Minnesota arrests 58 in child sex sting
during NCAA Final Four weekend
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[April 11, 2019]
By Brendan O'Brien
(Reuters) - Nearly five dozen people were
arrested in a Minnesota undercover sting operation for attempting to
meet up with children for sex or for sex-trafficking of minors during
last weekend's NCAA Final Four basketball tournament, authorities said
on Wednesday.
Undercover agents from dozens of agencies in Minnesota spent Friday
through Monday posing as children or sex buyers on various social media
platforms. The agents chatted with suspects online and then arrested
them when they arrived at an arranged meeting place for an encounter,
the Minnesota Department of Public Safety said in a statement.
A total of 58 suspects were taken into custody, while 28 victims,
including one minor, were rescued from trafficking situations, the
department said.
The suspects were not part of a single sex-trafficking ring, said Jill
Oliveira, a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension with the
Department of Public Safety.
"These were separate instances where they either responded to undercover
officers posing as sex buyers or undercover officers posing as minors,"
Oliveira said in a phone interview.
The sting operation occurred as ten of thousands of fans converged on
Minneapolis for the semifinals and final of the National Collegiate
Athletic Association's men's basketball championship, won this year by
the University of Virginia.
Some 47 people face felony charges of solicitation of a minor or
solicitation of prostitution with someone under 16 years of age. Another
11 were booked on probable cause of sex trafficking and promotion of
prostitution, the agency said.
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"This operation is an example of the aggressive steps necessary to
stop traffickers and johns who buy and sell people for sex in our
communities," said Drew Evans, superintendent of the Bureau of
Criminal Apprehension.
It involved more than 33 local and state agencies along with
Homeland Security Investigations, a unit of the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security.
Most of the suspects were from the greater Twin Cities area, the
state department of public safety said, referring to Minneapolis and
Saint Paul.
Authorities routinely conduct sting operations coinciding with large
U.S. sporting events. During the week leading up to this year's
Super Bowl in Atlanta, authorities arrested 169 people in a
sex-trafficking sting.
The Minnesota sting comes less than two months after New England
Patriots owner Robert Kraft was charged with soliciting sex as part
of an investigation into sex trafficking at several Florida day
spas. Kraft, who has pleaded not guilty, was one of 25 men who were
taken into custody in the sting.
More than 5,100 cases of human trafficking were reported to the
National Human Trafficking Hotline in 2018. That amounted to 40
percent fewer cases than the 8,500 reported in 2017, which was a
five-year high, the organization said.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee and Gabriella Borter in
New York; Editing by Leslie Adler and Bill Berkrot)
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