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52 Judges J. 36 (2013)
Human Trafficking and the Internet (and Other Technologies, Too)

handle is hein.journals/judgej52 and id is 38 raw text is: TECHNOLOGY

Human Trafficking and the Internet*
(*AND OTHER TECHNOLOGIES, TOO)
By Judge Herbert B. Dixon Jr.

From the sublime and educational to
the provocative and salacious, I am
often amazed at the information and
materials that can be found on the Inter-
net. So it should not come as a surprise
that the Internet, along with other tech-
nologies, plays a role in both enabling and
combating human trafficking.
Use of the Internet to Ensnare
Trafficking Victims
Some trafficking cases start with the
offender contacting the potential victims
on social networking sites such as Face-
book and MySpace. The techniques used
by the offenders to gain trust vary widely,
including expressing love and admiration
of the victim, promising to make the vic-
tim a star, and providing a ticket to a new
location away from the victim's home.
Another type of trafficking effort starts
with an online employment search and
results in an unsuspecting victim relocat-
ing from her home on the promise of an
unbelievably good job. After the victim
has joined the offender, various tech-
niques are used to restrict the victim's
access to communication with home, such
as imposing physical punishment unless
the victim complies with the trafficker's
demands and making threats of harm and
even death to the victim and her family.
Here are some examples of how vic-
tims have been ensnared into human
trafficking:
m In Illinois, a 19-year-old female
responded to an Internet ad promot-
ing modeling opportunities. Instead
of offering her a modeling job, the
offender enticed the girl to wait in a
hotel room where she was expected to
have sex with an unknown person. The
offender, who would become her pimp,
intended to sell the young woman for
sex at an hourly rate. In this case, the

pimp's would-be client was an under-
cover police officer who brought the
young woman to safety.'
 In Denmark, law enforcement authori-
ties noted suspicious advertisements
for nannies, waitresses, and dancers
on Web sites in Latvia and Lithuania.
The traffickers used Internet sites to
post advertisements for jobs in West-
ern Europe. An anti-trafficking group
in Poland reports that 30 percent of
its clients (trafficked women) were
recruited through the Internet.'
 Polish and Italian police jointly dis-
mantled a network that trafficked men
for the purpose of forced labor. An
employment agency Web site was the
primary means of recruitment.3
 Testimony was presented to the
U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign
Relations at a hearing on Human
Trafficking: Mail Order Bride Abuses
that some entities in the mail order
bride industry (or international
matchmaking organizations) have

been linked to trafficking organiza-
tions that offer adults and girls as
brides but sell them privately into
sexual exploitation or domestic slavery.
These incidents include occasions in
which foreign organized crime groups
used fianc6e and marriage visas to
bring women into the United States
for exploitation.'
m A scheme demonstrating how tech-
nology was used to circumvent both
international borders and specific
national laws involved trafficking of
Japanese women from Japan to Hawaii
for the purpose of sexual exploitation.
The traffickers advertised in Japan for
nude models to work in the United
States. Upon their arrival in Hawaii,
the models were used to perform live
Internet sex shows and make porno-
graphic videos that would be shown
to Japanese audiences via the Inter-
net. To avoid running afoul of Japanese
pornography laws, the traffickers con-
ducted their operation, which was

36  'Judges' Journal Vol. 52 No. I

36

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