52 children rescued in nationwide sex-trafficking raids
Federal officials arrest almost 700 people, including 60 suspected pimps, in a three-day crackdown on child prostitution. The youngest victim was 10, authorities say.
By Joe Markman
Los Angeles Times
October 27, 2009
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-child-prostitution27-2009oct27,0,2692854.story
Federal
officials rescued 52 children and arrested nearly 700 people over the last three
days in a nationwide crackdown on child prostitution.
Almost 1,600 agents and officers took part in the raids, which followed
investigations in 36 cities, according to the FBI, local law enforcement
agencies and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Included in
the arrests were 60 suspected pimps, according to the FBI and local police
officials.
Authorities say the youngest victim was 10.
In Southern California, two children were rescued in Riverside, and four adults
were arrested, said Laura Eimiller, an FBI spokeswoman. Four suspected customers
of child prostitutes were arrested in Orange County.
"It is repugnant that children in these times could be subjected to the great
pain, suffering and indignity of being forced into sexual slavery for someone
else's profit," Assistant Atty. Gen. Lanny A. Breuer said in a statement. He
added that the latest raids show that "the scourge of child prostitution still
exists on the streets of our cities."
The sweep, dubbed Operation Cross Country, is part of the Innocence Lost
National Initiative, started in 2003 to address child sex trafficking in the
U.S.
The initiative has rescued nearly 900 children; led to the conviction of 510
pimps, madams and their associates; and seized $3.1 million in assets, according
to the FBI.
"We're having an enormous impact on this business," said Ernie Allen, president
of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
Most of the recovered children have been girls, who usually become victims of
traffickers around age 12, Allen said.
He estimated that 100,000 children are still involved in sex trafficking in the
U.S., adding that the problem is growing partly because of the recession.