February 11, 2010 7:14 AM

Study: Ohio at Center of Child Sex Trade

(CBS/AP)  About 1,000 American-born children are forced into the sex trade in Ohio every year and about 800 immigrants are sexually exploited and pushed into sweatshop-type jobs, a new report on human trafficking in the state said Wednesday.

Ohio's weak laws on human trafficking, its growing demand for cheap labor and its proximity to the Canadian border are key contributors to the illegal activity, according to a report by the Trafficking in Persons Study Commission.

"Ohio is not only a destination place for foreign-born trafficking victims, but it's also a recruitment place," said Celia Williamson, an associate professor at the University of Toledo who led the research.

Formed last year by Ohio Attorney General Richard Condray, the commission also found that hundreds more in the state are at risk of being forced into sex trafficking or to work against their will in fields, restaurants, sweatshops or constructions sites.

Nationwide, between 45,000 and 50,000 people are trafficked into the United States, according to a 2001 report by the U.S. State Department. But Williamson noted that the problem is hard to quantify because of the underground nature of human trafficking, and studies often rely on estimates. Even the Ohio study, which analyzed law enforcement and government databases, is limited, she said.

A special report last year by CBS Evening News anchor Katie Couric examined the worrying trend in the U.S. of more American children and teens being lured into the sex trade.

"This is not the kind of problem America thinks it is," Ernie Allen of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children told Couric.

Allen said prostitutes in this country are younger than ever, and they no longer all come from impoverished or broken homes.

"What we are seeing now is an increasing number of middle class kids and up - many of whom do it originally on a dare, or because they think it is interesting or different. And then find themselves trapped," Allen said.

Click the player below to watch Couric's report:

Watch CBS News Videos Online

Cordray said the new report establishes the scope of the problem in Ohio as authorities discuss ways to combat it.

From 1990 to 2000, Ohio's foreign-born population increased 30 percent, and the state has a growing pool of legal and illegal immigrants who draw victims or hide victims, Williamson said. These networks are highly organized, with brothels fronting as legitimate businesses.

Also, Toronto's airport is an arrival destination for international victims who are trafficked in Canada and transported to other cities, helping make Toledo, about 55 miles southwest of Windsor, Ontario, rank fourth in the U.S. in terms of arrests, investigations and rescue of domestic child-sex victims, the report said.

Only Miami, Portland, Ore., and Las Vegas had more.

A federal investigation into a child prostitution ring in Harrisburg, Pa., exposed Toledo as a center for the trade in 2005. Nine local girls were sold as sex slaves as part of the ring, and at least 12 of the 31 people charged had ties to Toledo.

Ohio does not have a stand-alone human trafficking law. Instead, it allows prosecutors to attach a human trafficking specification to related crimes that increase prison sentences - just as penalties are more severe if a crime involves a firearm.

According to the report, 42 states with tough human trafficking laws can bring serious charges. Offenders in Delaware, Montana, New Mexico and New York may face up to 100 years in prison, for example.

The report said that besides weak state laws in Ohio, law enforcement agencies often don't recognize human trafficking when responding to reports of illegal activity. For example, Ohio is quick to label child prostitutes as delinquents and to incarcerate them, rarely looking further at the adults involved, Williamson said.

The report recommends handling child trafficking cases through the child welfare system rather than the juvenile courts.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by scmatsuura July 8, 2010 2:30 AM EDT
Prosecuting criminals that participate in the trafficking of children is only part of the solution. The survivors need counseling and other forms of emotional support. Gracehaven is an organization that outreaches to survivors to help them rebuild their lives and complete their educations. Presently Gracehaven is building a shelter and collecting the resources to provide girls with the help they need.

Chase Bank is now offering a $250,000 grant for a charity. Please vote for Gracehaven by going to the Gracehaven website: www.gracehavenhouse.org

Thanks!
Reply to this comment
by KeithDrippingSprings February 11, 2010 8:55 PM EST
All you racist who like to blame illegal aliens for the present ills of American society are so clueless, it is evident you haven't researched the issue you are just spewing rhetoric you heard from some stupid politician like Tom Tancredo.

By criminalization of immigration we protect the pimps and johns who take advantage of these children, girls, and immigrants. They can't report their captors for fear of being sent back to a fate as bad as sex slavery. Grinding poverty, starvation, lack of education, lack of opportunity, to name only a few disadvantages of being born somewhere else than here the land of the free.

If a illegal immigrant got a job you wanted, I want to hear, how bad was your interview? If you can't compete against someone whose only advantage is that they are willing to work maybe you need to take a look at the advantages of being an American that you aren't taking advantage of.

If you really want change demand that our government do something about immigration. The problem is our government not the immigrants. Until you know first hand how screwed up our government is by the way they handle immigration you cant imagine a system more dysfunctional. And actually that is the way your congressman likes it or they would change it. And it gives the Congressional representatives and easy scape goat. O' and I guess it gives you and easy one also.
Reply to this comment
by curse914 February 11, 2010 9:03 PM EST
Precisely, the same works for laborers. It is better to have a scared naked and helpless laborer who will not complain about low pay or being paid at all for fear of deportation.

Criminalization has the opposite effect in some cases to what these conservatives think it should. And they will willfully ignore any facts that may show thier ideas to be a failure instead of admission and correction of a mistake.
by P0ST1ING_AWAY February 11, 2010 6:16 PM EST
Can anyone doubt that getting rid of the ilegal aliens would dramatically decrease whatever problem exists with these issues across the USA?
Reply to this comment

by billpl-2009 February 11, 2010 2:54 PM EST
yeah but....
who's going to
cut your lawn
wash your car
flip your burger
pick up your thrash
not unless you plan on raising your children to pick strawberries
....I'm sending mine to college, the illegals do all that other stuff
===================================================================
Lucky for you, I am picky about who I let do all of the aforementioned
tasks. After your kid goes to college, graduates, and DOES NOT FIND A
JOB, I will hire him/her to cut my lawn, wash my car, etc.
Reply to this comment
by retm-w February 11, 2010 9:25 PM EST
How about high school and college kids that can't get jobs now, because illegals are doing them.
by billpl-2009 February 11, 2010 10:35 PM EST
now guys, it's fun too be smug and rant around the playground but....

regardless what you say
facts are facts

Fact: college graduates get jobs, better pay and live better lifestyles....duh

Fact: Illegals do jobs that other people refuse

Fact: Unless we all move to the country and live like the Amish

illegals aren't going away any time soon

....deal with it and stop p issing on trees
by Farver4girls February 11, 2010 5:28 PM EST
Why can't Ohio simply toughen its laws against child prostitution? For example, charge any john who has sex with a minor for statutory rape. There wouldn't be child prostitutes if men didn't want to exploit them. Charge any pimp who exploits minors with felony child abuse. The minor's nationality or race shouldn't matter.
Reply to this comment
by weewillywonka February 11, 2010 2:43 PM EST
I knew I lived in a backwards state.
Reply to this comment
by Skruffy1 February 11, 2010 2:15 PM EST
Wow. I grew up in Ohio, and all my life, Ohio has been known as a conservative stronghold. So those hardcore conservatives look the other way when it comes to sexual exploitation of kids?
Reply to this comment
by ianlou February 11, 2010 3:33 PM EST
by Skruffy1 February 11, 2010 2:15 PM EST
Wow. I grew up in Ohio, and all my life, Ohio has been known as a conservative stronghold. So those hardcore conservatives look the other way when it comes to sexual exploitation of kids?
**************************************************
What makes you think they aren't participants?
by billpl-2009 February 11, 2010 12:44 PM EST
"For example, Ohio is quick to label child prostitutes as delinquents and to incarcerate them, rarely looking further at the adults involved, Williamson said"

Really?

are they saying the Ohio police, CPS and family court system are stupid?
don't know an exploited child prostitute when they see one?

kinda of doubt it


.... is this group looking for government funding right now?....Hmm...
Reply to this comment
by CBSName February 11, 2010 3:42 PM EST
The article says this was a commission formed by the Attorney General of Ohio.
by porcine_aviator November 8, 2010 5:56 PM EST
To answer your question: yes, yes, and yes. There is a reason Ohio is in a downward spiral and is not coing out of it. All of the smart people left a long time ago. The cops in Cleveland drove past a dead woman's body (who had been carjacked and shot) and reported it as a dead deer. The same fine cops released Anthony Sowell (serial killer) after a woman reported being raped and beaten by him...they even went into the house that smelled of rotting bodies (11 of them) to arrest him. No probable cause to investigate there, right! Ohio is full of such idiotic examples and the list grows daily.

So yes, the Ohio legislature and cops are, for the most part, pretty Fing stupid. How do I know? I live here...not much longer though. I've lived all over the US but this place is about as dysfunctional as it gets. The fact that a felon convicted of bribery can run a fairly successful re-election campaign (Jim Trafficant) speaks volumes about how bass-ackwards Ohio is these days.
by culturechang February 11, 2010 12:40 PM EST
They dont need to rely on estimates. They have real numbers that they are willfully ignoring.
Reply to this comment
by culturechang February 11, 2010 12:14 PM EST
They spend all their time throwing around estimates on human trafficking and many of the numbers are willfully exaggerated beyond any possibility or expectation of accuracy.

In 2000, they told Congress that 50,000 people were trafficked into the US annually. In Nov 2008, the Washington Post finally reported the State Dept's own admission of having great difficulty finding victims. They had found 1100 in 8 years. By the 400,000 they should have found, they were less than 1% accurate.

Most new outlets did not report it because many already had their own sensationalism newspaper series or Television "documentaries" that they needed to air and get a return on their investment.

My own hometown newspaper (Kansas City Star) just did a week series claiming KC was the nation's "hub" of trafficking victims. Now Ohio? It's is complete nonsense. KC is not a sanctuary city for illegal immigrants and there have been very few convictions to support the claim.

Many of these states and cities are angling for a federal monetary injection of pork barrel money.

Most of this trafficking beef is nothing more than media shock appeal and sensationalism to fuel political pork barrel spending on a problem that scarcely exists.
Reply to this comment
by DaVicar8 February 11, 2010 11:38 AM EST
"the Trafficking in Persons Study Commission"???

What the flock is that???
Reply to this comment
by hologram5 February 11, 2010 11:57 AM EST
It's another way to spend federal tax money without blatantly stealing it.
by culturechang February 11, 2010 12:16 PM EST
Another federal pork barrell joke costing a lot money.
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