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DOJ Removes ‘International Sex Trafficking of Minors’ From Areas of Concern Page

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The Department of Justice erased key sections from its child sex trafficking webpage in May, including the atrocity of “international sex trafficking of minors.”

The DOJ’s Criminal Division removed a total of three subject areas from its child trafficking page: “International Sex Trafficking of Minors”; “Domestic Sex Trafficking of Minors,” and “Child Victims of Prostitution.”

“One form of sex trafficking involves the cross border transportation of children. In these situations, traffickers recruit and transfer children across international borders in order to sexually exploit them in another country,” the now-deleted description of the website stated.

“The traffickers can be individuals working alone, organized crime groups, enterprises, or networks of criminals working together to traffic children into prostitution across country lines,” it continued.

“This form of sex trafficking is a problem in the United States, and recovered victims originate from all over the world, including less-developed areas, such as South and Southeast Asia, Central America, and South America, to more developed areas, such as Western Europe. Once in the United States, a child may be trafficked to any or multiple states within the country.”

Deleted portion of the DOJ website

The website’s deleted “Child Victims of Prostitution” profile explained how children are coerced into the sex trade and controlled by their pimps with drugs.

“Pimps and traffickers manipulate children by using physical, emotional, and psychological abuse to keep them trapped in a life of prostitution. It is not uncommon for traffickers to beat, rape, or torture their victims. Some traffickers also use drugs and alcohol to control them,” the description stated.

The “Child Sex Trafficking” section still remains on the website, but the following description was removed:

“After cultivating a relationship with the child and engendering a false sense of trust, the trafficker will begin engaging the child in prostitution, and use physical, emotional, and psychological abuse to keep the child trapped in a life of prostitution. It is common for traffickers to isolate victims by moving them far away from friends and family, altering their physical appearances, or continuously moving them to new locations. Victims are heavily conditioned to remain loyal to the trafficker and to distrust law enforcement.”

This comes as the Biden administration’s open border policy has accelerated human trafficking at the southern border, which has become a billion-dollar business.

“Human trafficking increased massively in the last fiscal year. Arrests rose 50%; convictions soared by 80%. The vast majority, 72%, of those trafficked in the U.S. are immigrants. Most of them are here illegally,” wrote the Heritage Foundation in May.

“Many are women and children who are highly vulnerable to being smuggled and eventually trafficked. A study from the Coalition Against Trafficking In Women estimated that 60% of unaccompanied alien children, or UACs, are caught by cartels and exploited through child pornography and drug trafficking.”

The DOJ’s inexplicable deletion of key child trafficking issues also comes amid the surprising box office success of the anti-child trafficking thriller Sound of Freedom released last week, which tells the story of former DHS agent Tim Ballard who rescues children from the dark underbelly of child trafficking networks abroad.

Bizarrely, the mainstream media has been running interference for the child traffickers and pedophiles by trying to discredit the film as a “Q Anon conspiracy theory” meant for “dads with brain worms.”

H/t Natalie Winters


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