Trafficking in Persons
What’s New
U.S. Department of Labor Report on Forced Labor and Child Labor
(Released September 2009): Includes a list of goods produced by forced labor and
child labor.
U.S. Department of Labor 2008 Findings on the Worst Forms of Child Labor (Released
September 2009)
Wisconsin Human Trafficking Resources
(June 2009)
2009
Trafficking in Persons Report (June 2009)
Request Assistance for Child Victims of Human Trafficking (U.S. Dept. of
Health and Human Services Form)
January 2009 BJS Report:
Characteristics of Suspected Human Trafficking Incidents
National Human Trafficking Resource Center at 1 (888) 373-7888
The national Trafficking Information and Referral Hotline is part of the
United States Department of Health and Human Services' Campaign to Rescue
and Restore Victims of Human Trafficking. The hotline was set up to
help you determine if you have encountered victims of human trafficking, to
help identify local resources available in your community to help victims,
and to help you coordinate with local social service organizations to help
protect and serve victims.
Index
Introduction to Human Trafficking
Anti-Trafficking Laws & Legislation
Recent Reports & Statistics
Online Slides and Presentations
Fact Sheets, Guides & Public Awareness
Materials
Introduction
Legal Definitions of Trafficking
Federal
Assistance Available for Victims
(Department of Health and Human Services Fact Sheet)
Glossary of Commonly Used Trafficking Terms
Frequently Asked Questions About Trafficking
The Difference Between Smuggling and Trafficking
(Link to Anti-Trafficking.net comparative chart)
Legal Definitions of Human Trafficking
Trafficking in persons is often referred to as a form of slavery because it
involves the deprivation of liberty of a person in order to exploit the victim
through labor services and/or the commercial sex trade. The elements of
trafficking can be subtle and complicated, making it difficult to craft one
definition that is universally accepted and used.
Many states also have state laws that define and prohibit
trafficking, including Wisconsin.
2007 Wisconsin Act 116 was enacted on March 19, 2008. It makes trafficking
or trafficking of a child a felony offense in Wisconsin.
Click here if you would like to receive updates about this and other
victim-related legislative proposals.
State of Wisconsin Definition of Human Trafficking:
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Trafficking means knowingly... |
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Done by any of the following... |
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For the purpose of... |
| • |
Recruiting |
| • |
Enticing |
| • |
Harboring |
| • |
Transporting |
| • |
Provision |
| • |
Obtaining |
| |
--OR-- |
| |
An attempt to do so |
| ...of an individual
without the consent of the individual |
|
 |
| a. |
Causing or threatening to cause bodily harm to any
individual; |
| b. |
Causing or threatening to cause financial harm to any
individual; |
| c. |
Restraining or threatening to restrain any individual; |
| d. |
Violating or threatening to violate a law; |
| e. |
Destroying, concealing, removing, confiscating, or
possessing, or threatening to destroy , conceal, remove,
confiscate, or possess any actual or purported passport or any
other actual or purported official identification document of
any individual; |
| f. |
Extortion; |
| g. |
Fraud or deception; |
| h. |
Debt bondage; |
| i. |
Controlling any individual's access to an addictive
controlled substance; or |
| j. |
Using any scheme or pattern to cause an individual to
believe that any individual would suffer bodily harm, financial
harm, restraint, or other harm. |
|
 |
| • |
Commercial Sex Acts |
| --OR-- |
| • |
Labor or SErvices |
Note...
Whoever benefits in any manner from a violation of trafficking
is guilty of a Class D felony if the person knows that the
benefits come from an act of trafficking. |
|
State of Wisconsin Definition of Trafficking of a Child:
Trafficking of a child
means knowingly... |
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For the purpose of... |
|
Note... |
| • |
Recruiting |
| • |
Enticing |
| • |
Harboring |
| • |
Providing |
| • |
Obtaining |
| |
--OR-- |
| Attempting to recruit, entice, harbor, provide
or obtain a child... |
|
 |
| • |
Commercial Sex Acts |
| --OR-- |
| Sexually explicit performance |
|
|
Whoever benefits in any manner from a violation of trafficking
of a child is guilty of a Class C felony if the person knows that the
benefits come from an act of trafficking. |
United States Federal Definition of Severe Trafficking of Victims:
For the purpose of criminal prosecution, the federal Trafficking Victims
Protection Act ("TVPA") defines the crime of severe trafficking as having the
following elements:
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Trafficking is the... |
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By means of... |
|
For the purpose of... |
|
|
 |
| • |
Force |
| • |
Fraud |
| • |
Coercion |
| --EXCEPT THAT-- |
| Force, fraud and coercion are not required to show trafficking of a
minor for commercial sex acts. |
|
 |
|
United Nations Definition of Severe Trafficking in Persons:
The United Nations Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in
Persons, Especially Women and Children, is a supplement to the United
Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (article 3 (a).
It defines severe trafficking as having the following elements:
| Trafficking is the... |
| • |
Recruitment |
| • |
Transportation |
| • |
Transfer |
| • |
Harboring |
| |
--OR-- |
| • |
Receipt |
| |
(0r attempt to do so) |
| ...of a person |
|
 |
| By means of... |
| • |
threat |
| • |
force |
| • |
coercion |
| • |
abduction |
| • |
fraud |
| • |
abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability |
| • |
Giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a
person having control over another person |
|
 |
| For the purpose of exploitation... |
| Exploitation shall include, at
minimum |
| • |
The prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation |
| • |
Forced labor or services |
| • |
Slavery or practices similar to slavery |
| • |
Servitude |
| • |
The removal of organs |
|
Glossary of Commonly Used Terms
A B C D E
F G H I
J K L M N O P Q
R S T U V W X Y Z
Coercion: Under the TVPA, coercion means: a) threats of
serious harm to or physical restraint against any person; b) any scheme, plan,
or pattern intended to cause a person to believe that failure to perform an act
would result in serious harm to or physical restraint against any person; or c)
the abuse or threatened abuse of the legal system.
Examples of coercion include debt bondage, threats against family members,
photographing or videotaping the victim in compromising or illegal situations,
then threatening to turn over the video to authorities or loved ones, punishment
of another victim in front of another person to instill fear, all money is
controlled by the trafficker, all identity or immigration papers are controlled
by the trafficker, threats of deportation or psychological abuse that
intimidates and frightens the victim.
Commercial Sex Act (TVPA Definition): any sex act
on account of which anything of value is given to or received by any person.
Debt bondage (TVPA Definition): the status or
condition of a debtor arising from a pledge by the debtor of his or her personal
services or of those of a person under his or her control as a security for
debt, if the value of those services (as reasonably assessed) is not applied
toward the elimination of the debt or the length and nature of those services
are not respectively limited and defined.
Force (TVPA Definition): Physical restraint or causing
serious harm.
Examples of force include kidnapping, battering, kicking, pushing, denial of
food or water, denial of medical care, forced use of drugs or denial of drugs
once a victim is addicted, forced to lie to friends and family about their
whereabouts, being held in locked rooms or bound.
Fraud:
Examples of fraud include false promises for specific employment, being
promised a certain amount of money that is never paid, working conditions are
not as promised, being told he or she would receive legitimate immigration
papers or a green card to work but the documents are not obtained.
Involuntary servitude (TVPA Definition): a condition of
servitude induced by means of (a) any scheme, plan, or pattern intended to cause
a person to believe that, if the person did not enter into or continue in such
condition that person or another person would suffer serious harm or physical
restraint; or (b) the abuse or threatened abuse of the legal process.
Peonage (TVPA Definition): holding someone against
his or her will to pay off a debt.
Recruitment: victims are recruited through fraudulent
employment offers posted in newspapers, by acquaintances promising opportunity
abroad, through mail-order bride and other marriage arrangements and by the
promise of the chance to earn large sums of money. Parents are tricked into
relinquishing their child with a promise the child will be schooled, employed or
otherwise cared for by the recruiter.
Smuggling (human): Human smuggling is the facilitation,
transportation, attempted transportation or illegal entry of a person(s) across
an international border, in violation of one or more countries laws, either
clandestinely or through deception, such as the use of fraudulent documents.
Often, human smuggling is conducted in order to obtain a financial or other
material benefit for the smuggler, although financial gain or material benefit
are not necessarily elements of the crime. Human smuggling is generally
with the consent of the person(s) being smuggled, who often pay large sums of
money. Once in the country of their final destination they will generally be
left to their own devices.
Transportation: victims need not be transported at
all in order to be trafficked. However, the TVPA seeks to prosecute all persons
involved in any stage of trafficking, in addition to those who directly
participate in and profit from the victim's sexual or labor exploitation. Persons who
knowingly transport a victim for the purpose of trafficking can be prosecuted
under TVPA.
Frequently Asked Questions About The Crime of Trafficking in
Persons
What is human trafficking?
As defined in the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, the legal
definition of a "severe forms of trafficking in persons" is:
a) sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud,
or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such an act has not
attained 18 years of age; or
b) the recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a
person for labor or services, through the use of force, fraud or coercion for
the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or
slavery.
How is human trafficking different than human smuggling?
Human smuggling is the facilitation, transportation, attempted transportation
or illegal entry of a person(s) across an international border, in violation of
one or more countries laws, either clandestinely or through deception, such as
the use of fraudulent documents. Human smuggling is usually completed with
the consent of the person(s) being smuggled, who may pay large sums of money.
Once in the country of their final destination the persons who were smuggled
will generally go their own way. Human trafficking may involve an element
of smuggling. The distinguishing factor, however, is that trafficking
specifically targets the trafficked person as an object of criminal
exploitation. Once in the country of their final destination, the
trafficked person is not allowed their freedom. Another important
distinction is that human trafficking does not always involve the crossing of an
international border - it does not even require the transportation of victims
from one locale to another.
Is it against the law in all states?
Human trafficking is a federal offense. However, not all states have
state anti-trafficking laws. Wisconsin is not one of the 30 states with a state
anti-trafficking statute but legislation has been introduced during the
2007-2008 legislative session to make trafficking in persons a state crime.
Isn't this really just an immigration or civil issue?
No- The definition of trafficking used in U.S. federal law does not require
crossing of international or state borders. Traffickers commit crimes of fraud
and violence and use other forms of coercion to victimize vulnerable people for
profit. Human trafficking victims can be foreign nationals or U.S. citizens,
young or old, in rural or urban settings. The crimes that are committed in order
to traffic victims (and maintain their compliance) warrant vigorous justice
system intervention.
How widespread is the problem of trafficking?
It has been said that trafficking is "hidden in plain sight." This is
one of the challenges of helping victims and prosecuting offenders. Traffickers
instill in their victims a fear and distrust of law enforcement and many victims
remain unidentified. The
U.S.
Department of State estimates that approximately 14,500-17,500 people are
trafficked into the United States annually. The number of U.S. citizens
trafficked within the country are estimated even higher, with an estimated more
than 200,000 American children at high risk for trafficking into the sex
industry each year (source: Polaris Project). There is controversy surrounding
how trafficked victims are counted for such studies and efforts are underway to
improve data collection at the national level.
What is the root cause of trafficking?
There are many factors that make victims vulnerable to trafficking, such as
poverty and lack of opportunity. Traffickers choose to victimize these
vulnerable persons because labor trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation
is a lucrative criminal industry where victims are in high demand and there is a
low risk of prosecution to the offender(s).
What can be done to combat human trafficking?
Governmental and non-governmental organizations can help raise awareness to
identify - and provide services to - victims of trafficking. Outreach within
vulnerable populations and building trust between law enforcement and community
and faith-based organizations is essential if victims are going to cooperate
with prosecution efforts. People and professions likely to encounter
victims (or evidence of trafficking), such as postal workers, health inspectors,
landlords, farm workers, health care workers, etc., can be educated to recognize
'red flags' that might indicate trafficking. Criminal justice
professionals will benefit from training to help them recognize victims of
trafficking as well as training to understand the legal options and services
available to victims. At the local level, when people are trained to "look
beneath the surface" as the U.S. Health & Human Services Rescue and Restore
Campaign materials say, more victims will be identified and more traffickers
prosecuted. With collaboration and diligence, we can make trafficking in
persons a riskier proposition for those who profit from the victimization and
slavery of others.
Anti-Trafficking Laws (Links to full text)
Reports and Statistics
U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics
Online Slides & Presentations
Fact Sheets, Guides & Public Awareness Materials
For Domestic Violence Centers
For Faith-Based Organizations
For Health Care Providers
For Law Enforcement
For Non-Governmental Organizations
Online Fact Book
Rescue & Restore Campaign Materials (Fact Sheets, Posters,
Guides)
For Social Service Organizations
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