Horrors of labor trafficking remain hidden with spotlight on sex trafficking
Many mornings as caregiver
The question may have started out as a good-natured greeting, but it was soon tinged with concern.
So much so that the neighbor eventually called the
The full extent of Guanzon's working conditions at the
She was fortunate. The neighbor had noticed the nuances that most people ignored, and the suspicions unraveled a labor trafficking scheme that rescued Guanzon and others from indentured servitude.
Guanzon is emphatic that there are many, many more victims like her, working across a wide swath of industries, hidden in plain sight.
Yet they remain some of the toughest victims to identify.
The horrors of human trafficking have gained significant awareness across the country over the past decade — with a proliferation of legislation, task forces and outreach campaigns — although the bulk of the attention has focused on just one side of the issue: sex trafficking.
It's an imbalance now being investigated by the state's independent oversight agency.
The commission started last month with an all-day public hearing in
The response from witnesses was overwhelming: the resources to identify such victims, treat their trauma and bring their traffickers to justice are scarce, they said.
"We've come a long way, but we're all working in our silos and we're all stretched thin," said
Comprehensive data measuring the scope of the problem is also lacking, although according to the
Guanzon, the first to testify at the
Unlike sex trafficking victims, labor trafficking victims are almost exclusively foreign nationals. Some are in the
Victims are trafficked in an array of industries, including agriculture, construction, janitorial, restaurant, domestic service, healthcare, carnivals, factories, nail salons and massage parlors.
They often don't speak English, have no understanding of
"Labor trafficking victims are even more isolated from society than victims of sex trafficking," said Beck.
Psychological manipulation and coercion are common, sometimes compounded by physical and sexual violence.
Guanzon, facing the prospect of being married off or jobless in
So cowed by the threats was Gaunzon that when the
The sample represented victims from 29 different countries, with
"Ninety-four percent knew they'd been victimized but blamed themselves for what they described as being 'tricked,'" the study's principal author,
Service providers emphasized the importance of outreach in vulnerable communities.
"These victims are not going to come forward," Beck said. "We need to go to great lengths to identify them and connect them to services."
But the outreach has to be on their terms — off site, in their languages, by their peers. Labor unions could help bridge that divide, they said.
But the business owners were not ultimately charged with the state's labor trafficking laws, which Stephan described as too cumbersome and murky for both victims and a jury to understand.
Instead, prosecutors took an easier route, getting them on a
Prosecutors acknowledge that labor trafficking cases can be some of the most difficult to investigate due to a lack of law enforcement understanding surrounding the issue. "It's often written off as an employment issue just like domestic violence was written off years ago as family issue," said
But also because the traditional tools used in sex trafficking cases don't seem to work for labor cases.
That's why the
"That's the only way to shift that tide to make it very uncomfortable for greedy businesses and actors," Stephan said.
A state law similar to the federal law that makes it illegal to withhold a person's documents would also be a useful prosecutorial tool, Stephan said, as it's easy to prove and common in such cases. It was recently vetoed as part of a larger legislative package but she hopes it will be reintroduced.
Because labor victims are often so distrustful of law enforcement — due to corruption in their homelands or their immigration statuses — witnesses proposed offering training for other public sector workers who might come into regular contact with victims, such as mail carriers, code compliance officers, health and food inspectors and animal services officers.
But one group that state and local authorities have remained reluctant to partner with are their federal counterparts.
Alamada County has a robust trafficking task force, but no feds are on it after two victims were deported, O'Malley said.
"We need to admit we are simply as a state and country not serving immigrants well," Buck said. "We need to pull back and ask why we're not paying more attention to labor trafficking. This is the hundredth time I've been talking about labor trafficking and it's not getting the attention it deserves."
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