Ending Of Virginia Human Trafficking

By Rosella Campbell


The reported case of hundred thousand victims whose dignity is eroded each year through slavery is on the rise. Despite their spirited attempt to end the Virginia human trafficking, the justice and law enforcement departments experience multiple challenges in bringing the perpetrators to book. This arises from the difficulty of distinguishing trafficking from the related activities including human smuggling and prostitution. Similarly, most victims encounter communication barriers in the foreign land, thus breaking the communication chain.

Although often confused with human smuggling, trafficking involves forceful, coercion or fraudulent recruiting, harboring or obtaining an individual for labor services or commercial sex actions. The former entails willing participants who are moved across international borders. This proves the distinguishing feature as inhuman activity may arise in the home country when one is forced into servitude. Considering that human trafficking may stretch from local to international scenes, this demands of the jurisdictions involved to cooperate during the investigation, prosecution and sentencing criminals, alongside rehabilitating the victims.

The worrying feature of human trafficking is its fast growth to topple other criminal activities leaving it to occupy the second spot. Mainly, this is a scaring trend in the states with weak legislative framework as such reveals a slow eradication process. Instead of matching the vigor exhibited by the traffickers who exploit the easy platform of propagating the business, they encounter little deterrent from the existing laws.

Contrary to the perception that this trafficking happens in the dark through night abductions, the perpetrators have organized attacks on unaware victims. The preference of online platforms in business today, places the online marketplace an ideal ground to hind their activities from the prying eyes of the government officers. The discovery of online recruitment presents unresolved barriers to the justice agencies as they mandate involvement of huge resources to navigate the logistic covers.

In an effort to show supplement the measures laid by the federal government to end the activities, the attorney general remains dedicated to initiate major crackdown in Virginia. Primarily, the office aims to accomplish declined rates by imposing hefty penalties during sentencing. Additionally, the attorney general remains on the forefront of organizing awareness work-groups and training programs. In particular, the 2011 partnership with the criminal justice services to offer progressive training boosted the enforcement of justice through coordinate investigations, prosecutions and protection of victim-witnesses.

The call for public participation to address the issue leaves whistle-blowing and secretive informers integral agents of ending the activity rings in the region. While this shows the attention of enforcing justice to the victims, the attorney has designated a special fund to rehabilitate the victims. The financial assistance is meant to cater for shelter and counseling of rescued victims.

Unlike the customary perception that the criminals targeted individual from specific regions and background, the present activities have spread. This threatens the public safety of human race as their victims are drawn across all races and socioeconomic class. In view of this, every individual remains exposed to traffickers irrespective of their place of residence.

Public awareness and involvement of task forces should constitute the initial process of eradicating the contemporary slavery at its source. For that reason, organizations dedicated to safeguard the dignity of the victims have owned the fight by highlighting the issues to speed public consciousness through training. Furthermore, this has facilitated sharing of resources through awareness programs to end the activities right at the backyard.




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