Authors: Kevin Bales,Ron. Soodalter
Tags: #University of California Press
the efforts of the various federal agencies to uncover trafficking cases,
prosecute traffickers, and assist survivors, “it was understood at the time
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of drafting the legislation that the TVPA was insufficient to prosecute all
human trafficking operations throughout the United States.” The federal
government acknowledged that state and local authorities were the like-
liest to locate and identify instances of trafficking at the community level.
Therefore, it was imperative that state and local law enforcement agen-
cies be armed with the appropriate statutes to prosecute these cases
within their own borders. This, states Farrell, was the federal govern-
ment’s understanding and intention when they framed the 2000 law.53 A
parallel can be drawn with another serious felony—kidnapping.
Kidnapping and human trafficking share certain characteristics, prima-
rily the violent control exercised over the victim. Every state has a law
against kidnapping, as does the federal government; there is no debate
about whether states should have their own kidnapping statutes.
R A I S I N G T H E M O R A L B A N N E R . . . A G A I N
The antiprostitution movement has influenced states’ efforts to activate
trafficking legislation in much the same way that it has been lobbying
Congress for changes in the federal laws. Says Amy Farrell, “The limited
research to date on human trafficking policymaking and legislation sug-
gests advocacy organizations specifically concerned with commercial
sex trafficking and child prostitution called upon political elites to
address the perceived growing threat of exploitation.”54 State legislators
have likely been responding as well to newspaper stories on human traf-
ficking. A review of 1,350 news articles for the period 1990–2006 that
use the phrase
human trafficking
or
trafficking in persons
points to an
increased emphasis on sex trafficking. The review focused on articles
relating to “sex trafficking,” “labor trafficking,” and “sex and labor
trafficking.” While there was an increased overall recognition of the
trafficking problem, media coverage was “dominated by articles focused
explicitly on sex trafficking.” The stories’ common theme featured
young women and girls “forced into prostitution by conspiracies of
foreign organized criminal networks.”55
Over several years the number of articles on all forms of trafficking
grew moderately, but in the mid- to late 1990s sex trafficking articles
increased dramatically. Whereas the number of articles on sex traffick-
ing, labor trafficking, and a combination of the two ran fairly even until
around 1995, after that year media coverage of sex trafficking took off.
By 2000 sex trafficking articles were increasing rapidly, and in 2006 they
were practically off the chart—while the number of labor trafficking
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articles remained relatively flat and even showed a downturn. This
trend, along with abolitionist lobbying, is likely to have had an effect on
legislators when they framed trafficking laws.56
Some statutes include a “findings” section, naming the type of traf-
ficking the legislators see as specific to their state; Nebraska named
prostitution. The 2006 Nebraska antitrafficking law states, “Increasing
prostitution in Nebraska has become harmful to communities and
neighborhoods, often contributing to both incidents of crime and fear
of crime.” The Nebraska law ostensibly addresses both labor and sex
trafficking; nonetheless, the “findings section is specific to prostitution
and commercial sex.”57
As in the TVPA and the DOJ model, forced prostitution of minors is a
major component of most state trafficking laws. In seeking a broad defi-
nition of the crime of trafficking, says Lou de Baca, the federal govern-
ment turned their gaze to prostituted children, and the states followed
suit. “Typically, state cases are just repackaging of what once were cate-
gorized as child prostitution. By conflating child prostitution with traf-
ficking in the 2000 TVPA, we’ve created low-hanging fruit—easy crimes
to detect and to prosecute. It’s really old wine in new bottles.”58
O F B L I N D M E N A N D E L E P H A N T S
There are several angles from which the states should examine, or reex-
amine, slavery and human trafficking: as an issue of immigration, crime,
human rights, national security, economic justice—or all of the above.
Framing a single statute to encompass them all is a daunting challenge.
Of the roughly two-thirds of the states that have made the leap and
passed antitrafficking laws, a few address a wide range of issues well,
some are more issue specific and “morally” inclined, and some shoot
considerably wide of the mark.
It is gratifying that most of the states have rallied and, in a very short
time, have initiated, supported, and passed laws outlawing slavery
within their borders. And if there is always room for improvement, there
is also the sense that as living, breathing things the laws can grow and
improve with increased knowledge and experience. But just passing a
law doesn’t necessarily entitle the state legislators to feel that they’ve
done all they could to fight human trafficking. For one thing, it is evi-
dent that few states have thought beyond the criminalizing of human
trafficking to address the vital issue of victim care and services. Yes, it is
essential to catch and punish traffickers, but that is only one part of the
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equation. The list of things needed by—and owed to—the victims must
not be ignored or dismissed. If a state law excludes the victims of human
trafficking, the law should be changed to encompass them. Now that
the state legislators have assumed the DOJ’s aggressive position on the
actual crime of trafficking, they should take a page from the Freedom
Network, or Polaris Project, or any of hundreds of organizations that
provide care and services to America’s slaves, and should make their
laws more victim centered.
Some practical issues are inherent in widening the scope of the state
laws. As Farrell points out, “External factors beyond problem defini-
tion . . . may facilitate or hamper the passage of more comprehensive leg-
islation.” The more extensive the list of provisions, the greater the
likelihood of delays and disappointments in committee. And the wider
the range of proposed services—training, outreach, victim services—the
greater the likelihood of fiscal competition with other state priorities.
States have limited budgets and political agendas, and the issue of
modern slavery is comparatively new. It is unrealistic to presume that the
lion’s share of the money would go to human trafficking legislation.59
In framing their laws, the state legislatures should also include mon-
itoring programs. The absence of viable research data must be
addressed. While the passage of state laws is a laudable first step, the
only way to ascertain their success is to “monitor and understand how
legislative mandates are translated into action.”60 A system of tracking
the actual implementation of the state laws is needed. The Center for
Women Policy Studies’ “Report Card” and Farrell’s paper “State
Human Trafficking Legislation” are tremendously helpful, but ulti-
mately they will suffer from the same pitfall that afflicts all research
material in dealing with topical issues: they will soon be outdated.
Research, to be relevant, must stay current.
There is no doubt that ultimately every state will pass anti–human
trafficking legislation. But it’s better to do it right than to do it right
now. There is considerable merit to Leslie Wolfe’s suggestion that the
states take the time—and use the right resources—to explore and under-
stand the issue in its entirety before passing a law. As Finckenauer and
Liu suggest, “State policy makers should proceed cautiously and judi-
ciously in considering anti-trafficking legislation. Symbolic actions
should be avoided. And it should be recognized that half-way measures
may well be worse than no measures at all.”61
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T H E F E D S
It is important to look at the federal government’s actions—both
positive and negative—in its relatively new war against human traf-
ficking in America. Many federal officials have taken on the task of
rooting out and prosecuting traffickers, as well as coordinating with
service providers and victim advocates providing care for survivors.
We’ll speak with representatives of some of the federal agencies whose
job description has been expanded to include modern-day slavery and
get a sense of how they feel the campaign is going. We’ll also examine
some cases that seem to stand in direct contradiction to the antitraf-
ficking position taken by the government—cases in which administra-
tion politics and inaction have actually increased human trafficking on
American soil—both here and abroad. One of the worst of these cases
involves taxpayer money supporting slavery as part of Operation Iraqi
Freedom.
B R I N G I N G D E M O C R A C Y T O I R A Q — O N T H E B A C K S
O F S L AV E S
First Kuwaiti General Trade and Contracting Co., a billion-dollar con-
struction company, was hired to build the new U.S. Embassy in
Baghdad—after no American company would agree to the govern-
ment’s terms.1 The project is worth $592 million to First Kuwaiti and
encompasses a 104-acre, twenty-one-building complex, making it the
largest U.S. embassy in the world. When completed, it will be six times
larger than the United Nations and the same size as Vatican City.2
From the beginning First Kuwaiti had difficulty in fulfilling the terms
of its contract. Serious problems piled up: faulty wiring, fuel leaks,
and poor construction. Some of the problems were determined to be
“life safety issues.” And while the day-to-day firefight was going on
in Baghdad, a war of words was being waged between the State
2 1 1
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Department in Washington, who defended their contractors, and those
on the ground in Iraq, who were suffering from substandard work and
delays.3
Boondoggles, pork barrels, and shoddy work are scandalous, but it
was another, uglier issue that brought First Kuwaiti to the world’s atten-
tion. Some of their contract workers had been trafficked to Iraq against
their will, held by force, and paid little or nothing. First Kuwaiti—and
by association, the U.S. Department of State—were using slave labor to
build the embassy. Taxpayers were footing the bill. The idea of a U.S.
subcontractor trafficking enslaved workers into the country where we
are waging a war to introduce freedom and democracy is disturbing. Yet
in case after case the construction company hired workers, normally
through subcontractors, from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Sierra
Leone, Egypt, Turkey, and the Philippines under false pretenses.
Promised work in Dubai—indeed, their boarding passes for the flight to
Iraq actually
read
Dubai—they landed in a combat zone. Once the
workers were in Iraq, contractors confiscated their passports and forced
them to live in squalid conditions and work long hours for little or no
pay. And, says journalist David Phinney, “It was all happening smack in
the middle of the US-controlled Green Zone—right under the nose of
the State Department.”4
The issue came to light after the murder of twelve Nepali workers
who had been “recruited under false pretenses from rural villages . . .
before being trafficked illegally into Iraq.” En route to a U.S. base in
Iraq, all twelve were kidnapped and executed by insurgents. The sub-
contractor had “sent them into the war zone, and along one of the
most dangerous roads in the world, in what basically amounted to taxi
cabs.” Ali Kamel al-Nadi, the man who allegedly assembled the
unprotected caravan, commented when asked about the incident, “If
they were my workers, maybe I should be compensated for losing
them.”5
Though foreign workers had been complaining of abuses since
early 2003, the problem was first flagged in a news report in late
2005. The report provoked a flurry of base inspections by the gov-
ernment. In April 2006, the Pentagon, without naming any of the
subcontractors to Halliburton/KBR, concluded that “doing business
in this way” was common in Iraq and Afghanistan.6 The confiscation
of workers’ passports kept the laborers from leaving Iraq, the report
stated, or from seeking jobs with other contractors. No penalties were
assigned to the contractors. Nonetheless, the Pentagon ordered that