Archive for the ‘Advocacy’ Category

From Outrage to Outreach

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

Our own Keisha Head and Jennifer Swain of JJF’s A Future. Not A Past. were featured on Channel 2 Action News to speak out against those purchasing sex from Georgia’s children.

See the Channel 2 article and interview below.

Group fights prostitution by putting focus on johns
Former teen prostitute speaks out

By Linda Stouffer

ATLANTA —

A woman who survived forced prostitution as a teenager tells Channel 2 Action News she thought she wouldn’t make it.

“I realized that — and this happened after many rapes and beatings from johns — I realized that if I continued I would eventually be killed,” Keisha Head told Channel 2′s Linda Stouffer.

Head said she ran away from local foster homes when she was 16 and trusted a man who soon used threats to force her to sell sex.

“These men who purchased me were normal, ordinary men, and I had no idea that they could turn into such violent monsters right before my eyes, and that was scary,” Head said.

Keisha Head, A Future. Not A Past.

Now Head works to help toughen laws though a local advocacy group called A Future, Not a Past.

Stouffer spoke with the group’s program director about their new focus for 2012: exposing the men who buy sex with underage girls.

Jennifer Swain wants to build community pressure against the buyers.

“What you’ve been able to do that has gone unnoticed will be noticed now,” Swain said.

A Future, Not a Past is rolling out a new message with billboards and a media campaign called “Take a Stand Against Demand.

 
The group credits the summer passage of Georgia HB 200 with increasing the penalties for sex trafficking involving teenagers.

Swain said the new tougher law is also helping change the focus from the teenagers, to the men who buy sexual services.

“We ask our community members to become outraged about this,” Swain said.

Head told Stouffer she helps counsel local girls on the edge.

“We have children as young as 13 being raped continually every night. This is wrong and we need to take a stand against it,” Head said.

What are Georgia Laws on Child Sex Trade?

Sunday, December 11th, 2011

Recently our Kaffie McCullough (A Future. Not A Past.) spoke on the panel for the Protected Innocence Initiative which graded each of our 50 States to evaluate human trafficking laws. While Georgia received a ‘C’, we were also 6th in the nation, which tells us that our nation has a long way to go.

Download your own free Georgia Report Card by Shared Hope International. It is well written and easy to understand.

Kaffie McCullough Honored As Visionary

Monday, November 28th, 2011

 

Kaffie McCullough, A Future.Not A Past.

The Georgia Conference on Children and Families (GCCF) presented its distinguished 2011 Gayle Bayes Vision for Children Award to our own Kaffie McCullough, campaign director for A Future. Not A Past. (AFNAP) last Thursday, Nov. 17.

The GCCF annually bestows the Gayle Bayes Vision for Children Award to an individual who is an outstanding advocate and visionary for at-risk children in the state of Georgia.

In addition, Global Centurion awarded Kaffie the Norma Hotaling Anti-Trafficking Award for leadership, courage, hard work, and innovation in eradicating sex trafficking and addressing demand for child sex in Atlanta. The award is the first of its kind in the United States. (see AJC)

Norma was a light and a leader who emerged from the darkest of places – child sexual abuse, sex trafficking, and drug addiction to become an inspiration to all who work to stop sex trafficking.

Kaffie spoke with JJF’s Martha Turner about her 11 year journey of successfully fighting for stricter punishment against perpetrators, and training law enforcement and the general public to fight demand.

Kaffie, eleven years ago, could you see yourself getting an award like this?

“No, I really couldn’t. The issue then hadn’t been spotlighted to the degree that it has today. I would suppose, optimistically, that 80 to 90 percent of the children serving audience here today knows about child sex trafficking, and has heard of it before, which never would have happened 11 years ago. That was unheard of.

L-R Sharon Joseph, Jennifer Swain, Kaffie McCullough, Keisha Head, Cathy Talley

“It was just a very small handful of people who were having to carry this torch, and now there are a lot of people and organizations who have raised the issue up.

“Today we have a statewide system of care that have it on their radar screen, we have a  Department of Education running training, we have a governor’s wife very keyed in on this, we have an Attorney General being one of the sponsors of HB 200 (human trafficking legislation.)

“There are so many more markers of how the level of awareness has been raised.”

Did you feel alone when you first started this work?

“Alone is not the word I’d use, because there still were people around us. It was as if you’re alone in a totally dark room with your one tiny candle, you can’t see too much, and now we have a lot more candle power!

“It’s really being seen now. We still have quite a ways to go, not just in awareness, but in services and recognition.”

Kaffie McCullough accepts award

Do you feel encouraged?

“Oh yes, definitely.”

What’s been one of the biggest changes you’ve seen around this issue in almost a dozen years?

“Recognition in the public sector. The recognition of the issue in DFACS (Division of Family and Children Services), law enforcement and education.

“Before it was strictly a grassroots movement. Now it’s a policy initiative. If we’re going to end up making systemic change, which is what we really want, you need both of those.”

JJF’s ED Sharon Simpson Joseph observed, “Kaffie is a leader in our community,  inspiring countless others to get involved and empowering them to understand that every individual can make a difference.

JJF Executive Director Sharon S. Joseph

“She is a real-life heroine fighting for the lives of the most disadvantaged children in our community.

“Kaffie is a wonderful and caring person – a true visionary and advocate for some of our community’s most at-risk children. What she does every day makes an enormous difference in dismantling demand for child sex trafficking – giving girls hope for a better tomorrow.”

Martha Turner is the Communications Officer
for the Juvenile Justice Fund

Massachusetts Gets Tough on Child Trafficking

Sunday, November 27th, 2011

Mass. Gov. Patrick signs anti-trafficking bill

While most prosecutors and judges will tell you that the anti-sex trafficking Ga. House Bill 200 doesn’t stop sex trade, they will tell you that it helps immensely in raising awareness of the problem, and thus is a vital component to ending it.

Following a national trend, Massachusetts passed their own human trafficking bill this week.

In the following article you will notice common threads in addressing  child sex trade:

  1. Realizing and admitting trafficking in one’s own community
  2. Hearing the message of survivors
  3. Legislating against internet use for sex trade
  4. Requiring provision of comprehensive services to victims

Far Right--Kaffie McCullough, AFNAP, witnesses Gov. Deal signing HB 200

Penalties for sex trading of minors (under 18)

  • Mass. ~ up to life.
  • Ga. ~ 25-50 yrs.

Penalties for businesses participating (hotels or rooms)

  • Mass. ~ up to $1 million.
  • Ga. ~ 10-30 yrs, up to $100K, and seizure of property.

Press Release
By:
Deval Patrick
Date:
Nov. 21, 2011
Location:
Boston, MA

“Today, we take a major step toward ending the exploitation of children and other victims in our Commonwealth,” said Attorney General Coakley. “As it should now be clear, these crimes aren’t only occurring in other countries and other states, but right in our own communities. I want to thank Governor Patrick for signing this bill into law to give us the tools to combat these egregious crimes while offering critical services to victims. I would also like to thank Senator Montigny and Chairman O’Flaherty for sponsoring this bill. Finally, I want to thank the many survivors of human trafficking who shared their personal stories to help other victims—their voices helped this new law become a reality.”

In response to the growing use of the internet as a human trafficking tool, the legislation will establish enticing a child to engage in prostitution, human trafficking or commercial sexual activity by electronic communication a crime, punishable by up to five years in state prison or a fine of $2,500 or both. A second or subsequent offense is subject to a mandatory five-year sentence and a fine of not less than $10,000.

The legislation requires the Department of Children and Families (DCF) to provide comprehensive services to all victims of child sexual exploitation, including state-funded social and legal services.

Read the entire article here

Town Hall Breakfast Meeting

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Join us on Monday December 12th to get the latest on what’s happening with child sex trafficking and to hear what A Future. Not A Past. is doing to stop demand!

Featured speaker Attorney General Sam Olens will share remarks on keeping Georgia’s children from becoming child sex trafficking victims, followed by a panel discussion with Senator Renee Unterman and other prominent champions who fight to keep our children safe.

The Shared Hope International Protected Innocence Initiative will be releasing its report card at the end of this month measuring each state’s legislative framework for stopping child sex trafficking. We will detail Georgia’s grade and our initiatives for improvement.

Monday, December 12th
7:30am Breakfast
8:00am Discussion Panel Begins

North Avenue Presbyterian Church
603 Peachtree Street NE
Atlanta, GA 30308

This is a free event, but SPACE IS LIMITED! Please RSVP no later than December 9th to info@afuturenotapast.org.

Asst. DA Fights Child Sex Trade

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

Today DA Paul Howard will honor JJF’s Keisha Head for her work in anti-sex trade. Asst. DA David Cooke worked with Mr. Howard for many years prosecuting traffickers and spoke with us about the need for community help if we are serious about shutting down this industry. Day in and day out David hears the horror stories of victims sold against their will, but says the grassroots movement is what really drives the fight to stop this human slavery.

“Some people may feel fear or disgust, but most people, once they see what’s going on, want to make a difference and want to make things better.”

David also suggests ways to talk to children about the subject: “…they need to know that they have the right to decide what happens to their bodies.”

 

David Cooke, Senior Assistant DA
Houston County, GA

——————————————————————————————————

Martha Turner is the Communications Officer for the
Juvenile Justice Fund

‘Clergy Demand Village Voice Media Help Stop Boys and Girls from Being Sold for Sex’

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

Clergy Demand Village Voice Media Help Stop Boys and Girls from Being Sold for Sex
PR Newswire-US Newswire
NEW YORK, Oct 25, 2011

Thirty-six prominent clergy have appealed to Village Voice Media to end the sex trafficking of girls and boys made possible by its Web site, Backpage.com, in a full-page New York Times advertisement today. The advertisement featured a letter from the clergy in which they called on Village Voice company executives to immediately shut down the Adult section of its Web site where this activity is taking place. The clergy also launched a nationwide petition in partnership with Change.org’s more than one million members.

The newly formed multifaith coalition is made up of mainline Christians, Catholics, Jews, evangelical Christians, Muslims, Sikhs, Humanists and other moral and religious leaders. Groundswell, Auburn Seminary’s social action initiative, convened the group.

“Village Voice Media CEO Jim Larkin and his Board of Directors need to stop Backpage.com from serving as a platform for the sex trafficking of girls and boys immediately. For over a year, advocates have demanded action, but the responses they have been given are half-measures and delays. We are tired of Village Voice’s delay tactics,” said The Rev. Dr. Katharine Henderson, President of Auburn Seminary. “The only way to end the sale of minors for sex on Backpage.com is by shutting down the Adult section for good.”

To read the rest of the article, click here.

Voice For Victims, Keisha Head Goes Above and Beyond

Monday, October 24th, 2011

Keisha Head, Advocate for AFNAP

JJF’s Keisha Head brings courage and great heart to her work with girls being trafficked. As an Advocate with our A Future. Not A Past. (AFNAP), Keisha will be honored this week by DA Paul Howard for her extraordinary work in the community. Read about it in this press release:

Keisha Head, Sex Trafficking Survivor and Advocate for A Future. Not A Past., to be Recognized by the Office of the Fulton County District Attorney

ATLANTA (Oct. 24th) The Office of the Fulton County District Attorney will recognize Keisha Head – a former victim of child sex trafficking and now a program advocate for A Future. Not A Past. (AFNAP), the Juvenile Justice Fund’s campaign to stop the prostitution of children in Georgia – at its upcoming 14th Annual “Voice for Victims” Awards Ceremony.

The event is held yearly to pay tribute to law enforcement, civil servants and civilians who go “above and beyond” on behalf of victims. The 2011 “Voice for Victims” event will be held Thursday, Oct. 27 at 9:30 a.m. in the Executive Conference Center (Bank of America Auditorium) on the campus of Morehouse College.

“I am honored to be part of this event and to be recognized by the Office of the Fulton County District Attorney,” says Head. “Countless efforts are done by so many to help young victims, and that truly makes it even more humbling to be chosen.”

According to Shannon Hervey, director of victim services for the Office of the Fulton County District Attorney, “We consider it our honor this year to recognize Keisha for her service and tireless commitment to improving the lives of young girls.”

Keisha on the right, pictured with Ga. Gov. Deal and Jennifer Swain

About Keisha Head

After her early years were spent in and out of foster care, Head was victimized by the infamous Atlanta-area pimp, “Sir Charles” at age 16, trafficked on the streets of the city and ultimately raped and beaten by buyers. Her inability to see herself as a victim kept her in the lifestyle, and at 18, Head – who felt she was not deserving of any other life path – started her own escort service, which she operated for seven years.

In 2006, Head and her then boyfriend were arrested on felony drug charges, for which she was convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Though she ended up serving only three of those years, she says it was her time in prison that changed her life.

“My prison term, or my darkest hour, was when I began to see things differently,” Head says. “I was finally able to see how all of the negative experiences of my youth had made me a victim as a child – not a criminal. I knew when I was released that it was my chance to start over and to make a difference.”

Head, 31, is now a married mother of three, pursuing her college degree and through AFNAP helps to aide girls who are currently victimized – and need the help she so desperately went without for so many years.

“Through AFNAP, I am able to tell my story, a story which I hope will help girls facing the same situations I did,” Head says. “These girls are our daughters, sisters and friends. They are faces, not labels – and they are crying out for help in a desperate way.”

About A Future. Not A Past.

Since 2007, A Future. Not A Past. (AFNAP) has been addressing the commercial sexual exploitation of children through research, education, advocacy and intervention. AFNAP provides training for law enforcement, legal professionals, mandatory reporters and community leaders. For more information, please visit www.afuturenotapast.org.

What Can YOU Do To Stop Child Sex Trafficking?

Tuesday, September 27th, 2011

#14 Urge your U.S. Representative and Senator to support the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2011.

The Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA) establishes trafficking as a federal crime, provides victim assistance programs, and authorizes both the State Department Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons and the annual Trafficking in Persons report.

While this bill is incredibly important in the fight to end child sex trafficking, it must be reauthorized every three years. The Senate and House bills reauthorizing the TVPA in 2011 include provisions to strengthen global and domestic anti-trafficking programs through the Departments of State, Justice, Health and Human Services, Labor and Defense.

Check out this video from change.org featuring the Juvenile Justice Fund’s Keisha Head urging community members to join her in supporting this bill.

What can you do to ensure that this bill is passed?

Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation 149 Years Ago

Monday, September 26th, 2011

New ways to make a change are opening up to students

Almost 150 years after President Lincoln proclaimed the Emancipation of American Slaves, America and the world looks for emancipation of slaves of a different sort, but slaves no less. For a look at what students are doing in the anti-human trafficking movement, read the following.

mtvU’s Against Our Will Spotlights Student Efforts to End Modern-Day Slavery

Posted 9/22/11 7:09 pm EST by

If you are reading this you were able to wake up, grab something to eat, go online to chat with your friends, and check out this blog. What if someone else made these decisions for you? For the 27 million people who are currently living in modern-day slavery, this is a reality.

Modern-day slavery, also referred to as human trafficking, occurs in labor markets and can be found everywhere, from the food you eat to the clothes you wear; it can also be found in the commercial sex industry, with pimps exploiting girls as young as 12. All of this is happening in the U.S., in our backyard. As overwhelming as that can be, the power to end it is within our reach.

You might be wondering how modern-day slavery could possibly still exist, and more importantly, what you can do to help. mtvU’s Against Our Will Campaign launches today, on the 149th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s announcement of the Emancipation Proclamation. The campaign is calling on all the young change-makers out there to pick up where Lincoln left off, and join the fight to end modern-day slavery.

mtvU’s Against Our Will Campaign has teamed up with Free the Slaves, Polaris Project, and GEMS to empower students to be part of the solution. The campaign will spotlight the inspirational work already being done on campuses, and arm students with facts and tools to get involved. Students will be able to turn every day decisions- from what to buy to how to bring up the issue with their friends- into a nationwide movement combating modern-day slavery.

If you’re on campus, be sure to check out the videos airing throughout the day on mtvU. All the videos will also be available on demand at mtvu.AgainstOurWill.org, where you can also learn more about the issue and find ways to take action. Stay updated on campaign developments by liking our Facebook page and stay tuned on Act for more stories of student activists, survivors, and key actions that you can take.