Source: http://ift.tt/hFWySe - Saturday, January 31, 2015
Though some reports point to an uptick in human trafficking around the Super Bowl , experts are increasingly denouncing the statistic as a "myth" that detracts from a reality in which the crime is a problem year-round. And on any given day, that crime is largely happening online. Research suggests the majority of human trafficking activity takes place digitally. A 2012 report by United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimated that 76 percent of trafficking transactions for sex with underage girls started on the Internet, World Pulse pointed out. Those findings go hand-in-hand with a 2014 study that discovered 70 percent of child trafficking survivors surveyed were at some point sold online. "People are posted and sold online multiple times a day ," Asia, a survivor of sex trafficking, told Thorn -- the agency behind the 2014 report that studies technology's role in sex trafficking. "As far as the ad that was posted up [for me]… just [like] you can go find a car, there was a picture, and a description, and a price." Widespread Internet access also means the crime can occur anywhere -- not just in the places you may expect -- Rep. Kristi Noem (R-S.D.) pointed out. “We’re alarmed by what this industry is doing , how it’s growing in the United States, and not just in urban areas around big events,” Rep. Kristi Noem (R-S.D.) told EWTN. “Everybody thinks human trafficking and sex trafficking is happening at the Super Bowl, a
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