Posts Tagged ‘Jennifer Swain’

‘Victim becomes role model’

Tuesday, September 20th, 2011

A Future. Not A Past. Advocate Keisha Head shares her story with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution…

Child prostitution victim becomes role model
By Andria Simmons
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Keisha Head

In her role as counselor and mentor for young girls, Keisha Head is poised, polished and polite.

But she need only look in the mirror to be reminded of a troubled past. The name of her former pimp, “Sir Charles,” is literally branded across the top of her back in a dark, swirling script.

On a recent morning, the 31-year-old settled into a chair in a cheerfully decorated room at the Fulton County Juvenile Justice Center where she helps girls identified as being at risk for child sexual exploitation.

Head didn’t wait for questions before letting her life story unspool. It is a story of hitting bottom — hard — but then lifting herself above her past to become a positive role model.

Born to a schizophrenic single mother, Head was sent to live with a family member at age 4. The new home was far from a safe haven, though. She was sexually abused for the next eight years by two older male relatives.

By the time she was 12, Head was acting out so much that she was sent back to her mom. The situation was untenable from the start, with her mother wandering the streets at all hours and being committed several times to a state mental hospital.

Child protective services intervened when Head stopped going to school and placed her in emergency children’s shelter. For the next four years, she bounced among 42 foster or group homes. That is, when she wasn’t trying to run away.

At 16, she got pregnant and was so ill-equipped for motherhood that she gave custody of her newborn daughter to the father.

“After that I was very brokenhearted,” Head said. “I became very numb.”

Head was suicidal, dirty and hungry when she turned to a friend for help. Her friend said “I know somebody who can help you.”

That was the night she met “Sir Charles.” He seemed well-dressed, considerate, nice.

He set her up in his house with seven other girls who welcomed her like the family she never had.

He also told her that if she wanted to take care of herself, she needed to strip at a nightclub where several other of the girls worked. But that job lasted only three days before Sir Charles gave her a new task: prostitution.

He took her to Stewart Avenue (now Metropolitan Parkway) in downtown Atlanta and gave her a quota of $1,000 a night. If she didn’t comply, Sir Charles threatened to harm her daughter.

For the next six months, she wore high heels and skimpy outfits as she worked the corner of 14th Street and Crescent Avenue in Midtown, carefully following her pimp’s rules to avoid violent beatings.

During that period, Head said she was raped 15 to 20 times. Once, she was forced to jump from a car traveling 60 mph to escape from a john who tried to kidnap her.

“I saw a lot of girls getting in cars, and you never saw them again,” Head said. “I knew if I stayed on that track, I would die.”

To read the rest of Keisha’s story, please click here.

Take Your Steps to Stop Demand

Monday, September 19th, 2011

To learn more, visit A Future. Not A Past.’s website.

Raising Awareness in Israel

Friday, September 16th, 2011

I strongly believe that ending injustice requires creativity. I am always encouraged to learn about new and different ways people are dreaming up to help end sex trafficking. I recently learned about a campaign in Israel that used a store display in a Tel Aviv mall to raise awareness about sex trafficking in the country and to gain support for legislation that would make it illegal for men to purchase sex.

Watch this video from the CNN Freedom Project to learn more:

Check out this article for more information.

Allison Hood is the Operations Coordinator
for the Juvenile Justice Fund.

What Can YOU Do To Stop Child Sex Trafficking?

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

#13 Run or walk with us at our 7200 Steps to Stop Demand 5k.

www.afuturenotapast.org

Did you know that 7200 men purchase sex from adolescent girls each month here in Georgia?

Run or walk with us on Saturday, October 1st at 8:30am in Candler Park as we raise funds and awareness to stop the prostitution of children by focusing on disabling demand.

Register and get your Steps to Stop Demand t-shirt and help raise your voice to speak out against those who seek to purchase sex with adolescent girls. Registration is $20 before September 26th. You can register online, complete the mail-in form, or raise pledges online.

Join us and TAKE YOUR STEPS as we raise awareness to stop the demand for prostituted children in Georgia.

Plank to Stop Demand

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

Join us at 8:30am on Saturday, October 1st for A Future. Not A Past.’s 7200 Steps to Stop Demand 5k at Candler Park.

Prior to the start of the race, all attendees will be asked to participate in a mass “planking” in opposition to human trafficking – viewed as modern day slavery.

Planking – the popular fad of lying face down in various locations – is not directly related to slavery, however, it is a fact that slaves were sometimes transported on ships and positioned on “plank beds” – lying face up, chained side-by-side and tightly compact (see drawing).

This is the position A Future. Not A Past. will ask attendees to assume to show opposition to child sex trafficking and to support the estimated 400-plus girls prostituted in Georgia each month.

www.afuturenotapast.org

“Though the fad of face-down ‘planking’ is not directly related to slavery, as rumor has it, we will be using an alternate planking position, which was, in fact, commonly used to transport slaves on ships – tightly packed, side-by-side and face up,” says Kaffie McCullough, Campaign Director for A Future. Not A Past.

“As slavery was a terrible crime of the past, modern day sex slavery – which many young girls experience at the hands of pimps and buyers – is a crime that must be fought by all today.”

Kaffie McCullough, A Future. Not A Past. Campaign Director

“Our hope is this event will increase awareness about penalties men can incur, thus decreasing the estimated 7,200 men buying sex with young girls each month,” says McCullough. “By walking or running, participants will contribute to decreasing demand – and ultimately will save minor victims of sex trafficking.”

For more information on the event, please visit A Future. Not A Past.’s website or email info@afuturenotapast.org.

What Can YOU Do To Stop Child Sex Trafficking?

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

#12 Attend A Future. Not A Past.’s Community Ambassador Training.

The Community Ambassador Training is a a free 3 hour training session to educate any community member on the commercial sexual exploitation of children (CSEC) and disabling the demand for those prostituted children here in Georgia.

Find out what the warning signs are and what options are available to help protect our children. Learn how to use YOUR voice to raise awareness in YOUR community! Make sure you are registered by emailing info@afuturenotapast.org to receive final details!

Saturday, September 10, 2011
8:30am-12:00pm
Morehouse College
Atlanta University Center, Room Number To Be Determined
830 Westview Drive SW
Atlanta, GA 30314

Continental breakfast will be provided

Email info@afuturenotapast.org for more information! RSVP is required.

There is no such thing as a child prostitute. Countless girls are coerced, abused, and forced to live a life of exploitation at the hands of predators. Become involved in the fight to protect our children. For more information visit www.afuturenotapast.org or call 404.613.4555.

WPBA-TV 30 This Sunday

Friday, August 19th, 2011

Jennifer and Keisha pictured with Ga. Governor Nathan Deal

JJF’s Jennifer Swain and Keisha Head (A Future. Not A Past.) are busy of late.

Don’t miss their interview on PBA as they discuss the various ways they are raising awareness about the prostitution of children, and the new initiative to curb demand for it.

Hosted by Angela Robinson, “Living Hell: Child Sexual Exploitation” airs on WPBA-TV 30 this coming Sunday, August 21st at 9:00 am.

http://www.pba.org/

Through various international collaborations, IN CONTACT has traveled around the globe to bring viewers culturally relevant shows on South Africa, Jamaica, Barbados, the islands of Turks and Caicos, and Kenya.

New Billboard Sighting

Sunday, July 31st, 2011

Billboards targeting child sex trafficking are springing up in Metro Atlanta

The latest sighting we have of our billboard is at the corner of Huff Rd and Atlanta Rd (in west Midtown/near Howell Mill). It’s right over a gentleman’s club.

JJF has a total now of at least 8 billboards in the Metro Atlanta Area. When you see a billboard, let us know as we track them across our city. Email us at info@juvenilejusticefund.org when you see this billboard and we will add it to our roster. Here are the locations of the other  7 billboards. Have you seen one?

  • Conyers (need exact location)
  • Spaghetti Junction, at 285-W.
  • I-85 South and Shallowford Rd., Exit 93, on the right.
  • I-285 at Riverdale
  • I-85 at Cheshire Bridge
  • Hwy 141 at McGinnis Ferry
  • I-85 at Sylvan Road

Kaffie McCullough and Jennifer Swain with WSB News

Developed by Kaffie McCullough and Jennifer Swain (A Future. Not A Past.) the billboards are sweeping across the city to let people know about the consequences of purchasing sex from underage girls.

Thanks to HB 200, the laws offer greater support to victims of child prostitution, and harsher penalties for johns and pimps.

What Can YOU Do To Stop Child Sex Trafficking?

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

#10 Become a Mobile Mentor for the Voices Project.

Voices Project Staff

The Voices Project, our new initiative under the Center to End Adolescent Sexual Exploitation, is a direct service program which empowers adolescent girls against the vulnerabilities of child sex trafficking. Our chief affirmation, “Yesterday I found my voice – Today I’m here to shout about it!”  fuels our mission to empower girls and provide opportunities through healthy and holistic education.

Unfortunately, the girls that would most benefit from the Voices Project are also the girls that have the most significant barriers preventing their involvement.

One Voice Can...

Safe and consistent transportation is not readily available for every girl.  Her caregiver often relies on costly public transit or friends and family to get to work, get groceries, and do other daily errands. Becoming a Mobile Mentor to help an at-risk girl is a small way to stay connected with your community and make a difference in someone’s life.

If you, or your group, are interested in being a Mobile Mentor, please contact Jennifer Swain at 404.613.4555 or jennifer.swain@fultoncountyga.gov.

Sharing a Hug

We are aware that the above request may not be designed to fit your exact schedule or volunteer availability, but if you are willing – we invite you to call for more details as we may be able to adjust requirements to fulfill your need.

Please see the information sheet for more information. You are also invited to join us for an information session to learn how you can join the fight to prevent a young girl from becoming a child sex trafficking victim.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011
6:00p.m.
Fulton County Juvenile Court
395 Pryor Street SW
1st Floor/Room 1132
Atlanta, GA 30312

Have You Seen It?

Monday, July 18th, 2011

Let us know when you find a new billboard

JJF has a total now of at least 7 billboards in the Metro Atlanta Area. Another digital billboard was sighted this weekend in Conyers. When you see a billboard, let us know as we track them across our city. Email us at info@juvenilejusticefund.org when you see this billboard and we will add it to our roster. So far we have confirmed 7 billboards at the following locations. Have you seen one?

  • Conyers (need exact location)
  • Spaghetti Junction, at 285-W.
  • I-85 South and Shallowford Rd., Exit 93, on the right.
  • I-285 at Riverdale
  • I-85 at Cheshire Bridge
  • Hwy 141 at McGinnis Ferry
  • I-85 at Sylvan Road

Developed by Kaffie McCullough and Jennifer Swain (A Future. Not A Past.) the billboards are sweeping across the city to let people know about the consequences of purchasing sex from underage girls.