FBI
Operation
Cross Country
Recovering
Victims of Child Sex Trafficking
06/23/14
In
many ways, Nicole was a typical teenager. In high school she tried
cigarettes and alcohol, but she says, “I was pretty much a good
kid. I didn’t really stay out late, I always came home, I never
stole anything. I did what a lot of teenagers do.”
By
age 17, however, things were deteriorating at home. Her parents were
divorced, her father was absent, and she and her mother had an
on-again, off-again relationship. That’s when Nicole met a man who
took her shopping and showered her with attention. “He was gorgeous
and he had charm,” she said. “I didn’t really think he was
going to turn out to be…” Her voice trailed off as she tried to
find words to describe Juan Vianez, the pimp who forced her into
prostitution and later brutally beat her.
Being
There for Victims
When
the FBI investigates crimes, federal law requires that we offer
assistance and services to victims. Through our Office for Victim
Assistance, the Bureau has approximately 130 victim specialists
working in every FBI field office in the country, and many of them
regularly deal with children who have been sexually exploited.
While
investigators on our Child Exploitation Task Forces make cases
against pimps and others who commit violent crimes against children,
victim specialists assess the needs of the young victims and help
them get assistance and services. Often these specialists represent a
lifeline to minors who have nowhere else to turn.
“A
lot of these girls feel like they are stuck,” said Dani
Geissinger-Rodarte, a victim specialist in our Seattle Division who
has been working with sexually exploited children for more than a
decade. “But I know that if they keep in touch with me, that
somewhere down the road they are going to be ready for services, and
we can connect them.”
“We
can’t just make our case against the traffickers and not address
the significant issues that face the victims,” said Special Agent
Steve Vienneau, who works in our Violent Crimes Against Children Unit
at FBI Headquarters. “If we fail to help these young people, they
end up just as vulnerable or even more vulnerable to being trafficked
again.”
Now
27, Nicole is one of countless young women victimized by child sex
traffickers. But with the assistance of the FBI and our partners, she
and other victims are turning their lives around—and helping to put
hundreds of pimps behind bars.
Operation
Cross Country, an annual law enforcement action that took place last
week in 106 U.S. cities, highlights ongoing efforts by the
Bureau—together with the National Center for Missing &
Exploited Children and our local, state, and federal law enforcement
partners—to address the sexual exploitation of juveniles as part of
our Innocence Lost National Initiative.
Since
its creation in 2003, the Innocence Lost program has resulted in the
identification and recovery of approximately 3,600 minors who have
been sexually exploited. This year marks the eighth Operation Cross
Country, the largest such enforcement action to date: 168 trafficking
victims were recovered and 281 pimps were arrested.
"These
are not children living in some faraway place, far from everyday
life," FBI Director James Comey said at a press conference today
at FBI Headquarters. "These are our children. On our streets.
Our truck stops. Our motels. These are America’s children."
To
address violent crimes against children, the FBI has established
nearly 70 Child Exploitation Task Forces around the country, said
Special Agent Steve Vienneau. Noting that the task forces rely on
partnerships with all levels of law enforcement, Vienneau added, “the
FBI could never succeed in this mission alone.” The task forces
also include FBI victim specialists from our Office for Victim
Assistance—men and women who play a key role in helping victims
while their cases are being investigated and up to and beyond
criminal prosecutions.
“We
don’t enter any of our victims’ lives at a good time,” said
Victim Specialist Dani Geissinger-Rodarte, who works in our Seattle
Division and who was instrumental in helping Nicole get away from her
pimp and later testify against him (Vianez is serving a 20-year jail
term).
“A
lot of victims of child prostitution have difficult backgrounds,”
Geissinger-Rodarte explained, so victim specialists must assess the
girls’ needs before they can begin to help them. “You start with
the basics: Do you feel safe at home? Do you have clothing? What’s
your interaction with your parents? You assess everything,” she
said, “and then you make referrals to community service providers
to fill that void or address those issues.”
Sometimes,
it’s not easy to convince young victims they need to get away from
those who are exploiting them. Nicole, like many trafficked
juveniles, was totally dependent on her pimp. “I didn’t have
money, I didn’t have a house, I didn’t have a bank account, I
didn’t have my own car,” she said. “I didn’t have anything.
So if I left Juan, I left everything.”
In
2007, after a vicious beating that left her in the hospital with
serious injuries, Nicole met Geissinger-Rodarte—and over time came
to trust her. Eventually, Geissinger-Rodarte connected Nicole with
community services and helped her to see there was a future beyond
prostitution. “Our job is to meet the victim where they are,”
said Geissinger-Rodarte. “When they are ready for help, they need
to know we are there.”
Today,
Nicole is an honors college student on her way to a psychology
degree. She has a job, a driver’s license, a good credit rating,
and she just bought a new car. “I am very, very proud of myself,”
she said.
Read
this story and get additional information plus a video at FBI
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