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Among the activists who helped sway lawmakers to adopt the stricter penalties is Keisha Head, who was lured into prostitution at the age of 16 after she ran away from home. She worked for a pimp for years, suffering rapes, abuse and an attempted kidnapping. Each time she tried to get out of her situation, the pimp threatened to harm her and her daughter. "I became numb to what I was doing," she said. "I guess that is the survival instinct to become numb when inflicted with such an ordeal." The Associated Press does not generally identify victims of sexual assault, but Head has agreed to let her name be used to illustrate the dangers of child prostitution. The new restrictions are a strong first step, Head said, but the work in Georgia is far from over. "They need to turn up the heat," she said, "and start convicting the predators or the pimps who are exploiting the children."
[Associated
Press;
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