Posts Tagged ‘A Future. Not A Past.’

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.

‘Riverdale High students host sex trade forums’

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Riverdale High students host sex trade forums
Jeylin White
Clayton News Daily

"Broken People, Broken Dreams" forum on human trafficking at Riverdale High School (Jeylin White, Clayton News Daily)

“When you hear the word ‘prostitute,’ what is the first word that comes to your mind?” Jennifer Swain asked a room full of teenagers at Riverdale High School.

The question by the deputy program manager for the Juvenile Justice Fund led one boisterous teen to yell, “Ho!”

Other pupils were more reserved, and responded: “Someone who sells their body for sex.” Their replies led to an in-depth discussion about a subject that is getting a lot of attention right now, because of a rise in sexual exploitation of young girls and boys –– human trafficking in Georgia.

Swain, of the Juvenile Justice Fund, was at the school for a two-day forum called “Broken People, Broken Dreams,” which aims to inform the community about the issue of human trafficking in society, and in the local community.

“I think that the [students] were honest,” said Swain. “I think, maybe, some of the teachers were shocked and mortified, by the students’ responses.”

The members of DECA, an association of marketing students, at Riverdale High School are hosting the forum which ends today ( Thursday).

Students who spearheaded the project include: Jocelyn Stargell-Zachery, 18, Emmanuella Ibekwe, 17, and Johel Avila, 17. Beverly Holyfield, a DECA teacher, is the group’s advisor. The project was sponsored by Lighthouse Partners, Inc., Riverdale City Councilmember Kenny Ruffin, and several other businesses and officials.

To read the full article, click here.

Rally Day–Feb. 1, 2012

Friday, January 6th, 2012

A Future. Not A Past is a campaign of the Juvenile Justice Fund to end the prostitution of children in Georgia by disabling demand. Follow us on Facebook & Twitter

Stop the Prostitution of Children in Georgia

A Weekly Advocacy Update from the 2012 session of the Georgia General Assembly.

Off to a Running Start

The Georgia General Assembly 2012 session starts Monday, Jan. 9th as legislators return to the state Capitol. The Budget is expected to dominate the discussion over the coming months.

Priorities for the New Year Yet again this year we will raise our voices on behalf of commercially sexually exploited children at the Capitol. Given the grim budget outlook our top strategic priority this year will be to protect funding for victim services.

Join us at the Georgia State Capitol

It’s time to register for the 2012 CSEC Lobby Day at the Georgia Capitol! Get ready to make a real difference in the lives of exploited children in our state. Thank your legislator with written notes, make your voice heard, and join together in an awareness-raising show of support for children victimized by CSEC. Lobby Day is an easy, fun, and empowering event. If you’ve never been to the Capitol, this is a perfect way to get started with grassroots advocacy.

When: February 1st, 2012, 8:00 am – 1:00 pm

Where: We will assemble at Central Presbyterian Church (201 Washington Street Southwest, Atlanta, GA 30303) for check-in and advocacy instructions, then walk across the street to the Capitol in groups. Thank you for being part of this historic event! Everyone who participates in Lobby Day will receive a name badge listing their State Senator and Representative. Due to time constraints, we will be unable to provide printed name badges for those who register after 3:00 p.m. on January 30, 2012. All registrations received after this time will need to check-in at the walkup table the morning of Lobby Day.

How to Register: Registration is free and easy. Simply go to www.streetgrace.org to sign up today. After you register you will receive additional information regarding participation.So please join us February 1st and invite a friend to attend with you! Our children are depending on us to be their voice.  

email: info@afuturenotapast.org
phone: 404 612 4628
web: http://www.afuturenotapast.org

 

 

FBI Heralds Kaffie McCullough–AFNAP

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

JJF’s Kaffie McCullough received yet another award on behalf of AFNAP for her nearly twelve years of work to help children being prostituted, and to put a stop to the demand for prostituted children.

While the campaign she directs, A Future. Not A Past. (AFNAP) works with the GBI here in Atlanta training law enforcement to recognize and respond to victims of child sex-trade, now the FBI recognizes her work on a national level as awareness of the issue explodes across the country.

Read the full article below:

Published On: Wed, Dec 7th, 2011
news.gnom.es national newswire service

2011 Atlanta Division’s Director’s Community Leadership Award

Kaffie McCullough training law enforcement in Georgia

ATLANTA—Today, Special Agent in Charge Brian D. Lamkin, FBI Atlanta, presented the Director’s Community Leadership Award for 2011 to Kaffie McCullough, campaign director of A Future. Not a Past. (AFNAP), which—through the nonprofit Juvenile Justice Fund (JJF)—assists various law enforcement agencies and courts in addressing the needs of juvenile victims being exploited within the commercial sex industry. On March 16, 2012, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller will host all of the FBI’s 56 selectees from around the country at a national ceremony to be held at FBI Headquarters with Ms. McCullough present as Atlanta FBI’s honoree.

A Future. Not A Past.

Since 2007, the JJF’s statewide campaign, AFNAP, has worked to stop the prostitution of children in Georgia through groundbreaking research that drives strategies of prevention, intervention and education.

The mission of AFNAP is to protect and inspire hope in our children—the true victims of commercial sexual exploitation—as well as to disable demand and prosecute to the fullest extent the pimps and johns who exploit them.

AFNAP's 5K to Stop Demand

The AFNAP campaign has continued to address the issue of commercial sexual exploitation of minors through a four-tiered strategy of research, prevention, intervention, and education.

Along with other state entities, the campaign has pushed for tougher state laws to be implemented, and due to their combined efforts, Georgia House Bill 200 became law on July 1, 2011. With that, traffickers sexually exploiting victims under 18 face penalties including the possibility of life in prison and fines up to $100,000.

AFNAP Billboards are spread over Metro Atlanta

In June 2011, The Outdoor Advertising Association of Georgia donated billboards throughout Metro Atlanta to AFNAP to present public service announcements focusing on penalties associated with child sexual exploitation and to encourage community involvement and education.

Since 2007, AFNAP has utilized all means of technology to reach the masses, maintaining social networking sites to provide education and volunteer opportunities. Additionally, AFNAP sponsors an annual 5K run to fight the sexual exploitation of children.

Martha Turner is the Communications Officer for the
Juvenile Justice Fund

What Can YOU Do To Stop Child Sex Trafficking?

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

Atty. Gen. Sam Olens

Attend our Town Hall Breakfast this coming Monday where you can meet Atty. General Sam Olens, Senator Renee Unterman, Asst. US Atty. Susan Coppedge and other anti-trafficking experts.

Learn how you can impact legislation and make a difference in your community.

———————————————————————-

Senator Renee Unterman

A Future. Not A Past. (AFNAP) – the Juvenile Justice Fund’s campaign to stop the prostitution of children in Georgia – will host a free, community-wide Town Hall Breakfast this Monday, Dec. 12 beginning at 7:30 am at North Avenue Presbyterian Church.

Open to the public, this event will feature keynote speaker, Attorney General Sam Olens, who will give remarks on keeping Georgia’s children from becoming child sex trafficking victims.

Rose Scott WABE

Olens’ speech will be followed by a panel discussion – moderated by WABE’s Rose Scott – and featuring the following leaders currently fighting to keep children safe across the state of Georgia and the entire United States:

Sam Olens, Attorney General
Senator Renee Unterman, Georgia State Legislature
Susan Coppedge, Assistant US Attorney
Eliza Reock, Shared Hope International
Kirsten Widner, Emory’s Barton Child Law Clinic

Asst. US Atty. Susan Coppedge

“We are thrilled to have Attorney General Olens and so many other anti-child trafficking leaders as part of this upcoming event.

“All have been integral voices in the national campaign to stop the prostitution of children, and we applaud their willingness to speak with an even broader audience on the subject,” says Kaffie McCullough, AFNAP campaign director.

—————————————————————————————

In addition to the keynote speaker and panel discussion, AFNAP directors will present Georgia’s report card from the Shared Hope International Protected Innocence Initiative, a holistic strategy to promote zero tolerance for child sex trafficking. Under this initiative, Shared Hope International released 51 individual report cards nationwide based on the Protected Innocence Legislative Framework, an analysis of state laws. The report cards set a national standard of protection against domestic minor sex trafficking and strives to provide recommendations to improve a state’s grade.

About A Future. Not A Past.

Kaffie McCullough

Spearheaded by the Juvenile Justice Fund, A Future. Not A Past. is a statewide campaign to stop the prostitution of girls in Georgia by building a barrier between children and those who seek to harm them through commercial sexual exploitation. The campaign is tirelessly addressing the issue through a four-tiered strategy of research, prevention, intervention and education. It is the mission of AFNAP to protect and inspire hope in these girls, the true victims of this illicit practice … as well as to disable demand and prosecute the pimps and johns who make the prostitution of children a gruesome reality in Georgia. For more information about efforts to stop the prostitution of children in Georgia, visit www.afuturenotapast.org.

 

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

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.

Sex+Money: A National Search for Human Worth

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

Sex+Money: A National Search for Human Worth is a documentary about domestic minor sex trafficking and the movement to fight it. The team is currently traveling the country screening the film and hosting awareness raising events.

Join them tonight in Tull Hall at Emory University’s School of Law from 6:00pm-8:30pm. Our own Kaffie McCullough will be speaking on a panel about ways the community can get involved.

 

Join Us in Our 2011 Annual Campaign!

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

The Juvenile Justice Fund’s Annual Giving Campaign is your opportunity to make a substantial difference in the lives of children and families across the region.

We know that every person has value. Every person has something to contribute. Every person has dignity.

We know that every person deserves a chance and we are dedicated to playing an important role in helping children and families overcome challenging circumstances in order to become productive and vibrant members of the community.

Join us in serving the children and families in Georgia’s juvenile justice system. Please consider making a donation to support this important work. As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, your donation is tax-deductible to the fullest extent of the law.

We know that times are difficult and we want you to know that your gift is greatly appreciated and welcomed by everyone at the Juvenile Justice Fund, and most importantly, by the children and families we serve.

Together, we will continue to have a positive impact on children and their families in our community.

You can donate online or by sending a check or cash to the
Juvenile Justice Fund
395 Pryor Street, Suite 2117
Atlanta, GA 30312

Thank you for your support of the Juvenile Justice Fund.

Halloween and Human Trafficking

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

A student from the Center for Youth Leadership prepares to hand out Human Trafficking Halloween Candy Bags

The Center for Youth Leadership, based at Brien McMahon High in Norwalk, Connecticut, has created a model of youth activism called socially engaged philanthropy. One of the issues they focus on is stopping human trafficking.

As part of this initiative, they pass out Human Trafficking Halloween Candy bags to students in between classes. Inside each bag is a note that says “she gets tricked out and he gets all the treats”, along with information about Backpage.com and the national trafficking hotline number.

We are so glad to see high school students taking a creative approach to raise awareness among their peers.