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31 Missing Children in Texas anti trafficking operation

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The http://edition.cnn.com/search/?text=naked cam U.S. Marshals Service and Homeland Security Investigations rescued or located the missing kids during a month-long investigation dubbed “Operation Missing in the Metroplex.” They were found in the Dallas and Fort Worth areas by multiple federal agencies who also partnered with Dallas area police departments, the Texas Department of Public Safety’s Missing & Unidentified Persons Unit, and the Texas Department of Family & Protective Services.

Among the 31 survivors, at least seven were being sex trafficked at the time of their recovery. Noteworthy cases among the missing kids include:

A 15-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Dallas Police at a residence in Dallas following a tip by a confidential source.

A 17-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Dallas Police inside a vehicle in Dallas.

A 16-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Arlington Police inside a residence in Kerens, TX following an analysis of social media.

A 13-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Fort Worth Police inside an apartment in Fort Worth.

A 15-year-old Jane Doe from Fort Worth recovered in an Uber in Houston during a prostitution sting.

A 16-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Fort Worth Police at a “john’s” house in Fort Worth.

A 16-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Dallas Police walking on Lancaster Blvd.

According to The U.S. Attorney’s Office for Northern Texas, the remaining 24 children were recovered from friends or relatives, reunited with their legal guardians, and removed from the missing children database.

Debunking child sex trafficking myths to fight this global issue

The FBI has reported a significant increase in sex trafficking crimes in recent years. In fact, during the fiscal year 2020 alone, the FBI opened 664 human trafficking investigations across the U.S. and arrest 473 human traffickers. As of November 2020, the agency still had 1,800 open trafficking investigations—including child sex trafficking cases.

So how can we help make a dent on such a complex, devastating, and growing global issue?

Related: 9 Surprising Facts About Human Trafficking In The U.S.

This case and many others can help put conspiracies and myths to rest and help society see how child trafficking usually happens.

For example, one common misconception is that children are kidnapped by strangers. However, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children—a global organization that’s aided the investigation and recovery of thousands of missing kids—reports just the opposite.

According to NCMEC, less than 1% of missing children cases reported in the US in 2020 were non-family abductions. In fact, in a recent Virginia operation where NCMEC helped recover 27 missing children, none of the cases involved a child getting abducted by someone they didn’t know.

The Polaris Project is another excellent resource for learning about other common child sex trafficking myths.

Authorities recently recovered 31 missing children in Texas.

The U.S. Marshals Service and Homeland Security Investigations rescued or located the missing kids during a month-long investigation dubbed “Operation Missing in the Metroplex.” They were found in the Dallas and Fort Worth areas by multiple federal agencies who also partnered with Dallas area police departments, the Texas Department of Public Safety’s Missing & Unidentified Persons Unit, and the Texas Department of Family & Protective Services.

Among the 31 survivors, at least seven were being sex trafficked at the time of their recovery. Noteworthy cases among the missing kids include:

A 15-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Dallas Police at a residence in Dallas following a tip by a confidential source.

A 17-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Dallas Police inside a vehicle in Dallas.

A 16-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Arlington Police inside a residence in Kerens, TX following an analysis of social media.

A 13-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Fort Worth Police inside an apartment in Fort Worth.

A 15-year-old Jane Doe from Fort Worth recovered in an Uber in Houston during a prostitution sting.

A 16-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Fort Worth Police at a “john’s” house in Fort Worth.

A 16-year-old Jane Doe recovered by Dallas Police walking on Lancaster Blvd.

According to The U.S. Attorney’s Office for Northern Texas, the remaining 24 children were recovered from friends or relatives, reunited with their legal guardians, and removed from the missing children database.

Related: 5 Myths You’ve Probably Heard About Child Sex Trafficking

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Debunking child sex trafficking myths to fight this global issue

The FBI has reported a significant increase in sex trafficking crimes in recent years. In fact, during the fiscal year 2020 alone, the FBI opened 664 human trafficking investigations across the U.S. and arrest 473 human traffickers. As of November 2020, the agency still had 1,800 open trafficking investigations—including child sex trafficking cases.

So how can we help make a dent on such a complex, devastating, and growing global issue?

Related: 9 Surprising Facts About Human Trafficking In The U.S.

This case and many others can help put conspiracies and myths to rest and help society see how child trafficking usually happens.

For example, one common misconception is that children are kidnapped by strangers. However, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children—a global organization that’s aided the investigation and recovery of thousands of missing kids—reports just the opposite.

According to NCMEC, less than 1% of missing children cases reported in the US in 2020 were non-family abductions. In fact, in a recent Virginia operation where NCMEC helped recover 27 missing children, none of the cases involved a child getting abducted by someone they didn’t know.

The Polaris Project is another excellent resource for learning about other common child sex trafficking myths.

Related: 8 Popular Conspiracy Theories About Sex Trafficking, Debunked

Understanding the realities of what child trafficking is, how it happens, and who is involved is vital when it comes to recovering victims, preventing these crimes, and reporting suspicious behavior when you notice it.

Donald Washington, director of the Marshals Service that worked with NCMEC to rescue 26 missing children in “Operation Not Forgotten” in Georgia last year shared this message that society can get behind, “The message to missing children and their families is that we will never stop looking for you.”

Being able to tell fact from fiction is essential in knowing where to look and how to find both victims and perpetrators.

Porn’s role in child sex trafficking

Truly seeing the issue of child sex trafficking includes not turning a blind eye to the role pornography plays in sex trafficking and exploitation.

From normalizing abuse and sexualizing children to being used as a tool to groom victims, research and survivor accounts show that porn is interwoven in virtually every facet of sex trafficking, and vice versa.

Often what consumers believe to be harmless fantasy on a screen is actually the documented abuse of a real sex trafficing victim—a dark secret the porn industry doesn’t want consumers to know about. And the more consumers click, stream, and download porn, the more the demand for sex trafficking—including the exploitation of children—is fueled.

Sure, not all porn is nonconsensual, but some is. And there’s no way for someone browsing on a mainstream porn site to tell the difference. The fight against sex trafficking and the fight against porn are truly one and the same.

While child sex trafficking is a complex issue, the role porn plays in it is undeniable. What many consumers view as a passive, private act can actually contribute to the exploitation of real people—even real kids.

It’s a harsh reality, but reality all the same. And when you refuse to click, you can help stop the demand for sexual exploitation.

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on May 01, 21