Authors: Kevin Bales,Ron. Soodalter
Tags: #University of California Press
heard the sounds of her being beaten. The mama-san used a big wooden
spoon to beat her girls, and the sound was very sharp, very distinct. She
was being punished for having contact with me.”
Sarah’s earnings went toward college, where she took courses in
negotiation, mediation, crisis management, and human trafficking.
“Until then, I was mostly curious, I befriended them.” But the more she
learned, the clearer it became to her that the Asian women were
enslaved. “They never left; the mama-san did all the grocery shopping.
They slept in the same space where they worked, they were being paid
practically nothing, and the mama-san beat them regularly. And when
the police raided the place and arrested the women, a cab would pull up
and deliver four or five more, each carrying a single suitcase.”
Sarah realized that she wanted to do more for trafficked women,
so—while still working at the massage parlor—she volunteered with a
local antitrafficking group. “I never told them exactly what I did for a
living, that I was still very much ‘in the life’; I just said I was a nude
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dancer; that seemed okay to me. I let them know that I was friends with
people in the sex trade and could serve as something of an expert.” As
a volunteer, Sarah performed direct outreach services, speaking to
women from their teens up to their mid-twenties, giving them printed
material, and asking trafficking-related questions. “Because I’m white,
the organization only wanted me to work with the Caucasian women,
but they all seemed to relate to me well.”
Sarah makes it clear that her goal at this time was not to free enslaved
women: “When I volunteering, I wasn’t after freeing prostitutes. I just
wanted them to be able to
keep
the money they earned. I mean if they
had to do this kind of work, then at least they should be paid for it, as
women empowered.” One prostitute with whom Sarah worked, aged
fifteen or sixteen, was not a good fit at the NGO shelter: “She already
had a baby, whom her pimp had taken, her personal hygiene was poor,
she was a habitual liar, and she communicated with her pimp, which
put the shelter in jeopardy.” So the girl had to leave, but when she
needed a place to stay, Sarah shared her apartment with her. “I wanted
to get her away from her pimp. Aside from taking her kid, he put her in
the hospital on a number of occasions and kept most of what she made.
I just wanted her to make her money and live her life.”
When asked how she came to leave “the life,” Sarah responds, “I
didn’t leave it; it left me!” The massage parlor was raided so often that
the owner, sensing that the feds were closing in, closed her doors. “I was
really lucky. I was never arrested, never used my real name. As I look
back, I realize the woman I worked for was trafficking minors into pros-
titution. She’s now under federal indictment.” When the woman was
indicted, Sarah’s former co-workers, whom she still considers good
friends, became alarmed and came to her for counsel—because she had
gone to college. Sarah advised them that the government was pursuing
cases of human trafficking and had no interest in them.
Sarah, now in her mid-twenties, made a remarkable career decision.
Rather than continue in her present life, she chose to make a career
working against human trafficking. “When I was ‘working,’ I was trying
to help people; now, I just wanted to carry it on.” Believing that the
police are “the ones with the power to do something,” she went straight
to a large organization concerned with the legal affairs and applied for
a job. The TVPA had already been passed and reauthorized, and the
organization was including trafficking among its public awareness pro-
grams. Sarah was hired, and for the past few years she has been in
charge of programs concerned with human trafficking. When you call
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the organization and ask what they’re doing in the area of human traf-
ficking, Sarah is the person you’ll talk with. Along the way, she earned
a master’s degree from a major university.
Sarah Schell has covered a lot of ground from underage sex worker in
a massage parlor to heading up antitrafficking programs. But she didn’t
come out of it unscathed. “Anyone who’s been in the sex industry comes
away with scars,” she states. “I still suffer from depression, and I’ve been
diagnosed with PTSS [post-traumatic stress syndrome]. I used to hate
being thought of as a survivor—not of trafficking, but of exploitation—
but now I realize that it’s better to be a survivor than a victim.”
TA K E I T U P A N O T C H
Good Samaritans like Elaine Fletcher, Sandy Shepherd, and Sarah Schell
would not admit to being anyone special. Yes, they have saved lives and
brought freedom to slaves, but ask them about what they have done and
they tend to say something like, “Oh come on,
anyone
would do that in
the same situation!” They are average citizens confronting something
new and dangerous; they’re not blind to the danger, but their focus is on
the human being in front of them. For most Good Samaritans that focus
is combined with a big heart, determination, sensitivity, and common
sense. These are self-deprecating, even reluctant heroes in the battle
against slavery, but heroes nonetheless. We owe them thanks and sup-
port, but grassroots volunteers and well-intentioned individuals can’t
stop slavery in America by themselves. Ending slavery means that com-
munities have to make collective conscious decisions. Fortunately, many
American communities, in the absence of national leadership, have done
just that. Some of these are physical communities, others are the virtual
communities we share on the Internet, but what they have in common is
the conviction that they don’t wait for someone else to end the suffering
of slaves in America.
In many towns and cities, faith communities have taken the lead.
Mark Massey was a lay minister at a small Pentecostal Church in Tulsa,
Oklahoma. This was not a rich church; anyone could see that just by its
location, facing an oil pipeline welding factory that took up a whole
city block. One weekend the church had visitors. Massey explains: “It’s
a little country-type church and they came into the church one Sunday
morning, and you could tell they were kind of uneasy.” Two men from
India sat in the back for the service, and afterwards Massey approached
them. As a lay minister he had done outreach to homeless people and
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taught English to migrants. He welcomed them to the church and asked
how they came to be in Tulsa. The men shied away, suspicious of his
interest, but Mark gently stuck with them and they came back to the
church again. Over time they came to trust Mark, and from them a
remarkable story unfolded.
The owner of the oil pipeline company was a man named John Pickle.
Pressured by competition from overseas companies, he had devised a
scheme to bring highly skilled welders from India to America under a
visa program listing them as “trainees.” Dazzled with promises of high
wages, comfortable working conditions, and great opportunities, thirty
men chose to come to America. Members of the middle class in India,
they paid a recruitment fee amounting to a year’s salary at home and
arrived at the factory in Tulsa. At the factory they were ushered into a
warehouse that had been converted into barracks. Here, bunk beds were
crammed together, two toilets served for everyone, and there were no
tables or chairs. But what most concerned many of the men was the
heavy steel door that was the only entrance.
As time passed control over the men increased; guards kept them on
the factory grounds, and they were often locked in. Food was in short
supply and of poor quality. But in a strange way, and not uncommon
among traffickers, Pickle had convinced himself that he was doing these
poor men from a poor country a favor. One way he showed his benevo-
lence was to allow a few of the men to go to Massey’s church.
In conversations after services, Massey learned more about the men’s
lives. He says that at first “I thought I must have misunderstood them.”7
Their strong accents, plus some of the workers’ poor grasp of English,
sometimes made communication hit or miss. In time, Massey asked a
friend who had originally come from India to come and translate. Then
the whole story came out, and Massey told them that if things got unbear-
able he would help as best he could. Shortly afterward Pickle said he was
going to deport some of the men who had complained about the condi-
tions; they called Massey. That night he parked next to the factory as men
began to sneak away, crawling under the fence and rushing to his van.
One of the men Massey had not met before; the man told him that he was
not a Christian, like the men who had attended church, but a Hindu.
“Will you help me?” he asked. “Of course,” replied Massey.
In time, fifty-four men were freed from the factory, and a local lawyer
began to build a case for back wages. No government office or law
enforcement agency got involved, and Massey began to devote all his
time to the care of these trafficked workers. He moved his own family
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out of their big house and into a smaller rental house that they owned
in order to give fifty-two of the men a place to live. In his own church,
Massey says, “We didn’t become popular for doing this or praised
really, there’s been a lot of hurt. . . . Our churches have been good to
help foreign missions, but when the foreign comes into our own com-
fort area, we’re not ready to accept. There were some ministers . . . that
felt that it wasn’t God’s will that I did what I did.” Fortunately, other
churches, individuals, and charities felt otherwise and began to work
together to support the Indian workers. When Robert Canino, a lawyer
from the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission, joined the
case, the power of government finally arrived on the scene. At first,
Canino had to work hard to convince his bosses that employment law
was an appropriate way to fight human trafficking. In the process of
winning the Pickle case, he set new standards and was later named
“Lawyer of the Year” for his breakthrough. In 2003 Pickle was found
liable and still owes millions to the Indian men, many of whom have
remained in the United States on a special visa.
Many other faith communities have stepped up to help. On Long
Island, New York, a couple trafficked sixty-nine people from Peru into
forced labor. They were crammed into a suburban home and then
placed with a number of businesses, working in a plant nursery, even a
cannoli factory. For these workers, freedom came in part from their con-
tact with Catholic charities. They worked tirelessly with the service
provider Safe Horizon to find housing and services for the victims. And
in San Francisco, Jewish organizations came together to create the
Jewish Coalition to End Human Trafficking. They work with the San
Francisco District Attorney’s Office and promote the passage of strong
antitrafficking legislation.8
T H E C O P O N T H E ( T R A F F I C K I N G ) B E AT
In chapter 2, you read how a policeman made his own antitrafficking
video to help train other officers. Around the country law enforcement
personnel are often the first to encounter cases of modern slavery. When
they do, they regularly reach out to the only experts nearby, the faith com-
munities and service providers who are also on the front line. This is most
likely to occur where the problem is most prevalent. In Florida’s Panhandle,
an area rife with human trafficking, the sheriffs of four counties—
Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, and Walton—formed their own human
trafficking task force to investigate “organized criminal enterprises that
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engage in worker exploitation, . . . labor fraud, . . . identification docu-
ment fraud and commercial sexual exploitation of minors.” Their aim,
when they discover human trafficking, is to refer the case to “the appro-
priate federal agency for prosecution.”9
Some officers simply come to the decision that finding and liberating
trafficking victims is just something they have to do. The Hillsborough
County Sheriff’s Office in Tampa, Florida, boasts 1,200 officers; since
March 2006, two of them have devoted themselves to pursuing human
trafficking cases. The point person, Detective Jason Van Brunt of the
Criminal Intelligence Unit, had been working computer crime and
decided he needed a change. The Crime Prevention Section of the