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These middlemen commonly dock students' pay so heavily for lodging, transportation and other necessities that the wages work out to $1 an hour or less, according to George Collins, an inspector at the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Department in the Florida Panhandle who has worked cases involving J-1 students since 2001. Collins, who once notified the State Department that "J-1 abuse is epidemic here," told the AP the same companies often exploit students year after year despite his reporting them. For years, the State Department has refused to publicly discuss problems in the program in any kind of detail. The AP asked the State Department in a Freedom of Information Act request in March 2009 for a full list of complaints related to the program. In May, more than a year later, the department finally responded that it kept no such list, and that it keeps records related to the program for only three years. Last month, the department said it had finally created a database of complaints. "It turns out that until this year, we did NOT keep a record of complaints. Now, we do," Marthena Cowart, a senior adviser for the department's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, said in a Nov. 10 e-mail. Cowart did not provide a copy of the complaint database to the AP or indicate how many complaints it included. And the department declined to discuss the AP's findings on the record. "We are deeply concerned by any allegations involving the poor treatment of participants as this potentially undermines our goal of promoting mutual understanding and goodwill between the people of the United States and the people of other countries," the department said Friday in declining an interview request. For the many J-1 women who end up working in strip clubs, whether by choice or force, the changes can't come soon enough. In Florida, a 19-year-old Russian told the AP she went to work as a cocktail waitress this summer at a topless bar in Fort Walton Beach because the souvenir shop where she worked didn't pay much and the shop owner had her living in a crowded, run-down apartment. She gave the AP only her first name, Oleysa, because she hadn't told her parents. "My father doesn't know where I work," she said, lowering her gaze to a tray of beers and mixed drinks. A Ukrainian woman who said she was forced to strip in Detroit asked the AP to identify her only as Katya, because she fears for her life. Katya, who used the same alias when testifying to Congress in October 2007 about how sex trafficking brought her to the U.S., said she was studying sports medicine in Kiev back in 2004 when her boss told her about the J-1 program. Instead of waitressing for a summer in Virginia as she'd been promised, however, Katya and another student were forced to strip at a club in Detroit. Their handler confiscated their passports and told them they had to pay $12,000 for the travel arrangements and another $10,000 for work documents, according to court records. Katya said he eventually demanded she come up with $35,000 somehow, by dancing or other means. "I said, 'That's not what I signed here for. That's not right.' He said,
'Well, you owe me the money. I don't care how I get it from you. If I have to sell you, I'll sell you.'" The women were told that if they refused, their families in Ukraine would be killed, Katya said. Over the next months, the two men beat the women, threatened them with guns and made them work at Cheetah's strip club, court records state. Katya said one of the men also forced her to have sex, a memory she still struggles with. The two men are now in prison, and Katya's old boss in the Ukraine is a fugitive. Even J-1 students who avoid physical or sexual abuse often face other challenges. Exchange student Munkh-Erdene Battur said he and four others were fired from their fast-food jobs last year in Riverton, Wyo., after complaining about living in what looked like a converted garage and paying $350 apiece per month for the accommodations. "In my whole life, I've never lived in that kind of place and that kind of conditions," said Battur, who is from Mongolia. Iuliia Bolgaryna came to work this summer at a souvenir store on the outskirts of Surf City, N.C. The store manager offered to let her and two other women from the Ukraine stay with him for $120 a week. But he wouldn't let them eat at the table, so they huddled together for meals on the floor. They worked loads of overtime but were only paid for 40 hours a week. The store manager declined to comment. "It was almost normal that he screamed, that we worked 14 hours, that we ate on the floor," she said. "That was our America."
[Associated
Press;
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