Illinois gets failing grade in new report on child sex trafficking
prevention
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[November 30, 2021]
By Scot Bertram
(The Center Square) – Illinois is among 40
states that received a failing grade in a new report on child and youth
sex trafficking.
The 2021 Report Card on Child and Youth Sex Trafficking was produced by
Shared Hope International. The organization looked at six main
categories, including criminal provisions, identification of and
response to victims, access to justice for trafficking survivors, and
prevention and training.
“I will say Illinois has a higher ‘F’ than the national average,” said
Sarah Bendtsen, director of state legislative advocacy at Shared Hope
International. “Our national average this year was 44% and Illinois was
just a little bit higher at 48%. It's a big drop from where we were
grading states, specifically Illinois, in 2019.”
She says the decline in grades came as the survey shifted its focus from
criminal justice response to efforts to screen and protect children from
abuse. As in the past, Illinois ranked high on the list when it comes to
criminal accountability for offenders of sex trafficking.
“Illinois was one of the first states to have a statutory protection
that says kids engaged in commercial sex are not offenders of
prostitution, they're victims of sex trafficking,” Bendtsen said.
“Therefore, kids cannot be prosecuted for prostitution. That's key.
That's a foundational protection.”
Moving forward, Bendtsen says states across the country should have
clearly defined policies and procedures in place.
“We have to be sure that our child-serving agencies are required to
screen for child sex trafficking when cases come in and they're required
to screen for cases when kids are going through this system,” Bendtsen
said.
The report argues one key to the process is getting state legislators on
board to codify practices and responses into law.
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The Illinois State Capitol in Springfield, Illinois.
John Spataro | Watchdog.org
“It calls to the legislature that there are incredible practices in
place that need to be funded by the legislature,” Bendtsen said.
“There's a responsibility to the legislature then to appropriate a
significant and inappropriate amount a month of money to support what's
happening within communities in the field.”
In early November, a federal jury convicted a Chicago man on sex
trafficking charges for recruiting several children to engage in sex
acts for money. The conviction carries with it a potential life sentence
behind bars.
Bendtsen says it’s important that states realize their role, working
alongside the federal government in fighting against child and youth sex
trafficking.
“When cases are suspected or identified there should be a coordinated
service response in place,” Bendtsen said. “We're not just identifying
sex trafficking, but putting into motion an entire response within the
community to support that child and, if the parents or caregivers aren't
the offenders, to support the whole family.”
Of the nine states to receive a passing grade, eight were awarded a “D"
with one state, Florida, receiving a "C."
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