U.S. Senators Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) today introduced the Combat Human Trafficking Act which would strengthen law enforcement efforts to investigate and prosecute all who commit sex trafficking crimes, particularly the buyers of sex acts from trafficking victims. Enforcement efforts often focus only on prosecuting the sellers of these acts because of challenges in prosecuting buyers.
Human trafficking is a $32 billion industry worldwide. The U.S. Department of Justice estimates that up to 83 percent of sex trafficking victims are American citizens, and the average victim is first trafficked between ages 12 and 14. Ohio has been on the front lines in the battle to combat human trafficking. A 2010 Ohio Attorney General Trafficking in Persons Study Commission Report estimated that more than 1,000 minors are sex trafficked in Ohio annually.
The Combat Human Trafficking Act would increase penalties for buyers of sex acts from trafficking victims, expand reporting on trafficking prosecutions, require training by the Justice Department on targeting and prosecuting buyers, expand wiretapping authority to cover all human trafficking offenses, and strengthen crime victims' rights.
"This legislation sends a clear message to those who victimize children that we will prosecute you to the full extent of the law," Portman stated. "By strengthening laws against buyers, we can take steps toward reducing demand and ensuring criminals are fully prosecuted."
"The sexual exploitation of children and other trafficking victims is a scourge on our society that we must do more to prevent," said Senator Feinstein. "Too often, buyers of sex acts from trafficking victims escape with a slap on the wrist or aren't prosecuted at all. To reduce the demand for trafficking, we need to strengthen laws and enforcement efforts against buyers."
The Combat Human Trafficking Act would:
Reduce demand for human trafficking by:
Clarifying that a buyer of a commercial sex act from a trafficking victim can be prosecuted under the commercial sex trafficking statute (18 U.S.C. § 1591), codifying the Eighth Circuit's decision in United States v. Jungers, 702 F.3d 1066 (8th Cir. 2013).
Making a seller or buyer of a sex act strictly liable, with respect to the victim's age, if the victim is under the age of 18, thereby sparing child victims from having to testify and be re-traumatized.
Establishing a minimum period of five years of supervised release for a person who conspires to violate the commercial sex trafficking statute (§ 1591), thereby making conspirators subject to the same term of supervised release as those convicted of attempting to violate the statute or of violating the statute.
Require the Bureau of Justice Statistics to prepare an annual report on the number of arrests, prosecutions, convictions and lengths of sentences regarding sex trafficking offenses prosecuted in state courts.
Direct the Department of Justice to ensure that each anti-human trafficking training program it offers includes training on effective methods for investigating and prosecuting the buyers of sex acts, and to ensure that federal law enforcement officers investigate and prosecute such individuals.
Expand federal and state wiretapping authority to cover all human trafficking offenses, specifically peonage, involuntary servitude, forced labor, child sexual exploitation, child pornography production, slavery and involuntary servitude.
Strengthen crime victims' rights by:
Amending the Crime Victims' Rights Act to provide victims with the right to be informed in a timely manner of any plea agreement or deferred prosecution agreement.
Clarifying that, when a victim is denied his or her rights in the lower court and appeals that denial, the appellate court shall apply ordinary standards of appellate review. This is the process followed by the majority of federal courts including the Second, Third, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits, rather than the "clear and indisputable error" standard applied in fewer federal courts.
The Combat Human Trafficking Act is endorsed by the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association, Shared Hope International, ECPAT, Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, Rights4Girls, Survivors for Solutions, Sanctuary For Families, World Hope International, Prostitution Research & Education, Misssey and Breaking Free.