Awareness – Safe House Project https://www.safehouseproject.org Fri, 21 Nov 2025 19:36:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://www.safehouseproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/cropped-Asset-42-32x32.png Awareness – Safe House Project https://www.safehouseproject.org 32 32 50 Reasons We’re Grateful for Safe House Project’s Impact https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/50-reasons-were-grateful-for-safe-house-projects-impact/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/50-reasons-were-grateful-for-safe-house-projects-impact/#respond Fri, 21 Nov 2025 19:34:52 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3877 50 Reasons We’re Grateful for Safe House Project’s Impact Victims & Survivors at the Center The courage of victims who reach out for help, trusting us with their safety Every...

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50 Reasons We’re Grateful for Safe House Project’s Impact

Victims & Survivors at the Center

  1. The courage of victims who reach out for help, trusting us with their safety
  2. Every survivor who believes they deserve better, even when the odds are stacked against them
  3. Survivor voices being elevated in everything we do
  4. The 17-year-olds who are brave enough to ask for help
  5. Every person who uses Simply Report to take their first step toward freedom
  6. Every single victim who trusts Safe House Project’s team to get them to safety

Programs & Innovation

  1. Simply Report – our technology platform connecting victims to help
  2. Our ability to certify community-based programs nationwide
  3. The goal to certify 100 programs and the progress we’re making
  4. CORE – our certification program raising the standard of survivor care
  5. Team Protector’s Podcast launching to expand our reach

Growth & Impact

  1. Record-breaking growth in identification and support requests
  2. States requiring anti-trafficking training or the use of Simply Report
  3. Certifying community-based programs that serve survivors with excellence
  4. The improvements we’ve made in how we serve based on survivor feedback and data
  5. Every barrier to services we’ve been able to remove
  6. Training that has reached hundreds of thousands of people

Our Response Team

  1. Volunteers who answer our response line, ready to help 24/7
  2. The taxi driver who dropped everything to help a victim in need
  3. Team members who take the toughest cases and find a way to help
  4. Staff who understand mental health crises and respond with consistency and compassion
  5. The steadiness of our operations team making things happen behind the scenes every day

Partners & Community

  1. Partner programs hungry to learn, connect, and grow together
  2. Anti-trafficking organizations across the US working to break down barriers
  3. Task forces fighting to eradicate trafficking from multiple angles
  4. Partners and collaborators who do the work without needing recognition
  5. Our Community Review Board volunteers who guide our work

Supporters

  1. $700,000+ raised through our annual Galas
  2. Every donor, including those who give $5 a month
  3. Record donations that allow us to expand our reach
  4. Funds raised through partner initiatives and fundraising events
  5. People who believe this work matters enough to invest in it

Ambassadors

  1. 34 Ambassadors in 15 states (with 14 in training and 5 more states joining!)
  2. Ambassadors who carry Simply Report cards everywhere, leaving them in public places
  3. Community members praying those cards will be found by someone ready to exit
  4. Volunteers who give their time to fight trafficking in their communities
  5. People willing to get trained on identification and speak up

Our Team

  1. The big, open, humble hearts of our entire team who show up every day for this mission
  2. Leadership that leads with prayer, integrity, and servant hearts
  3. The courage to build a team of incredible women who lift each other up instead of tearing each other down
  4. A culture where everyone has a voice and drama has no place
  5. The woman-power driving this organization forward with excellence

Resources & Learning

  1. The resources we can connect survivors with to remove barriers
  2. Attending the Global Leadership Summit and bringing those lessons back to our team
  3. Learning from books like “High Road Leadership” to strengthen our integrity
  4. Using tools like Clifton StrengthsFinder to understand how we work best together

The Daily Work

  1. The little moments when things just “work” despite the odds
  2. White papers that bring perspective and insight to complex issues
  3. The ability to pull together what’s needed in crisis moments
  4. A safe and productive place to rebel against something worth rebelling against – human trafficking

To everyone who stands with Safe House Project in the fight against human trafficking: thank you. Together, we’re changing lives and building a world where exploitation has no place.

<p>The post 50 Reasons We’re Grateful for Safe House Project’s Impact first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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How Can I Tell if Someone is being Trafficked? https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/how-can-i-tell-if-someone-is-being-trafficked/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/how-can-i-tell-if-someone-is-being-trafficked/#respond Fri, 14 Nov 2025 19:03:26 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3864 In the U.S., the general perception of what human trafficking looks like has been shaped by media portrayals, often involving abduction, physical restraints, or victims being smuggled across international borders....

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In the U.S., the general perception of what human trafficking looks like has been shaped by media portrayals, often involving abduction, physical restraints, or victims being smuggled across international borders. In reality, trafficking is far more often invisible, hiding in plain sight in neighborhoods and across rural and urban communities alike. Victims often appear to have normal daily lives, interacting with others at school, work, and the grocery store.

Because human trafficking can take so many forms and frequently relies on psychological rather than physical control, it can be very difficult to spot. However, learning to recognize the signs of trafficking is one of the most important things you can do to help someone who may be looking for help.

Whether you are a parent, teacher, healthcare provider, neighbor, or concerned community member, you do not need to be an expert to notice when something is wrong and take action. By staying alert and understanding the real red flags for human trafficking, you can be a vital part of creating opportunities for trafficking victims to find freedom and begin their journey to healing.

What Human Trafficking Looks Like

Human trafficking is defined as the exploitation of individuals through force, fraud, or coercion to perform labor or engage in commercial sexual activity. It is important to note that any commercial sexual activity involving minors is considered sex trafficking, regardless of the presence of force, fraud, or coercion. In the U.S., the legal definition of human trafficking includes both sex trafficking and labor trafficking, although sex trafficking is more commonly identified.

Many people assume that human trafficking victims are always strangers, from other countries, or people who have been kidnapped and held captive. However, most U.S. cases involve traffickers that the victim already knows and trusts. This is often a family member, romantic partner, friend, employer, or other authority figure. In fact, between 80% and 90% of U.S. human trafficking victims in 2020 were exploited by someone they knew. This reality makes human trafficking incredibly difficult to detect. Victims often remain in their home communities and continue to live outwardly “normal” lives while experiencing unimaginable abuse in silence. 

Another misconception is that victims of human trafficking are unable to leave because of physical restraints. This is usually not the case, as traffickers use a wide range of control tactics to gain and maintain power over their victims. These may include physical violence, psychological abuse and manipulation, threats of harm to themselves or their loved ones, isolation from familial or social support systems, and financial abuse. Many traffickers also introduce trauma bonds, in which they use cycles of abuse and affection or approval to create strong psychological attachments with their victims. In some cases, traffickers weaponize essential needs like food, shelter, or medication to control their victims or threaten to expose private information or images. Many traffickers force their victims to use drugs or alcohol to make them more compliant or take advantage of existing addictions. Some traffickers use law enforcement as a threat, saying that their victims will be arrested, imprisoned, or even deported. These methods create a constant state of fear, dependence, confusion, and isolation, making it extremely difficult for victims to seek help or leave on their own.

Red Flags of Human Trafficking

There is no one-size-fits-all indicator that someone is being trafficked, since human trafficking takes so many forms in many different populations. However, there are behavioral, emotional, physical, and situational signs that may suggest someone is experiencing exploitation. These signs do not confirm trafficking on their own, but if multiple are present, it is always worth reporting your concerns.

  • Behavioral Red Flags:
      • Seems unusually fearful, anxious, paranoid, or tense
      • Avoids eye contact or social interaction
      • Appears withdrawn, depressed, or overly submissive
      • Seems coached or unable to speak freely
      • Has inconsistencies in their story or avoids answering personal questions
  • Physical & Environmental Red Flags:
      • Has visible bruises, cuts, burns, or other signs of physical abuse, especially if in various stages of healing
      • Lacks personal possessions or appears to wear the same clothes repeatedly
      • Is always busy but does not share what they are doing
      • Seems malnourished or poorly cared for
      • Is not in control of their identification documents
      • Is always accompanied by someone who speaks for them or appears controlling
  • Work & School Red Flags:
      • Works long hours with no breaks or days off
      • Cannot leave their workplace or living situation without permission
      • Suddenly stops attending school or starts missing activities
      • Has expensive belongings they cannot afford
      • Expresses fear, confusion, or shame about where they live or work
  • Relationship Red Flags:
    • Refers to an older boyfriend, boss, or friend who is controlling about their time and social contact
    • Talks about owing someone money or needing to meet a quota
    • Expresses fear of disappointing or angering someone in their life
    • Appears to be in a relationship that is unequal or manipulative
    • Seems isolated from friends or family or is secretive about their social circle
    • Refrains from discussing their home life or family

Many trafficking victims are taught to be afraid of outsiders, and may fear retaliation if they do share something they aren’t supposed to. They may not disclose their abuse, even if asked directly. This makes it especially important to pay attention to your instincts and look for patterns of red flags.

Who Is Most Vulnerable to Trafficking?

Trafficking victims represent all demographic groups in the United States, but some populations are disproportionately targeted due to other social or systemic risk factors. Instead of focusing on a single demographic, most traffickers look for existing vulnerabilities that they can use to isolate and control their victims.

Trafficking victims often represent one or more of the following groups:

  • Children in unstable home situations, foster care, or the juvenile justice system
  • Individuals experiencing homelessness, unemployment, or poverty
  • LGBTQ+ youth facing family rejection or social isolation
  • People with disabilities or mental health problems
  • Individuals with a history of abuse or neglect, especially those with high ACE scores
  • Survivors of domestic violence or sexual assault
  • Immigrants or undocumented individuals with limited legal protections

Most traffickers seek out people who are already struggling to meet their basic needs, lack strong support systems, or have limited capacity to make their own choices. They may promise love, protection, employment, housing, or opportunity, only to later use those promises as tools for manipulation.

What Should You Do If You Suspect Trafficking?

If you have reason to believe that someone may be in a trafficking situation, it is important to act carefully to protect both yourself and the potential victim from harm. Confronting the trafficker or victim directly can result in increased danger, so instead, take the following steps:

  • Document what you see. Take note of the person’s appearance, behavior, and any relevant details, such as license plate numbers, addresses, or interactions. Make sure to write down which red flags you noticed, as well as names and the time and date of concerning events. Any of these details might be a critical piece of helping that potential victim.
  • Report your concerns. Even if you aren’t certain that what you’re seeing is human trafficking, you can still make a report. You aren’t responsible for proving that trafficking is taking place — trained professionals can use your report to take safe, careful action.

You can make a report by:

  • Submitting a tip through Safe House Project’s Simply Report app, which will be directed to the appropriate law enforcement office.
  • Calling local law enforcement, using 911 if someone is in immediate danger and a non-emergency line otherwise.

Reports can be made anonymously, and every tip helps build a fuller picture of what might be happening.

If the trafficking victim is alone and in a safe situation, they can contact Safe House Project directly for immediate support by calling our team at 507-769-0819 or filling out our support form at https://www.safehouseproject.org/refer/

  • Do not try to intervene yourself. Trafficking situations are often complex and dangerous. Trying to help the victim can put yourself at risk, or result in the victim being punished. It is always safer to let professionals with experience handle the situation.

What You Can Do To Help Now

Every person can make a difference in the fight against human trafficking in their own community. You can start by:

  • Learning the signs of human trafficking and educating others in your community, such as:
  • Supporting local organizations that provide housing, care, and advocacy for trafficking survivors through donations or volunteering
  • Become a Safe House Project Ambassador to learn to raise awareness and train your community to combat human trafficking
  • Downloading the Simply Report app

Together, we can restore hope, freedom, and a future to every survivor.

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Inside Congregate Care for Human Trafficking Survivors https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/inside-congregate-care-for-human-trafficking-survivors/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/inside-congregate-care-for-human-trafficking-survivors/#respond Mon, 10 Nov 2025 19:49:30 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3860 For many survivors of human trafficking, residential programs are one of the first steps toward safety and healing. These programs, often designed around a congregate care model, offer structure, supportive...

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For many survivors of human trafficking, residential programs are one of the first steps toward safety and healing. These programs, often designed around a congregate care model, offer structure, supportive relationships, and therapeutic care within a shared living environment. In theory, they provide consistency and community, which are essential building blocks for survivors to build stability and self-sufficiency. In practice, the survivor experience inside these spaces can vary widely.

To ensure congregate care supports rather than derails healing, programs must prioritize flexibility, individual dignity, and mutual trust. How these spaces are set up can either deepen a survivor’s sense of safety or reinforce the dynamics of control they are trying to leave behind.

The Limits of Congregate Care

Residential models for trafficking recovery care are not a one-size-fits-all solution. Healing is not a linear process, and it certainly is not universally experienced. For some survivors, the presence of others in close quarters provides comfort, a sense of belonging due to shared experiences, and daily support. For others, being constantly surrounded by people, especially strangers, can feel overwhelming, or even triggering. Many survivors are able to navigate their own healing journey without participating in structured residential care programs, especially when they are able to access external resources in their own community.

Programs that offer non-residential options, such as scattered-site housing and transitional access to therapeutic care, avoid these damaging assumptions that all survivors need or want communal living. When survivors are given the opportunity to choose how and where they heal, it opens doors for meaningful engagement in systems of care. A survivor’s participation in trafficking recovery care should affirm their agency and ability to make good decisions, not another space where control is removed.

Centering Survivor Perspectives

Many congregate care programs are designed by leadership and staff who do not live in them or have lived experience with human trafficking. Even with the best intentions, this distance from the survivors’ reality can result in care environments that feel overly structured, inflexible, or disconnected from their needs. Survivors are often expected to adapt to systems that were not designed for their real needs for support, leaving them feeling dismissed or disempowered when their experience in the program doesn’t align with what program staff believe is best for them.

Programs thrive when survivors are invited into the design, which is often best accomplished by including survivor leaders in the development process. This means not only listening to their feedback on current practices but also allowing their expertise to shape policies, routines, and expectations. Survivor-informed environments are more adaptive, more respectful, and ultimately more effective. Centering the voices of survivor leaders communicates to survivors entering the program that they can and should be active participants in their own healing journeys.

Making Structure Work

Clear programmatic structure is often considered a key element of trauma-informed care, and when implemented thoughtfully, it can be highly impactful for survivors as they build stability. Survivors can benefit greatly from predictable routines and straightforward expectations, especially as they move out of survival mode and the chaos of trafficking situations. However, structure alone is not enough to create safety. When rules are rigid, unexplained, or inflexible for personal needs, they can result in control rather than support.

After a trafficking experience, survivors are constantly evaluating whether they can trust their environment and whether their needs are going to be acknowledged and met. A primary question for many survivors is whether they are free to say no at all. In these circumstances, effective structure in trafficking recovery programs must balance consistency with individual autonomy, making sure that survivors feel supported while helping them establish helpful rhythms and stability. These programs create space for the setbacks inevitable in non-linear healing and are responsive to the evolving needs of survivors over their time in the program.

Supporting the Whole Person

Trafficking survivors bring their full selves into congregate care settings — their sense of identity, personal history, cultural backgrounds, family roles, and spiritual beliefs. For these programs to be truly supportive, they must do more than treat the symptoms of trauma and meet survivors’ basic needs. They must create space for the complexity of each individual survivor. Healing happens most effectively in environments where survivors are seen not only as people who have experienced harm, but also as parents, community members, and cultural individuals with deep personal identities.

  • Parenting Support

Many trafficking survivors are also parents, but few congregate care models are designed to accommodate their children or pregnancy. Survivors are often forced to choose between receiving critical services or remaining with their kids — an impossible decision that undermines both healing and family stability.

To address this gap, congregate care programs should:

  • Include parenting resources in their core services, such as access to childcare, parenting education, and trauma-informed supports specific to the needs of mothers and children.
  • Offer housing options that support family living.
  • Train staff to respond to the needs of both survivors and their children, with special attention to the ways trauma can affect parenting, attachment, and child development.
  • Develop policies that support, rather than penalize, the additional pressures and complexity of parenting as a trafficking survivor.
  • Cultural Inclusion

Inclusion also extends to cultural identity. When programs fail to reflect the racial, cultural, or ethnic diversity of the survivors they serve, it sends an implicit message about who belongs. This can be as subtle as not providing appropriate hair or skin care, or as obvious as being the only person of their background in the program or on staff.

Care that affirms cultural identity should include:

  • Representation in staffing and leadership whenever possible, which helps survivors feel understood and welcome in the program.
  • Access to culturally appropriate food, hygiene items, and language support.
  • Respect for diverse family structures and customs, allowing for flexibility in routines, celebrations, and communication styles that vary across cultures.
  • Program content that respects multiple cultural perspectives, such as materials, media, and activities that are not rooted in a single cultural narrative.
  • Willingness to adapt and learn, recognizing that no program can be perfectly representative but all can be teachable and responsive.
  • Faith & Spiritual Autonomy

Many congregate care programs have foundations in certain religions or faith traditions. For some survivors, spirituality is a vital part of their healing. For others, especially those who experienced spiritual abuse or manipulation during exploitation, faith may be a source of pain or distrust.

Programs can support spiritual healing without coercion by:

  • Always making faith-based activities optional, ensuring that participation is never a condition for receiving services or progressing in the program
  • Creating space for exploration, questions, or distance from religion.
  • Respecting each survivor’s personal beliefs without pressure to conform, including those with no religious beliefs or those practicing less-represented faiths.
  • Equipping staff to navigate spiritual care with humility, including recognizing the difference between offering support and imposing belief.
  • Providing access to spiritual or cultural leaders when requested.

Building Lasting Healing

Congregate care can play a meaningful role in a survivor’s healing journey, but its true success lies in how well it prepares survivors for long-term independence. Programs should build toward this from the start by teaching practical skills, increasing autonomy, and offering continued support after exit. When programs center survivor voices and foster trust, they create more than temporary shelter. They offer a foundation where survivors can build stability, reclaim identity, and move forward with confidence.

To learn more about survivor experiences in congregate care, watch Safe House Project’s webinar Inside the Experience: Understanding Life in Congregate Care Settings.

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Why Don’t Human Trafficking Victims Leave? https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/why-dont-human-trafficking-victims-leave/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/why-dont-human-trafficking-victims-leave/#respond Wed, 01 Oct 2025 14:38:33 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3688 A common misconception is that human trafficking in the United States usually involves kidnapping, where women and children are abducted and held against their will. While these situations can occur,...

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A common misconception is that human trafficking in the United States usually involves kidnapping, where women and children are abducted and held against their will. While these situations can occur, they represent a very small percentage of cases in the U.S. Instead, most trafficking victims are exploited by someone they know and trust in their own community.

When people first learn about human trafficking, one of the most common reactions is disbelief that someone would continue to stay in such an abusive and dangerous situation. The question that often follows is, “Why don’t they just leave?” This question, though understandable, reflects a lack of understanding about how human trafficking operates, the levels and severity of abuse experienced by survivors, and the complex barriers they face to finding freedom. In reality, leaving a trafficking situation is not a matter of willpower, but a long process of overcoming compounding layers of psychological, emotional, physical, legal, and systemic barriers that are often invisible to the rest of the world.

  • Complicated Relationships Between Traffickers & Victims

A significant majority of human trafficking situations involve a complex and pre-existing relationship between the trafficker and their victim. Many are exploited by someone they know and, in many cases, someone they love and trust. Their trafficker may be a parent or grandparent, a trusted adult, a romantic partner, a close friend, or an authority figure like a coach, employer, or community leader. Traffickers will often take advantage of a vulnerable person’s trust in them to start the grooming process, breaking down their boundaries and creating dependence. For many victims, the deep affection and loyalty they feel to their trafficker maintains a strong emotional bond, despite the abuse and mistreatment they experience.

The complexity of the trafficker/victim relationship is often a serious barrier to the survivor’s ability to leave. They may believe that they are betraying or abandoning their trafficker, especially in situations involving family members or romantic partners. Many fear that reporting the exploitation would harm their trafficker, send them to prison, or cost them a job or other relationships. While victims may recognize that they do not deserve to be treated this way, the emotional bond with their trafficker may seem too important to risk. Leaving can cost a trafficking victim an important relationship with family members, friends, or their community. The decision to break these bonds takes incredible courage.

  • Psychological Trauma & Trauma Bonds

Every survivor of human trafficking experiences complex trauma, often resulting in debilitating psychological issues that deeply affect their daily lives. 98% of survivors report at least one mental health problem while being trafficked, with an average number of more than 10 concerns. Survivors experience extremely high rates of clinical depression, anxiety disorders, complex PTSD, and other severe psychological conditions. On top of the day-to-day impact of trauma, these serious conditions can significantly impair a trafficking victim’s ability to think clearly, make decisions, or trust their own judgment. Trauma often distorts their perception of safety, healthy relationships, self-worth, and even reality, making it difficult to recognize abuse or believe that a different life is possible. Many survivors feel paralyzed by fear, guilt, shame, or dependence on their trafficker, all of which are intensified by mental health conditions. Without access to comprehensive and trauma-informed support, the mental and emotional weight of their experiences can make leaving feel not just unsafe, but impossible.

Psychological challenges are often compounded by trauma bonds, which are powerful emotional attachments that form when a victim experiences repeated cycles of affection and abuse from their trafficker. The trafficker may provide affection, attention, or gifts in one moment and become abusive in the next. These intermittent reward/punishment cycles create a distorted sense of loyalty or love, making the victim believe that they are at fault, that they are inherently worthless, and that no one else would care for them. This emotional entanglement becomes a significant barrier for trafficking victims to leave their abusers.

  • Lack of Access to Basic Necessities

Most trafficking victims do not have access to independent sources of housing, food, or income apart from their trafficker. Survivors may believe that leaving is impossible because they have nowhere to go, no money to buy food or necessities, or even no phone to call for help. These are not theoretical concerns, as many survivors live with the constant threat of homelessness, starvation, or danger on the streets if they act out or try to leave. This is especially true for minor survivors, undocumented individuals, and those without any support systems, safe family members, or access to community services. Survivors frequently report staying in trafficking situations longer because it was the only way to meet their immediate needs.

  • Fear of Retaliation & Violence

Traffickers often use threats of physical harm, violence, or assault to maintain control over their victims. These threats can extend beyond their victims to their family, children, or friends, and traffickers frequently prove their willingness to punish their victims through violence. 92% of trafficking survivors report experiencing physical violence during exploitation, including sexual assaults, beatings, and strangulation. The fear of retaliation keeps many trafficking victims in exploitation, as they are forced to choose between staying in a highly dangerous and abusive situation or risking real harm to themselves or someone they love.

  • Forced Substance Use & Addiction

Substance use is frequently used by traffickers as a method of control, with some victims forced or coerced into drug or alcohol use and others misusing substances to cope with the trauma. For many trafficking victims, the prospect of leaving becomes even more difficult due to fear of withdrawal, lack of treatment options, or shame. Unfortunately, a significant number of emergency support services, like local shelters, exclude individuals struggling with addiction or with recent substance use. Many survivors believe they will not be believed or helped, especially if they have faced judgment or rejection when attempting to report abuse in the past, making these psychological barriers just as powerful as physical ones. 

  • Criminalization & Fear of Law Enforcement

Many survivors are afraid to reach out for help because they fear arrest, deportation, or further abuse by authorities. This fear is often rooted in experience, as trafficking survivors are frequently criminalized for acts they were forced to commit, such as drug use or prostitution. These criminal records create lasting barriers to housing, employment, and legal protection. For undocumented survivors, the fear of deportation is compounded by threats from their traffickers. Even those with legal status may have experienced negative or traumatic encounters with law enforcement, and without trauma-informed responses, attempts to seek help can result in retraumatization or incarceration instead of support.

  • Isolation & Emotional Manipulation

Traffickers often isolate victims by cutting them off from friends, family, and any external support systems. This may be done physically by moving them to different locations or emotionally by instilling fear, shame, and distrust. Victims are frequently told that no one will believe them, that they are to blame for their situation, or that they will be arrested if they speak up. This manipulation is especially effective for individuals who are already marginalized, such as LGBTQ+ people, those living with disabilities, or people of color, who may have already experienced rejection or discrimination. The result is a deep sense of powerlessness and disconnection that makes reaching out for help feel impossible.

  • Systemic Gaps in Survivor Services

The lack of trauma-informed, survivor-centered services in the United States is a major barrier to freedom. Fewer than 1% of trafficking victims are ever identified, and of those who are, at least 80% are revictimized due to lack of emergency support or access to long-term care. Survivors who attempt to lelave trafficking situations often find themselves without a place to go or may wait weeks or months for a spot in a safe house program. During that time, they remain vulnerable to coercion, exploitation, violence, and homelessness. The limited availability of immediate and comprehensive services often leads survivors back to their traffickers or into another trafficking situation simply to survive.

Understanding how human trafficking affects survivors is essential to understanding why it is so difficult to leave. Instead of asking why survivors don’t leave exploitation, a more accurate question is, “What is preventing them from leaving, and what can we do to help?” The answer lies in recognizing that trafficking is not simply a series of bad choices or isolated events but a system of control that exploits a person’s vulnerabilities and strips away their independence. Survivors need pathways to safety that address both immediate needs and long-term healing, including safe housing, trauma-informed care, legal advocacy, and supportive communities. Effectively addressing the crisis of human trafficking requires us to intentionally dismantle the systems that leave people vulnerable to exploitation and prevent them from finding hope, freedom, and a future.

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Human Trafficking Survivors and Healthcare https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/human-trafficking-survivors-and-healthcare/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/human-trafficking-survivors-and-healthcare/#respond Tue, 23 Sep 2025 14:37:29 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3686 Healthcare settings are among the most frequent points of contact for human trafficking survivors. In fact, 88% of survivors access medical care while being actively exploited, and often multiple times...

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Healthcare settings are among the most frequent points of contact for human trafficking survivors. In fact, 88% of survivors access medical care while being actively exploited, and often multiple times during their trafficking experience. These encounters often happen during routine checkups, care for sickness, or emergency visits. Despite the likelihood and frequency of a trafficking survivor’s interactions with the healthcare system, fewer than 1% of survivors are ever identified.

One of the greatest challenges in addressing these missed opportunities for identification is that most healthcare professionals do not know what human trafficking looks like in their community or in a clinical setting. Without the right training, survivors are regularly treated for injuries or illnesses without any questions being asked about what caused them. Trafficking survivors may interact with providers and other healthcare workers many times without being identified.

When healthcare providers understand what to look for and how to respond to human trafficking, they can transform a standard medical visit into a meaningful point of connection, and even a first step toward freedom.

Recognizing the Survivor in the Room

Trafficking survivors frequently present in clinical settings with a mix of physical, psychological, and behavioral health problems. These signs may not indicate exploitation on their own, but when multiple signs are observed in one patient or alongside unusual behaviors, they warrant further attention and screening.

Physical Health Indicators:

  • Injuries or bruises that are untreated, poorly healed, or in various stages of healing
  • Chronic infections or repeated sexually transmitted infections (STIs)
  • Apparent evidence of rough or violent sexual activity
  • Signs of malnutrition or dehydration
  • Psychomatic symptoms, such as chronic pain with no clear medical cause
  • Fatigue, sleep disturbances, or reported insomnia
  • Frequent or recurring complaints of unexplained pain or discomfort

Mental or Behavioral Health Indicators:

  • Anxiety, depression, or panic symptoms
  • Emotional dysregulation or difficulty managing strong emotions
  • Emotional numbness, withdrawal, or unresponsiveness during visits
  • Nervousness or sensitivity to being asked questions or being touched
  • Irritability, agitation, or being easily overwhelmed
  • Difficulty focusing or maintaining consistency with follow-up care
  • Signs of post-traumatic stress, such as hypervigilance or an exaggerated startle response

Substance Use Indicators:

  • Reports of drug or alcohol use during periods of instability or coercion
  • Substance use patterns that align with emotional stress or a desire to dissociate
  • Difficulty remembering how much or when substances were last used
  • Evidence or disclosure of being coerced or forced into using substances

Social & Environmental Indicators:

  • Being accompanied to the medical visit by someone who answers questions for them or refuses to leave the room
  • Hesitation to speak openly or make eye contact
  • Signs of fear or deferring to another person before responding
  • Lack of access to or control over identification documents or personal belongings
  • No known address or reports of frequent moves, unstable housing, or homelessness
  • Limited or no access to health insurance or consistent medical care

In many cases, survivors do not see themselves as victims of human trafficking, especially if they do not know what trafficking is. They may believe that their experiences are normal or deserved, or even the consequences of their own choices, especially if they were groomed at a young age or manipulated emotionally by a trusted individual. Healthcare providers must understand that trafficking survivors are not likely to use language like “abuse” or “trafficking” to describe their situation. Rather, providers should be aware of the common medical indicators of trafficking victimization and complete a screening process if there is any suspicion of potential exploitation.

Changing the Survivor Narrative in Healthcare

Healthcare providers can play a powerful role in helping trafficking survivors feel safe during medical visits and take advantage of the opportunity to seek help. Even small, intentional actions can change a survivor’s understanding that they will be believed if they speak up, changing their story from continued exploitation to freedom and healing.

  • Addressing Stereotypes & Biases

Providers must prevent their own perceptions about trafficking victims from impacting their ability to see the signs of exploitation in any patient. This is especially important when considering how often trafficking survivors present in healthcare spaces with other primary concerns, such as homelessness, addiction, mental health challenges, behavioral health problems, or sexual health issues.

  • Investing in Training

The signs of human trafficking are often hidden behind other medical complaints. Survivors may seek care for injuries, infections, anxiety, pregnancy, or substance-related concerns, but these symptoms result from ongoing abuse rather than the more common reasons. With targeted and comprehensive education, medical workers can learn to recognize these patterns, ask gentle and non-threatening screening questions, and respond effectively when the signs of exploitation become clearer.

  • Offering Privacy

Many healthcare organizations have existing policies about separating patients from guests or asking standard questions about feeling safe, but these practices should be taken a step further if there is any suspicion of trafficking activity. Many survivors are not allowed to attend medical visits without being accompanied by their trafficker, and they are unlikely to disclose sensitive information even if their trafficker is not in the room. Offering an intentional private moment, even under the pretense of a routine procedure, can be a critical opportunity for a provider to invite self-disclosure and for a survivor to feel safe enough to share.

  • Prioritizing Clarity & Consent

Many survivors of human trafficking experience ongoing violations of their boundaries and agency, including invasive or dehumanizing treatment from people in positions of authority. Medical procedures can feel threatening or triggering, even when they are standard practices or medically necessary. It is critical for providers to present choices during examinations and clear explanations of all procedures and steps, along with asking for consent before physical contact, to help survivors feel more secure during a healthcare visit.

  • Recognizing Trauma Responses

The way a trafficking survivor expresses fear, pain, or distress may look very different from what a healthcare worker expects. Survivors are often forced to control or hide their emotions in order to prevent further harm, and this response can become a habit that appears even in situations that are not exploitative. However, understanding that these behaviors are common trauma responses can help providers respond with empathy instead of frustration.

  • Creating Calm Environments

The sensory experience of a healthcare visit can deeply impact a survivor’s sense of safety, especially when considering the effect of loud noises, intense conversations, and rapidly changing environments on individuals with complex trauma or PTSD. Providers can mitigate this by speaking clearly, making intentional eye contact, and creating space in the conversation for survivors to express their need for a calmer environment. Even small changes, like offering a quiet space to sit or waiting to ask questions until in a more private space, can be significant.

  • Providing Trusted Resources

Many survivors, even if they choose to share about their experiences, may not be ready to take action during a healthcare visit. In all situations, providers should have access to an existing list of vetted resources, including local shelters, advocacy groups, crisis hotlines, or mental health providers, to encourage survivors to consider tangible options without forcing a decision. Providing this information discreetly may equip survivors to hold on to it longer and take action when they are ready.

For many survivors of human trafficking, the healthcare system may be one of the few places where help is accessible. Providers who are willing to look beyond surface-level symptoms and engage patients with care, curiosity, and patience have a unique opportunity to create a transformative moment of safety. Every appointment or encounter, no matter how routine, holds the potential to become a turning point for trafficking survivors living in exploitation.

<p>The post Human Trafficking Survivors and Healthcare first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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The Lie We Still Believe: Human Trafficking Is a Foreign Problem https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/the-lie-we-still-believe-human-trafficking-is-a-foreign-problem/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/the-lie-we-still-believe-human-trafficking-is-a-foreign-problem/#respond Fri, 19 Sep 2025 16:09:39 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3667 “That doesn’t happen here.” It’s the sentence we hear the most. The disbelief is always familiar. The nervous laugh, the quick head shake, the hopeful glance toward anything else. Because...

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“That doesn’t happen here.”

It’s the sentence we hear the most.
The disbelief is always familiar. The nervous laugh, the quick head shake, the hopeful glance toward anything else.
Because the truth is harder to swallow: Human trafficking is not a foreign problem. It’s an American one.
It doesn’t require a border crossing. It doesn’t look like a white van in the parking lot.
It often looks like a child sold by someone they trust.
It looks like a teenager still showing up to school. A child still sleeping in their own bed.
Every year, an estimated 300,000 children are trafficked right here in the United States. And 40% of them?
They’re sold by a family member.

The Real Face of Trafficking in the U.S.

Human trafficking in America doesn’t match the movie scenes.
It rarely involves chains. It rarely involves strangers. It almost never involves movement across state lines.
In fact, movement isn’t even required for a case to qualify as trafficking.
According to the U.S. legal definition, what matters is exploitation, not location.

So what does trafficking really look like here?

  • A 13-year-old girl being sold by her grandmother to cover rent
  • A boy trafficked by his coach, youth leader, or even a parent
  • A young woman manipulated online, promised a job, then threatened into sex work
  • Victims of every race, gender, zip code, and faith background — from suburbs to small towns to cities

And yet, the myth persists:
“That happens over there.”
“That happens to other people.”
In a recent national data study, only 0.3% of Non-Gen Z respondents mentioned human trafficking as a top issue, ranking it 27th overall.

The issue isn’t just hidden. It’s misunderstood.

If We Want to End It, We Have to See It

When we keep trafficking at a distance, we keep survivors in the dark.
When we say, “That could never happen here,” we close the door to identifying the 99% of victims who remain unseen.
Yes — 99% of children trafficked in the U.S. are never identified.
We cannot fight what we refuse to see.
But once we name it, once we acknowledge that trafficking is happening in our neighborhoods, our schools, our churches, our families — something shifts.

  • We start to notice the signs.
  • We start asking better questions.
  • We start funding real solutions — like safe housing, survivor-led programs, and prevention education.

And perhaps most importantly, we start telling the truth.

Here’s What to Do Next

You don’t need to have all the answers. You just need to start with action:

  • Learn what trafficking actually looks like. Take our free OnWatch™ training — it’s survivor-informed and only takes an hour.
  • Support survivor placement. Your donation helps us place victims into safe housing and comprehensive care.
  • Sign the petition. Help us hold lawmakers accountable and advocate for stronger policies that protect children now.

Every child deserves safety. Every survivor deserves a future.
And every one of us has a role to play in making that possible.
The lie says trafficking is a foreign issue. The truth is it’s happening here.
And truth is where the work begins.

The Disconnect Between Headlines and Reality

Major news stories rarely show the day-to-day ways trafficking is sustained in U.S. communities.
You might hear about international rings. You might hear about sting operations. What you don’t hear about: the 15-year-old in rural Alabama being exploited after school. The 12-year-old in Northern Virginia quietly controlled by a family member. The system that misses them entirely.

This disconnect creates a dangerous effect: people wait to act until the problem looks cinematic.
But most trafficking cases don’t make the news — they unfold slowly, invisibly, and locally. If we’re only watching for drama, we’ll miss the people living it.

Survivors Are Already Speaking. Are We Listening?

Survivors know exactly what needs to change. They’ve told us — in surveys, in interviews, in legislation. They’ve said that shame, silence, and ignorance are barriers. That well-meaning people often say the wrong thing, or worse, nothing at all.

They don’t need pity. They need policy.
They don’t need saviors. They need systems that protect, fund, and follow through.

One survivor said it best:
“You gave me the greatest gift already. You gave me hope.”
We can’t give that hope if we’re still clinging to myths.

This Work Doesn’t Belong to Someone Else

It’s easy to believe this is someone else’s fight. Someone more experienced. More trained. More connected. But trafficking doesn’t wait for experts. It takes advantage of ordinary gaps in attention, compassion, and knowledge.

The places where we live, work, worship, and raise our kids — these are the places where prevention begins.

And we don’t need to have a background in law enforcement or social work to make a difference.

  • A coach who sees the signs
  • A teacher who believes the story
  • A parent who starts a conversation
  • A donor who funds another safe night

Trafficking exists in the cracks. So does the solution.

Safe House Project

At Safe House Project, we’re building a future where child trafficking ends with identification, intervention, and long-term care, not just escape.

Since 2017, we’ve empowered over 300,000 people to identify trafficking, supported the placement of hundreds of survivors into safe homes, and helped launch 479 beds across the U.S.

You don’t have to do everything. You just have to do something.
Join the fight. Donate, train, advocate, and help us end trafficking for good.

 

<p>The post The Lie We Still Believe: Human Trafficking Is a Foreign Problem first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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How Can I Protect My Child from Trafficking? https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/how-can-i-protect-my-child-from-trafficking/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/how-can-i-protect-my-child-from-trafficking/#respond Fri, 29 Aug 2025 14:14:53 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3593 The public perception of human trafficking often includes dramatic kidnappings, strangers lurking on dark street corners, or people smuggled across national borders. In reality, the vast majority of human trafficking,...

<p>The post How Can I Protect My Child from Trafficking? first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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The public perception of human trafficking often includes dramatic kidnappings, strangers lurking on dark street corners, or people smuggled across national borders. In reality, the vast majority of human trafficking, including child sex trafficking, in the United States begins in familiar places like schools, neighborhoods, or online spaces. It often involves people the child already knows or trusts. Understanding what human trafficking is, what it is not, and how parents and communities can stay vigilant are the first steps to protecting children from this crime.

What Increases a Child’s Risk of Being Trafficked?

Any child can be at risk of trafficking, but some factors significantly increase vulnerability to being targeted, such as:

  • Living in an unstable home environment, like those affected by neglect, addiction, frequent conflict or change, poverty, or homelessness
  • Experiencing emotional, physical, or sexual abuse
  • Feeling socially isolated, disconnected from peers, or unable to seek support from adults
  • Lacking access to consistent emotional support or supervision
  • Spending large amounts of time online without adult guidance
  • Identifying as part of the LGBTQ+ community
  • Spending time in foster care or the juvenile justice system
  • Having cognitive or physical disabilities

These vulnerabilities are not always easy to see, and a child may appear to be doing well on the outside while struggling internally. Many trafficked children continue to attend school and extracurricular activities while being exploited.

What Does Trafficking Look Like?

Most human traffickers take advantage of these existing vulnerabilities to gain control over their victims, rather than physical force or abduction. In fact, kidnapping cases make up a very small number of the total human trafficking cases in the U.S. each year, especially in child sex trafficking cases. Traffickers are far more likely to be a family member, romantic partner, authority figure, or another trusted person in the child’s life.

Instead, traffickers commonly use tactics like emotional manipulation and psychological abuse to isolate their victims from their support systems and create dependence on the trafficker for approval, affection, and other emotional needs. A cycle of abuse and affection creates trauma bonds, which can make it incredibly difficult for the victim to recognize what is happening to them and seek help. 

Traffickers may use the following strategies to connect with and exploit children:

  • Grooming is a process by which a trafficker builds an escalating relationship with a potential victim to manipulate and exploit them. It often involves gaining a child’s trust, identifying and meeting a specific emotional or material need, and gradually introducing control, secrecy, or abuse. Other manipulation tactics like guilt-tripping and gaslighting are often used during the grooming process to make the victim doubt their experience and hesitate to tell someone. Grooming can happen in person or online, and may include flattery, love-bombing, extravagant gifts, attention, promises of safety, or meeting basic needs like food or shelter. Over time, the trafficker will use this emotional relationship and dependence to isolate the child and introduce sexual exploitation.
  • Online relationships are an increasingly common method that child traffickers use to build relationships with children. Traffickers may pose as another child or a young adult to gain the child’s trust, often through shared interests, flattery, and emotional support. Once a relationship is formed, they use manipulation, secrecy, and coercion to pressure the child into sending explicit pictures or meeting in person. Some traffickers exploit children entirely online through threats, sextortion, or blackmail, while others arrange meetings to begin in-person abuse or exploitation. These tactics target a child’s need for connection and are often hidden through fear and shame.
  • Coercion & isolation are often used by traffickers to maintain control over their victims and prevent them from seeking help. They may use threats, emotional manipulation, or addiction to create fear and dependence. Younger children might be told not to trust their parents or warned that their loved ones will be hurt if they speak out. Older children and teens are often manipulated through romantic interest, blackmail involving explicit images, or the introduction of drugs and alcohol. Traffickers may also control their victims’ access to food, housing, or money, using these basic needs as leverage.

How Can I Keep My Child Safe?

Children are most at risk of being targeted by human traffickers when they have a limited support system and little adult supervision. By taking steps to understand what trafficking is and how your child might be vulnerable, you are already well on your way to protecting your child. Continuing to build trust, fostering open communication, and teaching your child how to recognize unsafe people and situations is a powerful next step. Trafficking is preventable, and you are your child’s first and most important line of defense.

Talk Openly & Start Early

Having ongoing, age-appropriate conversations with your child can reduce their risk of being targeted by a trafficker. From a young age, teach your child about body safety, consent, boundaries, and what healthy relationships look like. Let them know that no topic is off-limits and that they can talk to you or another trusted adult about anything, even if it feels scary or uncomfortable.

  • Ages 3-5:  Teach your child the correct names for their body parts and explain the difference between safe and unsafe touch. Simple illustrations like the “swimsuit rule”, in which no one should be allowed to touch or ask the child to touch areas covered by a swimsuit, can be helpful for children to understand physical boundaries without sexual context. Make sure to point out other safe adults in the child’s life, since traffickers often tell their victims not to say anything to their parents.
  • Ages 6-9:  Reinforce the importance of their own and others’ personal boundaries. Teach your child the difference between fun surprises and unsafe secrets to help them recognize when to ask for help. Continue building their network of safe adults as they enter school and other activities, and make sure they know that it’s okay to talk to these adults in an emergency or when they are afraid or uncomfortable.
  • Ages 10-13:  Begin having open, honest conversations about sex, consent, and body autonomy as your child enters pre-adolescence. Encouraging your child to ask questions can help remove the discomfort children feel about sex and establish open channels of communication if they need them later. Talk about the risks of pornography, sexting, and online grooming. Discuss where and how traffickers might approach them, both online and in person. Set digital safety guidelines together and ensure that their devices include contact information for trusted adults.
  • Ages 14-18:  As your child gains independence, focus on helping them develop a strong sense of identity, self-worth, and decision-making skills. Encourage them to reflect on their relationships and online interactions, and continue having intentional conversations about boundaries, consent, and staying safe. Make sure your child knows that they can continue relying on you if they feel uncomfortable or unsafe as they enter adulthood.

For additional tips and guidance on protecting your children, download Safe House Project’s OnWatch: Protecting Our Children guide.

Be Aware of Online Activity

The internet is one of the most common tools that traffickers use to reach children. Social media, gaming platforms, and messaging apps allow traffickers to start conversations, build trust, and groom children, often without the knowledge of parents or guardians.

Talk to your child regularly about what is and isn’t appropriate to share online. Discuss the dangers of sexting, sextortion, and talking to strangers. Encourage them to tell a trusted adult if someone online is asking personal questions, sharing explicit content, or trying to meet in person.

Use monitoring tools and parental controls when appropriate, but focus on building trust with your child first. Imposing tools that children view as restrictive or invasive may push them to engage in more unsafe digital activity, so make sure to have collaborative conversations with your child about why monitoring is needed. Invite your child to participate in setting healthy boundaries for themself online. Keeping devices in shared family spaces and maintaining an open-door policy for digital conversations can help prevent secrecy.

For more tools and tips for safe online activity, explore Safe House Project’s Online Safety Guide.

Know the Warning Signs

Many children who are being trafficked do not show obvious signs, but there are common red flags that could indicate a problem:

  • Unexplained absences from school or activities
  • Running away or frequently sneaking out
  • Older, controlling “friends” or romantic partners
  • New or expensive items that they cannot explain
  • Withdrawal, anxiety, or sudden personality changes
  • Physical injuries, substance use, or overly sexualized behavior for their age

If something feels wrong, trust your instincts. Open a careful conversation, make sure they know that they can come back to talk to you, and seek help from professionals if needed.

Be Proactive

The most powerful protective factor for any child is a strong, trusting relationship with a safe adult. Traffickers often prey on isolation, so building emotional connection can significantly reduce a child’s vulnerability. Make time to engage in your child’s world by asking questions, staying involved, and being present.

Communities play an essential part in protecting children as well. Learn how to recognize and report trafficking through Safe House Project’s free OnWatch Training. Share prevention resources with schools, youth groups, and parent networks, and advocate for trafficking awareness and survivor support programs.

If you ever suspect that a child might be at-risk or in danger, it is always a good idea to report it. Contact your local law enforcement or child protective services, or use Safe House Project’s Simply Report app to submit a tip.

<p>The post How Can I Protect My Child from Trafficking? first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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Online Danger Zones https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/online-danger-zones/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/online-danger-zones/#respond Tue, 12 Aug 2025 13:14:11 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3551 Online spaces are the modern gathering place for young people. They connect with friends, complete schoolwork, explore hobbies, and express themselves across a range of social platforms. For most children...

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Online spaces are the modern gathering place for young people. They connect with friends, complete schoolwork, explore hobbies, and express themselves across a range of social platforms. For most children and teens, connected devices are part of everyday life. Yet within these same spaces, predators and traffickers are finding new ways to reach, groom, and exploit youth, often before a trusted adult realizes anything is wrong.

The risks of online exploitation are expanding as quickly as the technology that enables it, and protecting children and youth requires informed, united, and proactive action.

A New Frontline in Online Exploitation

Phones, tablets, and gaming systems have blurred the line between physical and digital spaces. A child’s bedroom or classroom, once the safest spaces, can now be the setting for predatory contact. For some young people, especially those in foster care, the juvenile justice system, group homes, or those experiencing homelessness or social isolation, online spaces can feel like the only place they belong. That sense of connection, however, is exactly what traffickers exploit.

Online recruitment and grooming are rarely obvious. They often begin in ordinary conversations on social media, in group chats, or through multiplayer games. But the consequences, when these interactions escalate to abuse, extortion, or exploitation, are not limited to a child’s online life. Many victims carry deep emotional or psychological scars, driving too many to seek relief through risky behaviors, self-harm, or even suicide. This damage can reshape lives in permanent or long-standing ways.

How Predators Adapt

The digital environment has allowed predators and traffickers to scale their operations and mask their intentions in unprecedented ways. Many blend familiar grooming tactics with advanced technology, including:

  • Platform hopping to move conversations from public social media to encrypted apps like WhatsApp or Telegram
  • AI manipulation to create sexualized images, impersonate peers, or use chatbots to pressure youth into harmful actions
  • Identity exploitation by posing as friends, classmates, or members of shared interest groups
  • Gender-specific grooming, with praise and validation often used to target boys, and isolation tactics, love bombing, and threats used to target girls
  • Large-scale criminal networks operating across states and countries, making identification and prosecution difficult

These strategies are highly effective in environments where children or youth are unsupervised online, or where caregivers, parents, or guardians are unaware of how quickly a seemingly harmless interaction can turn dangerous.

Barriers to Protection

The systems originally designed to keep children and youth safe online are struggling, and often failing, to keep pace with the advancement of technology and digital access. Laws like Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act and the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act are decades out of date, written before the rise of modern social media and offering limited protection against today’s dangers. Recommendation algorithms, increasingly addictive and intuitive, intensify risk by steering young people toward escalating explicit content. For children, this can normalize unsafe behavior and lower defenses against predators. 

Turning Awareness Into Action

While the risks of online activity are serious, there are practical steps that families, communities, and organizations can take to protect themselves and those around them.

  • Increase visibility and transparency. Use technology that flags explicit content, unusual conversations, or sudden changes in online behavior. Pair these tools with open, nonjudgmental conversations about what children are seeing and experiencing online.
  • Integrate digital safety education. Schools can incorporate online safety into existing health or life skills programs. Community organizations can host workshops for parents, teachers, and mentors. National initiatives such as Gavin’s Law, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s No Escape Room, and the Department of Homeland Security’s Know2Protect campaign demonstrate how interactive and age-specific training can prepare both youth and adults to identify and prevent exploitation.
  • Build a culture of shared responsibility. Lawmakers can update outdated legislation and require greater transparency from tech companies. Platforms can commit to removing harmful content quickly and limiting features that enable grooming. Caregivers, parents, and guardians can model healthy digital habits and remain engaged in the online spaces their children use. Educators, coaches, and mentors can watch for warning signs and be a trusted source of support.

When every adult who interacts with youth understands their role in online safety, and when young people know how to recognize and respond to threats, communities become more resilient to exploitation.

Shaping a Safer Digital Future

The digital world will undoubtedly remain central to how children and youth learn, connect, and explore. The responsibility before us is to ensure that these spaces are safe, supportive, and free from exploitation. Meeting this responsibility requires decisive action on several fronts: updating laws to reflect the realities of modern technology, holding companies accountable for the safety of their platforms, and investing in prevention through proactive education, transparency, and community engagement.

Online threats are growing, but so can our capacity to respond. When communities work together — across families, schools, governments, and industries — we can minimize the risks, disrupt systems of exploitation, and build digital environments where young people can socialize and thrive without fear.

 

<p>The post Online Danger Zones first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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Safe House Project & TraknProtect: Partners in Eradicating Human Trafficking – A Unified Mission for Real Impact https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/safe-house-project-traknprotect-partners-in-eradicating-human-trafficking-a-unified-mission-for-real-impact/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/safe-house-project-traknprotect-partners-in-eradicating-human-trafficking-a-unified-mission-for-real-impact/#respond Tue, 05 Aug 2025 20:29:03 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3547 At Safe House Project, our mission goes beyond escape; it’s about restoration, freedom, hope, and empowerment. In the fight to end trafficking in America, these values aren’t just guiding principles;...

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At Safe House Project, our mission goes beyond escape; it’s about restoration, freedom, hope, and empowerment. In the fight to end trafficking in America, these values aren’t just guiding principles; they’re a lifeline.

But one thing remains clear: no organization can end trafficking alone.

That’s why we are proud to partner with communities and organizations like TraknProtect that share a collective mission. 

Together, we’re reimagining what it looks like to collaborate for impact, harness innovation for good, and build a future where every survivor has access to safe housing and a pathway to freedom and healing.

 

A Collective Mission, A Unified Force 

Human trafficking is a crisis that affects every community yet hides in plain sight. It’s complex, global, and deeply personal. Solving it requires more than awareness; it demands action across sectors, guided by shared values and a relentless pursuit of change. 

 

We sat down with our Co-Founder and COO, Brittany Dunn, and TraknProtect CEO, Parminder Batra, to discuss the importance of these partnerships in the fight against human trafficking.  

 

Q: This partnership is a powerful example of how innovation and advocacy can come together for impact. What does true collaboration look like to you, and how can more businesses – regardless of size – step into this space meaningfully? 

 

Brittany: The partnership between Safe House Project and TraknProtect shows what can happen when purpose-driven organizations unite around a shared mission. Our organizations connected at the AHLA Safety & Security Summit back in 2018. Since then, our collaboration has demonstrated that meaningful change occurs when innovation meets unwavering commitment to human dignity. 

 

Parminder’s dedication to leveraging her business as a force for lasting change has been instrumental in advancing our shared vision. Her approach to integrating anti-trafficking solutions into hospitality operations shows how business leaders can embed social responsibility into their core operations, not as an afterthought, but as a fundamental principle. 

 

True collaboration transcends transactional partnerships. It requires vulnerability, shared accountability, and a willingness to challenge existing systems. Our work together has involved honest conversations about industry blind spots. We’ve had joint problem-solving sessions that bridge technology and human-centered approaches.  

 

For businesses of any size looking to engage in this space meaningfully, the entry point isn’t about having massive resources; it’s about having genuine commitment. You must commit to measuring impact beyond profit margins. Even more, you have to be willing to fail forward together and learn from frontline experiences in order to refine your strategies. 

 

This work requires all of us to move beyond corporate social responsibility initiatives toward what I call “collective impact,” where fighting trafficking becomes woven into how we do business, not just something we do alongside business. 

 

Parminder: When I met Brittany in 2018, we were a leading provider of safety solution in hotels in Chicago. And during one of my trips to Las Vegas, my phone rang in the middle of the night and I heard a young, scared voice asking how she could get an outside line. It was then I suspected that the person calling me may be a human trafficking survivor looking to call someone for help. I felt frustrated and helpless when I couldn’t get the security of the hotel to locate her room and provide assistance. It was serendipitous that when I flew out to DC a couple of days later, our display table was next to the Safe House Project table, and I connected with Brittany. In that moment, I realized there was so much we could do, for taking the training, bringing awareness to our customers, partners and vendors and creating ripple effects of knowledge.

 

Seven years later, we are now collaborating with the Safe House Project team to bring other partners to the table to collaborate on a technical solution that will help detect and prevent human trafficking in hotels as it is happening in the hotel rather than after the fact when hotels are unable to do anything. Finding out something happened in the room after the fact doesn’t help solve the problem but being able to address it as the trafficker checks into the hotel, or while they may be engaging in trafficking at the hotel, that can have a massive impact on helping survivors.

 

In collaborating, each party doesn’t need to have all the answers, but you have to be willing to learn, to contribute and to think outside the box as to what can be brought to the table to facilitate a solution towards a common goal.

 

Q: In a world where corporate social responsibility often becomes a checkbox, how can we redefine success to include measurable impact in causes like human trafficking prevention? 

 

Brittany: Redefining success requires fundamentally shifting from performative metrics to outcome-based accountability. Traditional CSR measurements like dollars donated or hours volunteered really tell us nothing about whether vulnerable individuals are actually safer.  

 

Measuring true impact in human trafficking prevention means tracking concrete indicators: 

 

  • How many potential victims were identified through your training programs 
  • How many supply chain partners implemented new screening protocols or  
  • How many community members can now recognize warning signs.  

 

This all-demands transparency about your failures alongside your successes, longitudinal tracking of initiatives beyond quarterly reports, and collaboration with organizations that can validate whether your efforts are creating real change rather than just good optics. 

 

Parminder: The checkbox problem is real – we see corporations say they support causes and organizations through measuring dollars donated and employee volunteer hours. But it’s more important to measure how many survivors’ lives were touched with those dollars and volunteer hours.

 

How many survivors were rescued from human trafficking? How many were housed as a result of rooms provided to human trafficking survivors at a hotel? How many were provided with skills training?

 

It means being transparent about the KPIs measured by corporations such as how many vendors and partners committed to and completed human trafficking training. Now that’s impact that is measurable.

 

Q: It’s 2030 – what does the world look like if partnerships like this one scale? What would success in eradicating human trafficking look like by then? 

 

Brittany: By 2030, if partnerships like Safe House Project and TraknProtect scale nationally, we will see a fundamentally different landscape where exploitation becomes exponentially harder to hide.  

 

Hotels, rideshare drivers, delivery workers, and countless other industry touchpoints operate as an interconnected early warning system. Technology seamlessly integrates with human intuition, algorithms detect suspicious booking patterns while trained staff recognize behavioral indicators, creating multiple layers of protection.  

 

The most profound shift is cultural: an entire generation has grown up understanding that protecting vulnerable people isn’t someone else’s responsibility, it’s embedded in how we conduct business, travel, consume, and interact with our communities. 

 

Success in 2030 looks like systems so robust that trafficking operations can’t achieve the scale, invisibility, or profitability they once enjoyed. Survivors lead prevention programs, and their lived experiences inform policy and technology development. Cross-sector data sharing means a suspicious financial transaction in one industry immediately alerts relevant partners in others. Most significantly, it will mean we’ve moved beyond reactive operations to proactive prevention, identifying and supporting at-risk individuals before exploitation occurs.  

 

The hospitality industry, transportation networks, financial institutions, and technology platforms operate as an integrated ecosystem where human dignity is a non-negotiable design principle.  

 

When businesses compete not just on profit but on their measurable impact in protecting human rights, the entire economic incentive structure shifts away from exploitation toward empowerment. 

 

Parminder: In 2030, success of eradicating human trafficking means that guests would not be able to access sites related to trafficking, it means they would not be able to stay in a hotel room to engage in trafficking someone or be able to conduct communications from the hotel guest room. It means that should anyone fly under the radar, fellow guests and employees will be able to detect a human trafficking survivor early on and get assistance. It would mean that there are more law enforcement departments that can address an issue as it arises rather than waiting hours or days before arriving at the hotel.

 

It means that survivors don’t feel hidden in plain sight because others avert their eyes when seeing a human trafficking survivor in a hotel. They feel seen. 

 

TraknProtect –  

Q: As a small business leader, you’ve often said that impact doesn’t require a Fortune 500 budget. What advice would you give to other small- and mid-sized companies about using their platform and products to tackle big problems like human trafficking? 

 

We all have business to run, clients and employees to take care of but we can weave the mission to do something in everything we do. My suggestion is to look at your operations and see where you can change something to include the mission to help eradicate human trafficking. Here are some ways that we embed the mission to help eradicate human trafficking at TraknProtect:

 

  • We talk about it during recruiting because we want to continue to grow the impact of what we do.
  • We require human trafficking training within the first month that someone joins and the hope is that those taking the training with recognize how much we don’t know and have their families and friends also take the training.
    • Imagine a world where we are all trained to be the eyes and ears to detect human trafficking? Awareness is big part of the goal.
  • We encourage our partner vendors to also commit to our mission and have their teams take the OnWatch training.
  • Our corporate gifts at conferences and otherwise are either survivor made or sold by an organization that supports survivors in myriads of ways from providing counseling to skills training and providing housing.
  • We also donate furniture and carpets from conference booths to organizations that support human trafficking survivors.
  • We talk about it with every customer interaction and about the training we take
  • We also host events to raise money for the Safe House Project and donate funds in our dedication to our customers, when possible.

 

So, while we are not at the front-line rescuing survivors or providing hands-on skills training to them, we are ambassadors and advocates helping create awareness and create “ripple effects” to encourage others to get involved and stay involved.

 

Safe House Project –

Q: Safe House Project has made huge strides in raising awareness and building survivor-focused resources. How do you see corporate partners like TraknProtect helping you close the gap between education and real-world safety? 

 

Corporate partners like TraknProtect are essential in translating our awareness efforts into sector-wide intelligence that creates exponentially more effective protection networks. Safe House Project, with the support of TraknProtect, convenes a hospitality working group of technology leaders across the sector to identify data patterns that individual properties or brands could never detect alone. This collaborative approach transforms our educational insights from individual responses into integrated intelligence; the collective data creates a comprehensive picture that makes trafficking operations visible and traceable. 

 

This working group approach addresses the fundamental limitation of isolated efforts; even the most well-trained individual can only see a small piece of a larger exploitation network. We are creating an integrated response system by bringing together technology leaders from across the hospitality sector. The working group develops collaborative protocols that ensure relevant information flows to appropriate partners while maintaining privacy and legal compliance.  

 

Most importantly, this collaborative model ensures that survivor voices and experiences continue to guide technological innovation, preventing the tech solutions from becoming disconnected from the human realities they’re designed to address. 

 

Q: You’ve worked with a wide range of organizations – from grassroots to corporate. What makes a partner truly effective in the fight against human trafficking, and what has this collaboration unlocked that others haven’t? 

 

Before co-founding the Safe House Project, I led an acquisition team for a technology company. Throughout my career, I’ve learned that the most challenging issues of our time, like human trafficking, require partners who can think beyond traditional silos and embrace strategic innovation.  

 

What makes the Safe House Project uniquely effective isn’t just our survivor-centered approach or deep expertise, though both are crucial. It’s our willingness to engage with complex, innovative technological solutions while never losing sight of the human element. We understand that sustainable impact requires systems thinking: you can’t solve trafficking with awareness campaigns alone, just as you can’t solve it with technology alone. The most effective partners are those who can navigate the intersection of human insight and technological capability, translating lived experiences into data structures and operational protocols that scale across entire industries. 

 

This collaboration has unlocked something I rarely see in other partnerships: the ability to create integrated intelligence networks that actually function in real-time business environments. The working group’s solutions will be integrated into our Simply Report platform.  

 

We’re not just identifying trafficking after it happens; we’re creating predictive capabilities that disrupt operations before they fully establish. This requires partners who can think strategically about long-term technological advancement while maintaining operational urgency about immediate human safety. That combination of strategic innovation and tactical responsiveness transforms good intentions into measurable impact at scale. 

 

Suspect Trafficking? Simply Report. 

At Safe House Project, we believe that increasing victim identification is one of the most urgent needs in the fight to end child trafficking in America. That’s why we created Simply Report: a streamlined, survivor-informed tool that empowers individuals and organizations to report suspected trafficking quickly, clearly, and confidentially.

Simply Report is designed to break down barriers that too often delay or prevent action. Whether you’re a teacher, hotel staff member, healthcare provider, or just someone who sees something that doesn’t feel right, Simply Report offers a safe, accessible way to speak up. With trauma-informed prompts and intuitive design, this tool ensures that the information collected supports law enforcement and anti-trafficking efforts while centering survivor dignity.

In a world where 87% of trafficking survivors report interacting with someone who could have helped them, but didn’t, tools like Simply Report make that help possible. Because awareness is only powerful if it leads to action, and Simply Report helps turn a moment of concern into a step toward freedom.

 

We invite others in hospitality, tech, and beyond to join us. This is an open call to those who believe that business can be a force for good. That innovation must serve humanity. Those partnerships have power. 

 

Together, we’re not just raising awareness. We’re raising the standard. 

 

To find out more, go to www.safehouseproject.com

<p>The post Safe House Project & TraknProtect: Partners in Eradicating Human Trafficking – A Unified Mission for Real Impact first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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Who Are Human Traffickers? https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/who-are-human-traffickers/ https://www.safehouseproject.org/blog/who-are-human-traffickers/#respond Tue, 05 Aug 2025 18:37:40 +0000 https://www.safehouseproject.org/?p=3524 WHO ARE HUMAN TRAFFICKERS? Every year, millions of people are victimized by human trafficking across the globe, including hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children in the United States....

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WHO ARE HUMAN TRAFFICKERS?

Every year, millions of people are victimized by human trafficking across the globe, including hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children in the United States. While public understanding of human trafficking has grown significantly in recent years, misconceptions about traffickers still shape the way many people view the crime. However, effectively combating human trafficking requires clear information about who traffickers are, how they operate, and the methods of control they use.

Common Misconceptions About Human Traffickers

Media portrayals often suggest that traffickers are strangers who abduct people and transport them across international borders. While this image is widespread, it does not reflect the reality of the vast majority of trafficking situations. Most victims are exploited by someone they know in their own community, including family members, romantic partners, friends, peers, or employers. These existing relationships often allow traffickers to gain the trust of their victims before escalating to exploitation.

Most survivors report being trafficked in their own neighborhoods or homes, and many never cross state lines or travel between cities while being exploited. Despite the general perception that trafficking victims come from other countries, about 94% of identified survivors in the U.S. are citizens exploited by other citizens.

When the general public believes that trafficking victims are only young women and children, many survivors who don’t fit this profile are left without opportunities to be identified. Instead of focusing on a single demographic, traffickers look for existing vulnerabilities that they can use as methods of isolation and control. Trafficking survivors represent all ages, genders, races, and socioeconomic backgrounds in the U.S., but people are more frequently targeted when they experience systemic and social challenges like poverty, homelessness, past abuse, social isolation, and addiction.

Types of Trafficking Relationships

Just as trafficking survivors do not fit a single stereotype, human traffickers vary in age, gender, race, and occupation. Some operate independently, while others are part of small groups or organized criminal networks. Despite these differences, traffickers consistently seek to exploit others for commercial sex, services, or labor for their own financial profit.

Traffickers often rely on existing relationships to gain access to and maintain control over their victims, including:

  • Family Members or Guardians — A significant percentage of trafficking victims, especially minors, are exploited by relatives, including parents or grandparents. At least 40% of child sex trafficking survivors are trafficked by a family member or guardian, and many are exploited in the foster care system by foster parents or siblings. These cases are extremely difficult to identify because the abuse frequently occurs in private homes and may be disguised by family dynamics.
  • Intimate or Romantic Partners — Traffickers regularly pose as romantic partners to build trust and emotional dependence before the exploitation begins. This grooming process, called “boyfriending”, can take place over weeks or even months as the trafficker initially showers their victim with love, attention, and gifts before manipulating them into commercial sex or labor.
  • Friends or Peers — Some victims may be recruited into a trafficking situation by a friend or peer, sometimes by someone who is being exploited themselves. This commonly occurs in schools, community groups, or online platforms and takes advantage of trusting relationships, which traffickers exploit to gain control.
  • Employers — Traffickers may use their position as an employer to force their victims to engage in commercial sex or labor under the threat of harm, withheld wages, or unsafe working conditions. Many traffickers also restrict access to food, medical care, housing, or basic necessities. In some cases, victims are trapped through debt bondage, in which their trafficker uses repayment of a loan to exert control, often while manipulating the terms of the debt to ensure that the victim will never be able to pay it off.
  • Gang Members or Organized Crime Networks — Trafficking can be part of a broader criminal enterprise, through which victims are forced to engage in sex or labor exploitation alongside other illegal activities. Sex trafficking may be disguised as prostitution involving a pimp. Victims under this form of control regularly face multiple layers of control, including threats of violence, forced participation in other crimes, substance abuse, and dependence on traffickers for protection.

Methods of Control

Many traffickers use physical, emotional, and/or psychological abuse to establish power. These methods may differ between trafficking situations, but many rely on the trauma bonds created through cycles of abuse and rewards to keep victims compliant, silent, and trapped in exploitation. Common forms of trafficking abuse include:

  • Mental Health Problems98% of sex trafficking survivors have at least one serious psychological issue while being trafficked, and on average, report 12 mental health problems. These conditions frequently include clinical depression and anxiety, complex PTSD, dissociative disorders, personality disorders, depersonalization disorders, and mood disorders. At least 42% of survivors have attempted suicide at least once. Traffickers regularly take advantage of existing mental health problems or emerging conditions to exert further control.
  • Substance Abuse84% of sex trafficking survivors report abusing substances during exploitation, with 28% saying that their trafficker forced them to use substances to keep them compliant. Many survivors did not use drugs or alcohol before their trafficking experience.
  • Homelessness — A lack of housing is a leading risk factor for trafficking victimization. Between 25% and 40% of youth who experience homelessness also experience sex trafficking, and traffickers approach 22% of these victims on their first night of homelessness
  • Psychological Manipulation — Traffickers regularly use tactics like gaslighting, guilt-tripping, love bombing, and trauma bonding to establish emotional control over their victims. Love bombing through excessive displays of affection, giving extravagant gifts, and other grand gestures can foster positive bonds with the victim, while gaslighting and guilt-tripping can wear down their self-confidence and trust in their own perceptions, making it easier for the trafficker to manipulate them.
  • Economic Dependence — Traffickers often target people experiencing economic hardship or unemployment, promising opportunities to make money or lessen their debts. They frequently and increasingly control their victims’ access to financial resources, phones, documentation or personal identification, and their ability to work independently to restrict their opportunities to leave.
  • Exploitation of Hope — Promises of love, a better life, job opportunities, or independence are an extremely common and effective tactic for traffickers to coerce their victims into exploitative activities. Children and youth being promised love by their romantic partner or people experiencing homelessness or unemployment are especially vulnerable to this tactic.

The control inherent to a trafficking situation is often so strong that leaving exploitation is incredibly difficult for survivors. Many survivors say that they tried to leave multiple times, but were forced to return to their trafficker because they had no safe place to go, no way to buy food or basic necessities, and no way to protect themselves from being found by their trafficker. Most survivors also face severe and co-occurring physical, mental, and behavioral health conditions, as well as addiction, which require comprehensive and immediate support. Without access to emergency services and long-term restorative care, 80% of survivors are revictimized.

How You Can Help

Human trafficking happens in every community, from rural towns to large urban centers and from private homes to city streets. All of us can educate ourselves and those around us to be aware of the signs of trafficking and report suspicious activity. Traffickers depend on stereotypes, myths, and ignorance to keep their victims hidden. By recognizing that both traffickers and survivors can be anyone, we can overcome the culture of silence around human trafficking. Together, we can build proactive communities to combat human trafficking, bring traffickers to justice, and restore hope, freedom, and a future to every survivor.

To learn more about what human trafficking looks like, take our free OnWatch training.

To report tips about human trafficking and connect survivors to emergency support, download our Simply Report app.

 

<p>The post Who Are Human Traffickers? first appeared on Safe House Project.</p>

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