Today's Story
Today, the world is FULL of violence and sexual immorality. You only need to turn the tv on and you will see violence, child sex trafficking, fornication and homosexuality everywhere. The cities of the world today are especially bad and are no longer safe places to be. God has been thrown out and sickness, a sinful sickness has taken holdâŠâŠ.
According to the FBI, sex trafficking of children in this country has become a nationwide problem. And traffickers target troubled girls with low self-esteem â girls like Alyssa Beck.
Beck was just a naĂŻve 15-year-old living in Jacksonville, Florida when she found herself trapped in a sex traffickerâs web. She would be in and out of their trap for almost five years.
CBS News correspondent Michelle Miller has been following Beckâs story and the horrific world of sex trafficking of kids. It could happen to anyone â thatâs why actor and activist Ashton Kutcher has taken on this cause to save other young victims.
ALYSSAâS STORY
Alyssa Beck: I was searching for something. âŠBut I didnât know what I was searching for. âŠI just wanted to be free. âŠI donât remember being popular when I was growing up. But I always got good grades. âŠI was really nice and sweet as a child. âŠBut we had problems at home. ⊠There has to be something else. Something better than living like this. âŠIâm just gonna run away.
Heather Beck | Alyssaâs mom: The first couple of times Alyssa ran away, you know, we would get in the car, we would drive around. âŠI have no idea where she was. I was terrified. Is she in the dumpster or is she in that trash bag on the side of the road and will I ever see her again?
Alyssa Beck CBS News
Alyssa Beck: I was a naĂŻve 15-year-old.
Alyssa Beck: I didnât know the streets, so I didnât know the bad things that came with it.
Alyssa Beck: I just thought that it would be fun, you know, maybe a party, maybe drink. âŠBut I never would have been prepared for what really happened.
Lawanda Ravoira | President, Delores Barr Weaver Policy Center: I would describe Alyssa when I first met her as afraid. As cautious. âŠHer experiences were some of the most violent, the most traumatic, that Iâve seen.
Alyssa Beck: My everyday life was laying there, naked, beaten and allowing guys to come and pay 10, 20 dollars to do whatever they wanted to me.
Mac Heavener| Prosecutor: She was being forced to do it.
Mac Heavener: We are talking about buying and selling children for sex acts.
Michelle Miller: How many men?
Shannon Schott | Juvenile justice expert and lawyer: Fifty. âŠOver the course of two weeks.
Heather Beck: It never crossed my mind in my wildest dreams that my child was involved in human trafficking.
Ashton Kutcher testifies at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on modern slavery, Feb. 15, 2017. âIâve seen things that no person should ever see,â he said.
SEN. BOB CORKER | R-TENN: OUR FIRST WITNESS TODAY IS MR. ASHTON KUTCHER.
ASHTON KUTCHER[ TO CONGRESS]: AS PART OF MY ANTI-TRAFFICKING WORK, IâVE MET VICTIMS IN RUSSIA, IN INDIA, VICTIMS IN NEW YORK AND NEW JERSEY AND ALL ACROSS OUR COUNTRY. âŠIâVE BEEN ON FBI RAIDS WHERE IâVE SEEN THINGS THAT NO PERSON SHOULD EVER SEE.
Ashton Kutcher: I have a hard time talking about this issue without being emotional.
Michelle Miller: Why this cause?
Ashton Kutcher: I was just so appalled ⊠If you donât do something about it, then who are you?
Ashton Kutcher: It can happen to anyone ⊠Traffickers prey on people and they know exactly whatâs gonna turn their trigger.
Alyssa Beck: These traffickers made me feel like I was loved. You know I was running from something ⊠and I was running to love and acceptance.
Shannon Schott: She believed these men until they were actively hurting her.
Alyssa Beck: I didnât want to die. You know I saw some light at the end of the tunnel. And I just knew like I had to get out of the situation. I had to live through this. âŠAnd that is when it got real.
TARGET: TROUBLED TEENS
A massage parlor in a Florida strip mall gained worldwide notoriety last month when New England Patriotsâ billionaire owner, Robert Kraft, was charged with soliciting prostitution there. He pleaded not guilty. Prosecutors believe workers at the parlor were victims of sex trafficking â and thatâs put a spotlight on this hidden crime with a devastating cost. Last year, â48 Hoursâ began following one teenâs harrowing story.
Alyssa Beck never imagined she would become a victim of child sex trafficking.
Alyssa Beck: Whenever Iâm over on this side of town, I kinda feel chills in my body. âŠIt brings back a lot of memories
But this is not just Alyssaâs story; the sex trafficking of children is a nationwide problem.
Itâs why every year the FBI launches Operation Cross Country, a vast sting operation to rescue children.
In 2017, in just four days, the FBI recovered 84 children and arrested 120 alleged sex traffickers.
FBI on sex trafficking sting: âOur primary goal is to recover childrenâ
Special Agent Courtney Harrison: I mean theyâre predators. They find a vulnerability and they jump on it.
Special Agent Courtney Harrison is a member of Jacksonvilleâs Human Trafficking Task Force. Florida is a hot spot and Harrison sees the work of sex traffickers every day.
Special Agent Courtney Harrison: They manipulate people. Theyâre very greedy, self-indulgent. They brag about, âLook at the money,â look at, ya know, âIâm enslaving these girlsâ is a quote that we got from one of our pimps.
And she says they target troubled girls just like Alyssa.
Alyssa grew up in a middle-class family, the third of four children. She was a good student, but in her early teens, she started breaking her parentsâ rules by hanging out with boys and staying out late.
Alyssa Beck: Part of it was me being a rebellious teenager. And honestly really just being a child. But also because my father and mother, they, you know, they had problems of their own. My father did use to drink and that just caused a lot of problems with the whole family.
Shannon Schott: Her life was not what she wanted.
Shannon Schott is a juvenile justice expert and Alyssaâs lawyer.
Shannon Schott: She was seeing a family situation between her mother and her father, her father who was drinking and was verbally abusive and just a very hard person to live with.
Things came to a head in March of 2008 when Alyssa was 13 years old. She and her older sister were caught sneaking a boy into their room late at night.
Alyssa Beck: I mean we were just hanging out. It was very innocent. Nothing going on.
But she says her father became enraged. As punishment, he hit them with a belt. Police were called and social services investigated the incident. In the report, Alyssaâs father admitted that he âspanked the girls,â but he did ânot beat them.â He also stated he âdrinks, but he does not discipline the children when drinking.â
Alyssaâs mom Heather says she and her husband may not have been perfect parents, but they were not abusive.
Heather Beck: We were very young parents. I think we were just doing what we thought was the best that we could.
In the end, the investigation concluded there were âno indicators of family violence.â But Alyssa says she no longer felt loved or safe at home.
Alyssa Beck: So now I just have to leave the house. âŠIâm just gonna run away. âŠThatâs what started it all.
At first, Alyssa ran away for just days at a time, mostly staying with friends. Gradually she stayed away longer. This went on for nearly a year.
https://www.broadbandsearch.net/blog/online-safety-parental-controls
Alyssaâs mom, Heather Beck
Heather Beck: It was emotionally torturous. âŠI had no idea where to turn for help.
Shannon Schott: Alyssa just was looking for something better. The grass is always greener. âŠAnd she was a teenager ⊠She was, you know, making some choices that werenât the best choices.
Alyssa started experimenting with drinking and drugs. Then, when she was 14, she got caught giving a police officer a false name â a criminal offense.
Alyssa Beck: I gave them a false name because I didnât want to get caught, ya know? And I would just â I didnât want to go home.
When notified by police, Heather says she was desperate and went along with the recommendation to have her daughter arrested.
Heather Beck: I was told that since Alyssa was a continual runaway ⊠if I had her arrested for providing a false name, she would be able to receive additional services.
Alyssa was sent to a juvenile treatment facility and received counseling for substance abuse.
Shannon Schott: At the time, Heather was confident that this would be a good choice.
Michelle Miller: Was it a mistake?
Shannon Schott: Absolutely.
Heather, like many parents, had no idea sex traffickers often prey on troubled children at these facilities.
Shannon Schott: The juvenile justice systemâs intention is to rehabilitate your kids ⊠But if you have a child who needs counseling, and who needs help because theyâve been through some serious trauma, theyâre going to probably find worse friends.
And sure enough, one month into her stay, Alyssa met a 17-year-old girl who would change her life.
Alyssa Beck: I mean, this girl she was just powerful. âŠthatâs what I wanted to be. You know I wanted to have a voice and stand out. So I remember one day ⊠she was just talking about these places to go and how much fun she used to have outside of this rehab setting. And ⊠she then asked me and another girl if we wanted to run away. And without thinking I was just like, âYeah, letâs do it.â
So they took off and the girl from the juvenile facility led them to Jacksonvilleâs Sin City, a dangerous, crime-ridden area with a lot of motels you rent by the hour.
Alyssa Beck: I remember⊠going to that area and just having this weird feeling, ya know. It was so â it was dark, and ⊠it was intimidating, scary, cold and different.
And it was here that Alyssa quickly learned that the older girl was not who she thought she was.
Alyssa Beck: She told us, âHey Iâm a prostitute.â âŠYou know, I heard about prostitution and stuff like that in movies, but I donât think I still understood what prostitution was. The girl was like, âEither youâre gonna work for us or youâre gonna leave.â âŠSo me and the other girl, weâre like, âOh, well donât worry about it. Weâll just go.â
But she didnât just go. Fearing she would be arrested for fleeing the juvenile rehab facility, Alyssa says she was too scared to leave, too scared to go home, and too scared to ask for help.
Alyssa Beck: I still canât go home. I donât want to go to jail, or I donât want to get arrested. So I decided to stay.
Alyssa didnât know it yet, but she had walked right into a trap.
TRICKS AND THREATS
Alyssa Beck: At 15 years old, I never even heard of sex trafficking.
But the trap was already set. The young woman Alyssa had run away with introduced her to a series of men. They let her stay with them in seedy motels and apartments. Alyssa didnât know it, but she was being groomed by traffickers.
Alyssa Beck CBS News
Alyssa Beck: I thought these guys were my boyfriends. ⊠They were nice ⊠Sweet, kind. âŠThey gave me food ⊠They gave me the clothes that I needed, the hair stuff, the makeup and they made me feel pretty.
Alyssa Beck: Everything that was missing in my life they supplied to me.
Lawanda Ravoira: Itâs easy to get tricked. And thatâs what traffickers are masters at.
Lawanda Ravoira works with girls who have been trafficked.
Lawanda Ravoira: Itâs tricking girls into believing that they are their friend, that they care about them. And particularly, when thereâs trouble at home, youâre now in a space that feels safe.
After living on the streets for about two weeks, Alyssa was introduced to Ian Sean Gordon, a 28-year-old unemployed father of two.
Alyssa Beck: I thought that Sean was a good guy. âŠHe was fun.
But Prosecutor Mac Heavener says Gordon had a criminal record.
Mac Heavener: To him, sheâs just an income flow.
He saw Alyssa as a commodity.
Mac Heavener: The moment he saw Alyssa and saw what she needed ⊠he said, âIâm gonna make a lot of money off of this girl.â
And just days after meeting Gordon, he became violent.
Alyssa Beck: I remember him just really brutally beating me and raping me.
Alyssa Beck: I was staring at him âcause I was so scared, I thought he was gonna keep beating me. And he ended up coming and shoving a pillow over my face and he was like, âDonât look at me, you canât look at me. You canât look at me.âAnd then he ⊠started taking pictures of me. And I heard him start a call to people and telling them, âHey, I have this girl here, you can come to do whatever you want to her, just for 20 dollars.â
Alyssa Beck: I remember trying to fight back. I ⊠tried kicking him, and that only made it worse. It made it really bad then. Sorry, I feel sick âŠ
Mac Heavener: Itâs not uncommon for sex traffickers to use violence to compel their victims to do things. Ian Sean Gordon ⊠would hit her repeatedly. âŠhe would take all of her clothes and leave her in a hotel room naked â in between customers. To basically prevent her from running away and escaping.
Ian Sean Gordon Leon County Sheriffâs Office
Alyssa says Gordon also tied her to the bed, and besides the daily beatings, he threatened to harm her family.https://hnewswire.com/child-sex-trafficking-dirtbags-august-arrest-as-it-happens-update-%e2%8b%852019/
Mac Heavener: He had her convinced that he had been staking her out and knew all about her, knew all about her family and that things would happen to her family if she didnât comply with what he said.
Michelle Miller: Itâs a form of terror?
Mac Heavener: Yeah, it very much was.
Alyssa Beck: He mentally frightened me into believing that if I try to run, I was gonna go to jail, I was gonna die, or he was gonna kill my family.
Alyssa Beck: I was just living in so much fear that I didnât even think escaping was an option.
How to spot the signs of sex trafficking
In addition to controlling her with fear, Gordon also fed Alyssa drugs. Itâs a trick that Heavener says traffickers often use.
Mac Heavener: They know that pain and addiction can force their victims into providing more services in order to get their fix.
Alyssa Beck: I do remember just men just coming in. At one point, I was laying on the bed completely naked, cause that is how I always stayed. And opening my eyes and just seeing a blur of a man on top of me and just saying, âNo, no get off of me.â
Alyssa Beck: And just being so high and trying to remove me from my own body. So that I wouldnât feel the pain and the hands of these dirty men and what they were doing to me.
It was at the Regency Inn Motel, and many others like it, where authorities believe that over a course of two weeks, Alyssa was raped by dozens of men.
Alyssa Beck: Men that could be anyoneâs father, anyoneâs uncle, anyoneâs cousin â brother.
And Alyssa says she was even bought by a pastor.
Alyssa Beck: And if ever thought there was a God, at that point, I completely â I just completely lost faith in anything that I ever thought was real.
But in her darkest days, there was one person who kept her going.
Alyssa Beck [breaks down]: I remember one time I was there and it was after a really bad beating and rape. And I remember sitting there and thinking about my little brother. And I just remember thinking about my brotherâs smile. And just thinking about his innocence.
And after about two weeks of being held captive, Alyssa says she somehow summoned the strength to escape. When Gordon wasnât around, she bolted, barely dressed. But she didnât get far.
Alyssa Beck: Next thing you know this thing comes behind me and grabs me by my hair and this thing was Sean. He came and grabbed me, he started dragging me and I started screaming to the top of my lungs ⊠I remember him looking at me and just telling me, âYouâre gonna die today.â âŠI was paralyzed in fear. Like that fear was holding me down. Like I was restrained to like a metal black chair.
Gordon threw her into his car, and when the car was stopped she attempted to escape ⊠once more.
Alyssa Beck: I took my seatbelt off and I ran down this expressway beaten, bloody ⊠At that point, I think I passed out. âŠI guess some would say I was free at that point. But that really only started the journey.
ANOTHER SIDE
When Alyssa came to, not far from the highway, Ian Sean Gordon was nowhere to be found. Not knowing where to go, Alyssa made her way back to the Regency Inn and called her mother for help.
Heather Beck: And I picked up the phone and she said, âMom I need help.â âŠAnd I just said, âYa know, well, where are â where are you? I will come get you. Where are you?â
Heather raced to the motel and called the police not knowing what Alyssa had been through
Heather Beck: I just said, âI need help.â
Alyssa was coming down from drugs. She was so shattered she was not able to articulate â or even comprehend â the magnitude of what had happened to her.
Alyssa Beck: I just had endured rape after rape after beating. And no food, my hygiene was probably terrible at that point. I just ⊠looked like death.
But at the time, the only thing she reported to police was that Ian Sean Gordon had raped her. She characterized herself as a prostitute because thatâs how she saw herself then.
Alyssa Beck: People labeled me as a promiscuous, bad girl, prostitute, criminal, juvenile delinquent. And you know, after hearing that so many times, I started believing it myself.
Alyssa was briefly treated at a hospital. But, she was also placed under arrest. Remember, Alyssa had violated her probation by running from that court-ordered rehab. So she was sent to a lockdown juvenile detention center.
Alyssa Beck: They didnât treat me like a victim. âŠI was just like another criminal in their eyes.
Ian Sean Gordon was brought in for questioning by police. At first, he spun a story that Alyssa was a willing participant.
Shannon Schott | Juvenile justice expert and lawyer: Ian Sean Gordon is telling law enforcement, âHey it was consensual. âŠShe wanted to do this. Iâm not a part of this at all.â So ⊠the whole narrative of the report is written from the perspective of âshe wanted this.â âŠNo mention of the fact that she was probably 90 pounds soaking wet, five feet tall and was 15 years old.
But given her age and condition, Alyssaâs case raised red flags. Federal prosecutor Mac Heavener and his investigator, Detective Richard Trew, were called in. They were part of Jacksonvilleâs Human Trafficking Task Force which was just getting off the ground.
Shannon Schott: And they had a very different opinion about what happened. âŠBecause they knew what was going on. They were aware of how bad this problem was becoming in the United States.
Trew, a former vice squad cop, was pioneering a new approach to dealing with sex trafficking victims.
Det. Richard Trew: Pretty much back in the day, I was out there, it was our job to pick up as many girls in a shift as we possibly could. âŠYour job was to make arrests.
But he says it was his former partner FBI Agent Eileen Jacob, who has since passed away, who taught him another side.
Michelle Miller: What was the other side? What was the side that vice squad wasnât getting?
Det. Richard Trew: These girls donât choose to be there. You â you got to hear their story.
Alyssa Beck: I just thought it was my fault, and that I got myself into this situation because I ran away and if I was never that rebellious teenager, this wouldnât have happened to me.
Within days of hearing Alyssaâs story, Jacob and Trew were the ones to gently tell her that, in fact, she been sex trafficked.
Alyssa Beck: Eileen was the first one that really tried to convince me ⊠Like, Alyssa, youâre a victim. You know you never asked these men to do things to you. And even though you made these mistakes, you did not deserve this.
Alyssa was transferred from the detention center to another juvenile rehab facility. And as difficult as it was, she soon told investigators every detail she remembered about what had happened to her.
Mac Heavener: Alyssa had such a vivid recollection and such a detailed memory of what had happened. She gave us the map, so to speak, to go create cases against these people.
So much so that Prosecutor Mac Heavener took a risk. Not only was the task force going to go after Ian Sean Gordon, but they were going to be one of the first in the country to go after some of the customers who bought Alyssa.
Mac Heavener: For us, it was very important to send that message that weâre gonna go after both sides of this crime. Because both individuals, the trafficker and the customer, are whatâs required to exploit sexually a child like this.
By the summer of 2010, Operation Abandoned Hope led to the arrests of seven people who were involved in buying or trafficking Alyssa, including the mastermind, Ian Sean Gordon.
Operation Abandoned Hope led to the arrests of seven people who were involved in buying or trafficking Alyssa Beck, including the mastermind, Ian Sean Gordon [not pictured]. CBS News/Jacksonville Sheriffâs Office
SHERIFF TO REPORTERS: SEX TRAFFICKING OF THE NATURE ALLEGED IN THIS OPERATION WAS TANTAMOUNT TO SLAVERY.
Gordon and five others pleaded guilty to sex trafficking or related charges. One was convicted of producing child pornography for filming Alyssa.
Michelle Miller: Essentially, you had what, seven defendants?
Det. Richard Trew: Yes.
Michelle Miller: From a single victim?
Det. Richard Trew: Yes.
Michelle Miller: That doesnât happen very often does it?
Det. Richard Trew: No it doesnât. And I think we had this based on her ability to remember vividly everything that she had been through â every encounter, every place, what people drove, what they wore. And we put it all together.
Alyssa had to relive the trauma over and over again as she sat through the many sentencing hearings. Her mother made sure she attended each of them with her.
Heather Beck [emotional]: I think it was important for her to know that I was her mother and I was never gonna leave her side.
When it was time for Ian Sean Gordon to be sentenced, Alyssa found her voice.
Alyssa Beck: And I remember strongly getting up there ⊠and like fiercely reading this poem in front of the whole courtroom:
âI RAN AWAY FROM A SUBSTANCE-ABUSE PROGRAM AND I NEVER THOUGHT IâD BE IN THE GRIP OF A MAN THAT WANTED TO STEAL MY INNOCENCE.
HE PULLED ME IN WITH HIS KINDNESS AND PUSHED ME OUT WITH HIS VIOLENCE.
I WAS ONLY 15 AND NAĂVE, HE FED ME WITH A POISON THAT ALTERED MY MIND AND MADE ME LEAVE MY FAMILY BEHIND.
I WAS STUCK ON CRACK AND THE DEMON WAS STUCK ON MY BACK.
IâVE HEARD OF THE STORIES OF GIRLS LIKE ME RUNNING AWAY BUT I NEVER THOUGHT THAT I WOULD SEE THIS DAY.
I WENT FROM LIVING AT A NICE HOUSE ON THE BEACH TO LIVING FROM MOTEL TO MOTEL AND BEING THROWN OUT ON THE STREETS.
BLOODY, BROKEN, AND BRUISED I NEVER FELT SO USED.
USED FOR ANOTHER MANâS PLEASURE AND GREED BUT HE MADE ME THINK HE WAS SUPPLYING ME WITH WHAT I NEED.
BUT DEEP DOWN INSIDE THE LITTLE GIRL HAD TO HIDE.
SCARED TO SHOW WHAT LIES WITHIN A BODY INFESTED WITH ANOTHER MANâS SIN.
THE DEVIL HAD MY SOUL, BUT DONâT GET ME WRONG I DIDNâT HAND IT TO HIM.
I WAS BEING SOLD FOR 100 SOMETHING MEN TO HOLD.
THESE MEN GAVE ME ORDERS AND I COULDNâT REFUSE BECAUSE I WAS THE ONE BEING ABUSED.
DO YOU KNOW WHAT ITâS LIKE TO WAKE UP WITH A SWOLLEN FACE NOT KNOWING THE LOCATION OF THE PLACE WHERE I LIE HOPELESS ON THE FLOOR? BUT IâLL TELL YOU ONE THING MY BOSS SURE WASNâT POOR.
I ATTENDED THESE MEETINGS WHERE I WAS INSTRUCTED TO TAKE THESE BEATINGS DISCUSSING THE PRICE OF THE COST BUT MONEY COULDNâT FIND THIS SOUL THAT WAS LOST.
HE TAUGHT ME THE TRICKS OF THE TRADE. HE HAD ME BELIEVE MY LIFE WAS MADE BUT IN REALITY, I WAS JUST HIS SEX SLAVE.
BRAINWASHED INTO BELIEVING BUT IT WAS GOD I WAS DECEIVING.
I WAS NO LONGER HUMAN I WAS A PRODUCT FOR THIS MAN. I WAS HIS WALKING CONTRABAND.
I HATED THIS LIFESTYLE BUT I WAS FORCED TO LIKE IT BECAUSE I LIVED IT FOR SUCH A WHILE.
I WAS THE DEVILS EMPLOYEE BUT IT WASNâT HARD TO SEE THAT ALL I WANTED TO BE WAS FREE.
SO ONE DAY I TRY TO ESCAPE FOR MY OWN LIFE SAKE.
BUT I WAS TURNED INTO THE MAN I MOST DISGUSTED BY THE PEOPLE I MOST TRUSTED.
THREATENED WITH A GUN IF I TRY TO RUN AGAIN, NOW IâM SITTING HERE PUTTING THE PIECES TOGETHER SO I WONâT HAVE TO LIVE THIS LIFE FOREVER.
ALL THIS TIME IâVE BEEN DIGGING MY OWN GRAVE BUT NOW IâM SAVED. LOOK AT ME NOW MY SPIRIT IS HEALED BUT IT TOOK THIS LONG FOR MY TRUE FEELINGS TO BE REVEALED IâVE BEEN THROUGH IT ALL.
I LIVED THROUGH ALL THE FLASHBACKS, THROUGH ALL THE NIGHTMARES AND THIS TIME I WILL MAKE SURE I DONâT FALL.â
âALYSSA BECK
Alyssa Beck: I remember feeling on top of the world after I read that poem because that was like my closing to him. That was the last thing that I was ever gonna say to him.
And while Alyssa waited to find out Gordonâs fate, actor and activist Ashton Kutcher was on a mission of his own â developing software to rescue sex trafficking victims.
Ashton Kutcher: These victims ⊠find safety in someone, anyone, anywhere, that will show what they think is love.
A CRUEL CYCLE
Ian Sean Gordonâs life was now in the hands of Judge Marcia Morales Howard. She could sentence him to as little as 15 years and as much as life in prison.
Judge Marcia Morales Howard: Selling a 15-year-old girl is bad enough. But he did so much more than that.
Judge Marcia Morales Howard: He beat her. He raped her. âŠAnd I just did not believe that any human being who thought it was OK to do that, had any hope of redemption.
Judge Marcia Morales Howard: A life sentence was the only sentence.
Ian Sean Gordon received one of the first life sentences given to a trafficker in the United States. Jacksonville Sheriffâs Office
Life in prison â one of the first-ever life sentences given to a trafficker in this country.
Judge Marcia Morales Howard: The sentence spoke to the brutality and the violence and the complete and utter lack of respect for human life. She was alive. But in many ways, he destroyed her.
Actor and tech entrepreneur Aston Kutcher is determined to stop the destruction caused by sex traffickers.
It was back in 2009 that he Demi Moore watched news reports about child sex slaves and were so horrified they founded an organization that is now called Thorn.
Ashton Kutcher: What we do at our core is we build technology to help fight the sexual exploitation of children.
Kutcher knew that tech was a tool of traffickers and that Thorn had to focus on Internet sites like Backpage.com, where sex traffickers advertised children for sale.
Ashton Kutcher: If you look at the place where these people are sold online, it’s right next to a car, or a sofa or a used bicycle.
Of the nonprofit, Thorn, Kutcher says: âWhat we do at our core is we build technology to help fight sexual exploitation of children.â CBS News
https://www.broadbandsearch.net/blog/online-safety-parental-controls
So he gathered a team of experts with one goal in mind: to identify and find victims quickly.
Ashton Kutcher: You can roll up your sleeves and go try to be like a hero and save one person or you can build a tool that allows one person to save a lot of people.
And while the tech tool was in development, Kutcher was also raising awareness about the severe mental manipulation victims to suffer at the hands of their traffickers.
Ashton Kutcher [to audience]: Thereâs a mental health issue that happens when you have that kind of trauma.
Ashton Kutcher: âHereâs a brand new Gucci belt ⊠but you need to turn 10 tricks today or Iâm gonna beat the sâ out of you.â ââŠHereâs a place to live and some food today. Oh, now youâre addicted to drugs so I got your next fix for you but you gotta go turn 10 to 20 tricks.â
Michelle Miller: I want to show you one of our kids. Her nameâs Alyssa. She was 15 years old when she was trafficked.
Kutcher never met Alyssa, but her story is all too familiar.
Ashton Kutcher: Itâs a very complicated psychological problem.
And the emotional fallout from trafficking can be overwhelming. When Alyssa finally returned home to her family, her story didnât end there.
Alyssa Beck: At first, I had really bad nightmares â flashbacks. And it was, it was really hard just to sleep without thinking that I was gonna get woken up â by him beating me â or wake up with somebody on top of me.
In February of 2011, Alyssa, who was now 16 years old, was crushed by shame and self-blame and started running away again.
Alyssa Beck: I still donât think I completely understood the aftermath of the trafficking.
This time she was placed into foster care and ended up stealing money from her friendâs mother.
Heather Beck: I thought, âOh my God, not again.â âŠAt that point, I had just had given up.
Alyssa was charged with theft, tried as a juvenile and found guilty. While she awaited her sentence, knowing she was facing up to a year behind bars, Alyssa was placed in yet another rehab facility.
Alyssa Beck: I did not want to go to jail. And I would have done anything to keep from going to jail.
And thatâs when Gregory Hodge, trolling the area for girls, approached her during a walk one day.
Gregory Hodge Facebook
Alyssa Beck: He was like, âHey, what are you doing? Do you want to make some money?â
He offered her a job in what he told her was a legitimate massage business. Alyssa jumped at the chance.
Shannon Schott: Alyssa was a very broken and vulnerable person. And I think that she just wanted to believe the lies of Gregory Hodge. And she wanted to believe that he really was going to do everything he said he would give her a place to stay, give her a job, give her power. And she didnât want to be locked in a cage, so that was the better option.
But Hodge uploaded photos of her to Backpage.com. And she ended up right back on drugs and in the sex trafficking trap.
Lawanda Ravoira | President, Delores Barr Weaver Policy Center: People often ask, âHow does a girl end up in the same situation after getting out?â
Getting lured back into the world is something trafficking expert Lawanda Ravoira sees happen to girls all the time.
Lawanda Ravoira: Alyssa began to see herself as unworthy, as âThis must be where I belong. I donât belong with regular people.â
Alyssa Beck: When people ask, âWhy didnât she leave?â And I donât know if thereâs really a right answer for it. But I do know that I physically, mentally and emotionally felt like I couldnât leave. Even if I thought it was the right thing, I just couldnât.
And then the beatings started.
Alyssa Beck: And I remember him slapping me and hitting me. âŠI remember getting up and running out of the front door â and him chasing after me
Michelle Miller: She feared for her life with him.
Shannon Schott: She did. She really did.
She managed to outrun Hodge, and in desperation, called Louis Wingard â another criminal she knew from the streets. Alyssa says she believed he would protect her.
Shannon Schott: He was more of like a father figure to her. âŠHe was promising her, âIâm gonna get retribution for you.â
Angry and hurt, Alyssa decided to fight back. Hodge had her money and all of her belongings. So, on Aug. 30, 2011, she, Wingard and two of his associates, set out to get Hodge. They jumped him in his car. But, before Alyssa knew it, the plan spun out of control.
Alyssa Beck: Gregory Hodge was duct-taped and put in the back of his trunk.
They all drove to Hodgeâs home looking for money. A relative was there â watching Hodgeâs 8-year-old daughter.
Alyssa Beck: [They] ⊠had to tie her up and put her into the closet â [she pauses] âŠAs much as I didnât like Gregory Hodge and what he did to me, I didnât want anyone to get hurt or feel the pain that I felt.
They grabbed some valuables and fled leaving everyone tied up. Police were tipped off.
All were eventually arrested, and this time, Alyssa was charged as an adult â facing six felonies, including kidnapping and carjacking.
In August 2011, Alyssa Beck was charged as an adult â facing six felonies, including kidnapping and carjacking. Jacksonville Sheriffâs Office
Heather Beck: It was really sad. âŠsad because I just didnât know when I would ever not see my daughter through the glass.
SECOND CHANCES
When Shannon Schott learned Alyssa was in trouble again, she knew it would be an uphill battle to help her. Alyssa was caught in a cruel cycle. Schott took the case pro bono.
âI represented over 2,000 or more people. And Alyssa is the first person who has done literally everything that she could do to claw her way out of her circumstances,â said lawyer Shannon Schott.
Shannon Schott: I knew that she was looking at life in prison. And I couldnât imagine and still canât imagine being 16 years old and facing life in prison.
As for Gregory Hodge, he too was arrested for his role in this whole complicated episode. He would eventually plead guilty to trafficking Alyssa.
Det. Richard Trew | Jacksonville Human Trafficking Task Force: His defense was that he just wanted girls to do massages. He didnât know they were doing additional things.
Michelle Miller: So he was ignorant about the whole situation?
Det. Richard Trew: Claimed to be.
Michelle Miller: And the fact she was underage?
Det. Richard Trew: He also claimed he thought she was 18.
Judge Marcia Morales Howard didnât buy Hodgeâs defense. She believed he knew exactly what he was doing.
Judge Marcia Morales Howard: He explained that he needed the money. He wanted to take care of his child.
Judge Marcia Morales Howard: I was pretty horrified by the idea that in order to provide for his own young daughter he thought it was OK to sell another manâs daughter ⊠I couldnât accept that and I told him that. And his sentence was an effort to reflect that.
Gregory Hodge left, was sentenced to 13 years in prison. Louis Wingard, who had a long list of other charges from his past, received two life sentences. Jacksonville Sheriffâs Office/Florida Dept. of Corrections
She sentenced him to 13 years in prison. Louis Wingard, who had a long list of other charges from his past, received two life sentences.
Alyssa was in an adult jail, isolated from other inmates for her own protection. Her case dragged on and on.
Shannon Schott: She hit rock bottom. She went to jail â she sat alone for a really long time.
And as she sat alone with nowhere to run, she says she had an epiphany.
Alyssa Beck: And I wanted to help people. I want to do things differently ⊠Like the battle will be won if I just donât give up.
Michelle Miller: That transformation, how big of a deal is that?
Det. Richard Trew: Maybe as big as Iâve ever seen.
With a renewed sense of hope, Alyssa â while in jail â got her high school degree and vowed to prevent others from following in her footsteps by giving talks to troubled kids.
Shannon Schott: Even when she was staring down life in prison, she was helping others. ⊠And if she could believe that she had a future not behind bars, then I could believe that too.
While Shannon was still working to resolve Alyssaâs case in Florida, across the country, in California, Ashton Kutcher and his team at Thorn had a breakthrough. In 2013, they created Spotlight: a confidential software that had the potential to transform the way law enforcement finds victims.
Quietly, authorities began testing it.
Ashton Kutcher: We basically take a victim, that otherwise is just a posting online, and we turn them into a human being. And then we take that and connect them with someone that can help [becomes emotional].
In July of 2014, after three years in jail, Alyssa was released on bond. She would later plead no contest to her charges of kidnapping, carjacking and burglary. She was sentenced to time served and two years probation. She was given a second chance.
Shannon Schott: I couldnât believe it. I was elated. It was definitely hard work, faith that paid off.
Lawanda Ravoira: When Alyssa came to us, the greatest barrier was helping her to know that she could trust us.
Alyssa was referred to the Delores Barr Weaver Policy Center run by Lawanda Ravoira, left. There, Alyssa finally embraced the counseling she so desperately needed.Today, she works at the center as an advocacy specialist. CBS News
Alyssa was referred to the Delores Barr Weaver Policy Center run by Lawanda Ravoira.
There, she finally embraced the counseling she so desperately needed.
Lawanda Ravoira: Very early on we saw her just grow so quickly in this safe environment.
Today, Alyssa works at the center as an advocacy specialist.
Alyssa Beck [speaking at a âSee the Girlâ event]: So today I stand in front of you as a fierce, independent, courageous and brave, as people say, advocate.
Heather Beck: Sheâs confident, sheâs strong. âŠWhen sheâs out there advocating for others, Iâm very proud.
Detective Trew and his new partner, Special Agent Courtney Harrison, continue to be on the front lines.
They now use Spotlight, the software developed by Thorn. Spotlight is used by some 6,000 law enforcement agencies across the country. And itâs working.
Ashton Kutcher: At this point, weâre identifying five victims a day. And our algorithms are getting better â weâre getting smarter â weâre getting the tool in more peopleâs hands.
Agent Harrison and Det. Trew finds a girl who has been trafficked. âWe never give up on these girls,â said Drew. CBS News
On this day, undercover agents have found a girl who has been trafficked, but she is too fearful to cooperate just yet.
Special Agent Courtney Harrison | Jacksonville Human Trafficking Task Force: We just have to give her time. âŠSheâs willing to talk. That door hasnât shut. âŠIt hasnât closed soâŠ
And just like their mentor â FBI agent Eileen Jacob â taught them, they live by one motto:
Det. Richard Trew: We never ever give up on these girls.
Heather and Alyssa Beck
Alyssa says she is grateful they never gave up on her. Today, she has extra motivation to keep moving forward. After a brief relationship, she is now a mother.
Alyssa Beck: Sheâs my world and she depends on me. I will never let her down.
She lives with her sister and visits her parents regularly.
Alyssa Beck: And I think part of me does what I do for her because I want her to see, you know, what a strong, independent woman is. And even though I went through all the terrible things that I went through, I want her to know that you have a choice and itâs never too late to turn your life around. Source
In April 2018, the FBI shut down Backpage.com, charging several of its officials with sex trafficking of minors.
Paul writes in Romans 13:12, âThe night is far gone; the day is at hand.â The âtimes of ignoranceâ (as he said at Athens, Acts 17:30), the dark season of human history, now has passed with the coming of Christ. The previous statement clarifies the context: âYou know the time, that the hour has come for you to wake from sleep. For salvation is nearer to us now than when we first believedâ (Romans 13:11). The day of Christâs coming, Paul, says, âhas drawn near.â
Hebrews 1:1-2 ⊒ God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds.’
“The beginning of sorrows” started nearly 2000 years ago with the persecution of the early church and the destruction of Jerusalem. We are living right at the end of time.
The people spreading concrete information on the dangers of globalism are accomplishing far more than those sitting around buying bitcoin or passing around Q-cult nonsense.
StevieRay Hansen
Editor, the127.org
https://www.broadbandsearch.net/blog/online-safety-parental-controls
Let Me Make This Abundantly Clear. (I Am Apolitical) While I Have a General Distaste for Politicians No Matter the Party They Belong To, I Am Unashamedly Politically a Bible Believing Conservative Christian. I Have a Severe Distrust of Government. I Believe It Is the Most Inefficient and Ineffective Way to Accomplish Most Things. While I Strongly Disagree with Liberals/Progressives and Conservative on Most Political Issues, and While I Believe Liberals/Progressives and Most Politicians Are Terribly Misguided and Naive About What Big Government Will Eventually Result In, I Strive to Not Question Their Motives. at the Same Time, While I Find Myself in Agreement with Conservative Politicians on Some Issues, I Do Not Believe Electing Republicans Is the Answer to Everything. for Me, Very Sadly, the Main Difference Between Republicans and Democrats Is How Quickly They Want to Drive the Car Towards the Cliff. Simply put, I do not believe the government is the solution for everything. I do not place any faith, trust, or hope in any politicians to fix what is wrong with the world. “Come Lord Jesus!” (Revelation 22:20)
Education is useless without the bible (Daniel Webster)
Usually, the Lord doth no great thing for or against his people, without giving warning of it before it comes.
John Wesley who said that what we tolerate in our generation, will be embraced by the next. Wesley is 100% correct! We are living in sick times.
Evil Exists So Spiritual Warfare Becomes Necessary!
John Wesley who said that what we tolerate in our generation, will be embraced by the next. Wesley is 100% correct! We are living in sick times.
HNewsWire- âAll political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable.â Just look at some of our modern-day examples: torture is âenhanced interrogation techniquesâ; murder is âcollateral damageâ; the aggression initiation of war is a âpre-emptive strikeâ; the theft of taxpayersâ money is a âbailoutâ, and the theft of depositorsâ money in a bank is a âhaircutâ or âbail-inâ.In a blatant example of Newspeak, the New World Order controllers (through the psychiatric DSM V) have tried to rename pedophiles as âminor-attracted personsâ and redefine pedophilia as a âsexual orientationâ. This makes no sense since sexual orientation has to do with gender, not age, with whether you are attracted to males or females, not how old they are. There are even organizations (like B4UAct.org) which are claiming that pedophiles are being unfairly stigmatized for their feelings!
Justice is a word that stands alone, adding anything to it demeans itâŠ.
It is impossible to find anyone in the Bible who was a power for God who did not have enemies and was not hated.
Children are being misplaced or lost in our foster care system, we must demand more openness and accountability from each state.
If you have information or believe there is a child in danger thatâs being exploited please contact 127 Faith Foundation
[email protected]
Call 325.347.2654
Please help me help these kids(orphans) that are in trouble, PLEASE 80% of the book sales goes directly to: The 127 Faith Foundation
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“It is better to be divided by truth than to be united in error. It is better to speak the truth that hurts and then heals, than falsehood that comforts and then kills. Let me tell you something, friend, it is not loved and it is not friendship if we fail to declare the whole counsel of God. It is better to be hated for telling the truth than to be loved for telling a lie. It is impossible to find anyone in the Bible who was a power for God who did not have enemies and was not hated. Itâs better to stand alone with the truth, then to be wrong with a multitude. It is better to ultimately succeed with the truth than to temporarily succeed with a lie. There is only one Gospel and Paul said, âIf any man preaches any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed.â
Proverbs 31:8 (NIV)
Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves,
for the rights of all who are destitute
MY MISSION IS NOT TO CONVINCE YOU, ONLY TO INFORMâŠ
Jesus come quick, there is nothing left in society that’s sacredâŠ.
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