24 May 2009

Keep An Eye Out

Hey everybody,

We just wanted to get the word out. Exciting things are happening here in our local NJV Love146 Task Force. Ideas are coming, things are in the works.

On June 6, the North Jersey Vineyard Church will be having a women's luncheon with Marie Morin, the Love146 Eastern Regional Director, as a guest speaker.

We've also got a couple of fundraisers in the works. In July, we're planning a carwash. As the details are hammered out, we'll immediately update the site. Please keep checking!

We're planning something for August, too. We know you're excited!!


We also wanted to share an event with you that's happening in Brooklyn. The North Brooklyn Vineyard in conjunction with the Trash Bar will be hosting an anti-trafficking event. Here's the details:

B'klyn Against Human Sex Trafficking

Sunday, May 31, 6:00pm, $5 cover charge

Trash Bar, 256 Grand St. Brooklyn, NY





Schedule:

6PM THE HI-HATS / BBQ & FREE FOOD START!
http://www.myspace.com/thehihatsmusic

7PM JOHN FURSTE & STEVVI ALEXANDER
http://myspace.com/johnfurste & http://myspace.com/stevvialexander

8PM Presentation by international advocate JOHN ODEAN / OPEN BAR (PBR & Well Drinks)

9PM BUGS IN THE DARK 
http://myspace.com/bugsinthedark

10PM DIESEL’N’DIXIE
http://www.myspace.com/dieselanddixie

+ DJ KENNY MITCHELL intermittently through the evening
http://www.myspace.com/djkennymitchell

We hope you can make it. We'll be there, but no bells.


We're only just getting started, so keep coming back to check the site. Meanwhile, check out some of the latest trafficking news from Google on the right hand side and visit some of the web resources to learn more about how you can help combat sex trafficking. Hope you are all having a great week!

10 May 2009

New Jersey Is Not Immune

Human trafficking a modern scourge

Public asked to help by reporting victims
Saturday, May 09, 2009
BY JEFF DIAMANT
Star-Ledger Staff

Some were from a rural town in Mexico, promised marriage in the United States but forced to work as prostitutes in Plainfield and Elizabeth.

Others were from Honduras, promised decent wages if they moved to America but made to work for free as hostesses at bars in Hudson County.

Still others were Russian, promised high-paying jobs but forced to dance for free in strip clubs.

All of these girls and young women were victims of human trafficking, and though their captors were eventually prosecuted, the restrictions they put on the victims made it difficult for them to get help, acting U.S. Attorney Ralph Marra said.

Marra spoke yesterday during a conference at Kean University on human trafficking during which he implored the public to help other victims who are "hiding in plain sight."

"Plain sight is somewhere -- hopefully -- (where) every citizen might have the opportunity to observe some of these girls," Marra said. "If someone looks young, if someone's not in school when they should be, if you find somebody like that, you should probably call" the state's human trafficking hotline, (877) 986-7534, he said.

"One human being brutally exploiting another human being is as old as human history. The 21st-century version of this is human trafficking," said Marra, whose office will soon prosecute a case involving a ring that allegedly forced girls from western Africa to work for free in hair-braiding salons in Newark and East Orange.

Authorities believe human-trafficking exploits tens of thousands of people each year in the United States, and that New Jersey, with its ports and airports and large immigration populations, is a hotbed for it. Foreign victims are often lured with promises of employment or marriage but are then forced to work as prostitutes, house cleaners, or in bars and restaurants for little or no money.

"As long as there's a demand for cheap labor and commercial sex, people will continue to be exploited," said Kathy Friess of the Statewide Human Trafficking Task Force. "Whether it's prostitution or farm labor work or factories or domestic help, there's always going to be a supply of people who are vulnerable to false promises or claims of ... opportunities for a better life."

Not only are human-trafficking victims hard for law enforcement to find, but those who are located often do not cooperate with investigations, said Brian Hayes, an FBI agent in Atlantic City who specializes in domestic human trafficking and sexual exploitation of children.

"These cases are tough," he said. "They are tough because the victims in child prostitution cases by definition are committing a crime. And they have a distrust of law enforcement. Just as illegal immigrants distrust law-enforcement, prostitutes distrust law-enforcement because they don't want to get arrested."

Further complicating investigations is the frequent reluctance of victims to turn on their captors, Hayes said.

"Victims lie," he said. "Victims care about their traffickers and their pimps. If we don't understand that, talk to people that you know who work with domestic violence victims and ask, 'Is it possible to love somebody that beats you?' And the answer is yes, as irrational as they may seem. It happens every day."

Jeff Diamant can be reached at jdiamant@starledger.com or (973) 392-1547

04 May 2009

Round Home is Open

This past week on April 28, 2009, Love146 opened their new safe home, "Round Home", in the Philippines. Round Home is now inhabited by seven rescued girls and several staff.

Inside

Therapy Tree House

Staff House

Reflection Room