they choose it. For most, prostitution is not a freely-made choice because the conditions that would permit genuine choice are not present: physical safety, equal power with buyers, and real alternatives.

The few who do choose prostitution are privileged by class or race or education. They usually have options for escape. Most women in prostitution do not have viable alternatives. They are coerced into prostitution by sex inequality, race/ethnic inequality, and economic inequality.

Here are examples of these invisible coercions:

More than 90 per cent of those in it tell us that they want escape from prostitution.

* The woman in India who worked in an office where she concluded that she might as well prostitute and be paid more for the sexual harassment and abuse that was expected of her anyway in order to keep her job. That’s not a choice.

* The teen in California who said that in her neighborhood boys grew up to be pimps and drug dealers and girls grew up to be hos. She was the third generation of prostituted women in her family. Prostitution more severely harms indigenous and ethnically marginalised women because of their lack of alternatives. That’s not a choice.

* A woman in Zambia who said that five blowjobs would pay for a bag of cornmeal so she could feed her children. That’s not a choice.

* The First Nations survivor of prostitution in Vancouver who said, “We want real jobs, not blowjobs,” See here for the rest of her 2009 speech and other writings by survivors who have gotten out and who are supporting sisters to also escape.

* The young woman sold by her parents at 16 into a Nevada legal brothel. Ten years later, she took six psychiatric drugs that tranquilised her so she could make it through the day selling sex. That’s not a choice.

There is no evidence for the theory that legalisation somehow – how is never specified – decreases the harm of prostitution.

In fact, legalisation increases trafficking, increases prostitution of children, and increases sex buyers’ demands for cheaper or “unrestricted” sex acts (Sullivan, 2007, “Making Sex Work: A Failed Experiment with Legalized Prostitution”). Whether prostitution is legal or illegal, research shows that the poorer she is, and the longer she’s been in prostitution, the more likely she is to experience violence. The emotional consequences of prostitution are the same whether prostitution is legal or illegal, and whether it happens in a brothel, a strip club, a massage parlour, or on the street.

A decade ago, Sweden named prostitution as a form of violence against women that fosters inequality. As a result Sweden criminalised buyers and decriminalised the person in prostitution. Iceland, Norway, and South Korea have now passed similar laws, with the UK passing legislation that moves in a similar direction and Israel currently considering such a bill.

The Swedish government recently released an evaluation of the 1999 Swedish law on prostitution much like the New Zealand Law Reform Commission’s Report. The news is better from Sweden.

In a decade, street prostitution in Sweden has decreased by 50 per cent, although it has increased in neighbouring countries. There is no evidence that women have moved from street to indoor prostitution in Sweden.

The intimate relationship between prostitution and trafficking is highlighted when buyers are criminalized. Sweden now has the fewest trafficked women in the EU. The law interferes with the international business of pimping and the practice of buying sex.

While there was initial resistance to the Swedish law, now more than 70 per cent of the public supports it. Women exiting prostitution use state-provided exit services. Not surprisingly, “those who have extricated themselves from prostitution take a positive view of criminalisation, while those who are still exploited in prostitution are critical of the ban.”

Prostitution should not be legalised because it can’t be fixed, only abolished. More than 90 per cent of those in it tell us that they want escape from prostitution. In order to escape they need housing, education, jobs that provide a sustainable income, health care and emotional support. We should all be working on providing women with alternatives to prostitution.

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Kudos to the Kansas Attorney General!

Kansas Attorney General Six Pushes Backpage.com for Additional

Attorney General Steve Six pushed Backpage.com for additional restrictions following an announcement by the website that they will suspend certain sections of their adult and personals ads.

Topeka, KS – – “We must continue to shine a light on these dark corners of the internet where girls and young women are being victimized each and every day,” said Attorney General Six. “Today’s announcement by Backpage.com is a welcome step but is only the beginning in cracking down on predators who are thriving online.”

Last week, Attorney General Six demonstrated the ease by which traffickers of children can attract business online when he announced a pair of arrests tied to an ad placed on Backpage.com. In each case, individuals allegedly travelled to meet with what they believed to be a 14 year old girl with the intention of having sex. These charges are only allegations and the individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

In its announcement today, Backpage.com immediately suspends certain areas of its personals and adult sections of the site while it continues to develop technologies, features and programs specifically tailored to prevent the misuse of the site and its services. Backpage also calls for the creation of a multi-stakeholder national task force to create best practices in the online classifieds industry to help stop the ability to advertise illegally.

“As Attorneys General, we are committed to attacking the crimes of human trafficking and prostitution before they happen, not waiting while more and more girls and young women are victimized,” said Attorney General Six, referring to the multi-state group of AGs who have called on sites like Craigslist and Backpage.com to take down its adult ads. “If you are engaging in child prostitution or child pornography online, we are going to find you and we will take you down.

“Only through strict review can these ads be targeted. I am encouraged by today’s announcement but I will continue to push for further restrictions and safeguards being put into place soon.”

It’s heartbreaking to see how easy it is to buy a child

By Aminda Marques Gonzalez
amarques@MiamiHerald.com
Jacqueline Charles and Gerardo Reyes arrived at the river crossing that divides Haiti and the Dominican Republic and started asking one question: How can we get a child? A half hour later, a man returned with an offer.

“He told us about a 15-year-old girl that he had at home that he was willing to sell,” said Charles, The Herald’s bureau chief in Haiti. “He said, ‘She is a good cook. She’s a very nice girl. She can clean. She’s very good.’ ”

The price was negotiable. How about $80?

“I wish I could say it was difficult,” said Reyes, investigative reporter for El Nuevo Herald. “But within 30 minutes, we had two guys offering us children.”

In a joint project between El Nuevo Herald and The Miami Herald, Charles and Reyes spent several weeks in both countries tracking the burgeoning child-smuggling trade fueled by the post-quake desperation in Haiti.

On today’s front page, you’ll find the first of a three-part series on this latest wave of exploitation that takes place with the complicity of both governments and the international community. Existing treaties are not enforced. A couple of dollars is all it takes for border patrol to look the other way. Meanwhile, children as young as 3 are imported into a life of begging and prostitution – for the monetary benefit of their handlers.

The second installment, which will explore the corruption on the border that facilitates the trafficking, will run on Wednesday. And the final chapter offers a glimpse of hope with a look at the private, non-profit groups trying to help the children of the streets.

Why would a parent set their children on such a path? Hopelessness is the answer, Charles said.

Desperate Haitian parents, unable to provide for their children in the best of times, are lured by the promise of a better life for their children. They are told that they’ll be able to go to school and eat regular meals – in exchange for doing small chores.

“The most difficult part is the sheer heartbreak,” Charles said. “At the end of the day these parents are not sending their children to the Dominican Republic to be prostitutes, to be house slaves, to be shoe-shine boys. In their minds, it’s always this idea that they are going to send their kids to a better life. Then they cross into this foreign land and they are invisible – they are black and they are Haitian.”

A RECORD OF THE DEAD

An estimated 300,000 people were killed in the Jan. 12 earthquake in Haiti. Yet there is no official record, no list of the dead. As the anniversary of the disaster approaches, The Miami Herald has launched an effort to try to collect the names of as many victims as possible. We have created an online database where users can input the names of those who died in the earthquake and upload photos or write messages in their honor.

Nancy San Martin, the editor leading the effort, said we are trying to gather the names of the deceased here and in Haiti in an effort to help bring closure to grieving relatives and friends. You can find the database at MiamiHerald.com/haiti/memorial.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/10/24/1887864/its-heartbreaking-to-see-how-easy.html#ixzz13fCNDon5

Disturbance in Salem Leads to Prostitution, Sexual Assault Charges

Disturbance in Salem Leads to Prostitution, Sexual Assault Charges
Salem-News.com

Left: Curtis Bunch Right: John Gentile
Photo: Salem Police Department

(SALEM, Ore.) – A 48-year old Monmouth resident and a 38-year old Junction City resident were arrested early Saturday morning on multiple charges related to assault, prostitution and the sexual assault of a juvenile female.

The incident began at approximately 10:55 pm on Friday, October 23rd when Salem Police Officers responded to the Crosslands Motel located at 3535 Fisher Rd NE on a report of a disturbance involving a knife.

Officers arrived to find that 38-year old John Gentile of Junction City had been chasing 48-year old Curtis Bunch of Monmouth around with a large knife.

As officers continued with their investigation they found that Gentile had befriended a female teenage runaway from the Eugene area. He engaged in sexual relations with the female as well as took sexually explicit photos and videos of her and prostituted her via the internet. Bunch was a “customer” of Gentile and the victim and engaged in sexual relations with the juvenile female. He then began to prostitute her over the internet as well. The disturbance on October 23rd stemmed from a dispute between Bunch and Gentile over the continued control of the victim.

Salem Police Detectives then responded to the Junction City residence of Gentile where they served a search warrant and found evidence of child pornography.

John Gentile was taken into custody and booked at the Marion County Jail on charges of Attempted Assault in the Second Degree, Unlawful Use of a Weapon, three counts of Encouraging Child Sexual Abuse in the First Degree and three counts of Possession of Child Pornography in the First Degree.

Curtis Bunch was taken into custody and booked at the Marion County Jail on charges of Prostitution, Compelling Prostitution and Encouraging Child Sexual Abuse in the First Degree.

The investigation is continuing and more charges and arrests are expected.

Human Trafficking is becoming more frequent throughout our communities. Women, juveniles and undocumented individuals are being victimized by human traffickers for forced labor as well as for sexual exploitation. Victims of human trafficking often feel as though they have no alternative but to obey those who take advantage of them. Anyone who has information about human trafficking is urged to contact your local law enforcement agency. Victims of human trafficking can also contact their local Women’s Crisis Center for assistance with safety and shelter. The Mid-Valley Women’s Crisis Service can be reached at their 24-hour crisis line at 503-399-7722.

Source: Salem Police Department