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Child Prostitution
Domestic
Sex Trafficking of Minors
The trafficking section of this web page provides information on the
international problem of cross-border transportation of children for sexual
purposes. It is important to note that United States not only faces an
influx of international victims of sex trafficking, but also the United States
has its own homegrown problem of interstate sex trafficking of minors.
Although comprehensive research to document the number of children engaged
in prostitution in the United
States is lacking, it is estimated that
about 293,000 American youth are currently at risk of becoming victims of
commercial sexual exploitation. Richard J. Estes and Neil Alan Weiner, Commercial
Sexual Exploitation of Children in the U.S, Canada and Mexico,
University of Pennsylvania, Executive Summary at 11-12 (2001) (available at
http://caster.ssw.upenn.edu/~restes/CSEC.htm);
see also Mia Spangenberg, Prostituted Youth in
New York City: An Overview (available at http://www.ecpatusa.org/child_prosti_us.asp).
The majority of American victims of commercial sexual exploitation tend to
be runaway or thrown away youth who live on the streets who become victims
of prostitution. Id.
at 11-12. These children generally come from homes where they have been
abused, or from families that have abandoned them, Richard J. Estes and
Neil Alan Weiner, Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children in the U.S,
Canada and Mexico, University of Pennsylvania, at 3 (2001) [hereinafter
Estes Report], and often become involved in prostitution as a way to
support themselves financially or to get the things they want or need. Id.
Other young people are recruited into prostitution through forced
abduction, pressure from parents, or through deceptive agreements between
parents and traffickers. Francis
T. Miko & Grace Park, Trafficking in Women and
Children: The U.S. and International Response, at 7 (Updated July 10,
2003), at http://www.usembassy.it/pdf/other/RL30545.pdf.
Once these children become involved in prostitution they are often forced
to travel far from their homes and as a result are isolated from their
friends and family. Id.
Few children in this situation are able to develop new relationships with
peers or adults other than the person who is victimizing them. Id. The
lifestyle of such children revolves around violence, forced drug use and
constant threats. Id.
Among children and teens living on the streets in the United States,
involvement in commercial sex activity is a problem of epidemic proportion.
Approximately 55% of street girls engage in formal prostitution. Estes
Report, Executive Summary at 7. Of the girls engaged in formal
prostitution, about 75% worked for a pimp. Id. Pimp-controlled commercial
sexual exploitation of children is linked to escort and massage services,
private dancing, drinking and photographic clubs, major sporting and recreational
events, major cultural events, conventions, and tourist destinations. Id. About
one-fifth of these children become entangled in nationally organized crime
networks and are trafficked nationally. Id. at 8.
They are transported around the United States
by a variety of means – cars, buses, vans, trucks or planes, Id., and are
often provided counterfeit identification to use in the event of arrest. Id. The
average age at which girls first become victims of prostitution is 12-14.
Estes Report at 92. It is not only the girls on the streets that are
affected -- for boys and transgender youth, the
average age of entry into prostitution is 11-13. Id.
U.S. Department of Justice,
Criminal Division ° Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS)
1400 New York Avenue,
6th Floor ° Washington,
D.C. 20530
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