WHEREAS, President Obama has proclaimed January 2011 National
Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention month; and
WHEREAS, The United States Department of Health and Human Services
and the United States Department of Justice estimates that between
14,500 and 17,500 people are trafficked into the United States each
year, with 50 percent of those being children; and
WHEREAS, Of the people trafficked internationally, an estimated 46
percent of those are for the purpose of prostitution, 27 percent for
domestic servitude, 10 percent to work in agriculture, and 5 percent to
work in factories; and
WHEREAS, Human trafficking is not only an international problem
with persons being smuggled into the United States or having received
false promises about the work they will do, but also a domestic one
that devastates the lives of women, children, and men in our own
communities through labor and sex trafficking activities, often
involving the commercial sexual abuse of minors; and
WHEREAS, Early awareness of this problem in Washington state came
about because federal experts determined Seattle to be one of the ten
human trafficking hotspots with people being smuggled into Seattle's
ports in containerships from Asia for labor, and the high-profile
murders of "mail-order brides" (Suzanna Remata Blackwell and Anastasia
King) and the enforced servitude of another (Helen Clemente); and
WHEREAS, Washington state has been in the forefront, nationally, in
the fight against human trafficking since 2001 under the leadership of
former State Representative Velma Veloria working with community
organizations, such as the Asian & Pacific Islander Women & Family
Safety Center, in convening a conference on human trafficking with the
University of Washington Women's Center, and, in 2002, leading the
efforts in creating in statute the nation's first state task force
against the trafficking of persons, and in 2003 in creating the crime
of trafficking, the first in the United States; and
WHEREAS, In every legislative session since, funding has been made
available and/or trafficking laws have been strengthened by specifying
penalties for violations of the criminal trafficking statute;
regulating the mail-order bride industry; establishing protocols for
providing services to victims of trafficking; providing funds to be
used in providing legal aid to undocumented immigrants who are victims
of sexual assault, domestic violence, or human trafficking; restricting
sex tourism; adding victims of trafficking to the Secretary of State's
address confidentiality program; creating and strengthening penalties
for a new criminal category for the commercial sexual abuse of a minor
and for providing training for law enforcement officers through the
Criminal Justice Training Commission; requiring domestic employers and
international labor brokers to disclose federal and state labor laws to
employees and requiring dissemination of information on trafficking to
health care providers; and in authorizing antitrafficking posters to be
placed in state highway rest stops; and
WHEREAS, Former Congresswoman Linda Smith, founder and President of
Shared Hope International, is a strong advocate against human
trafficking and the commercial sexual abuse of minors and leads the
Protected Innocence Initiative, which utilizes a holistic strategy to
promote zero tolerance for child sex trafficking; and
WHEREAS, Rani and Trong Hong, founders of the Tronie Foundation,
were victims of sex trafficking, whose courage to tell their stories
has raised awareness of issues of human trafficking in the United
States Congress and in legislative bodies around the world, and who
opened the state's first shelter for trafficking victims; and
WHEREAS, Human traffickers use many physical and psychological
techniques to control their victims, including the use of violence or
threats of violence against the victim or the victim's family,
isolation from the public, isolation from the victim's family and
religious or ethnic communities, language and cultural barriers, shame,
control of the victim's possessions, confiscation of passports and
other identification documents, and threats of arrest, deportation, or
imprisonment if the victim attempts to reach out for assistance or
leave; and
WHEREAS, Thursday, January 13, 2011, was Washington Antitrafficking
Engagement Day, an event to raise awareness and encourage advocacy on
the issue of human trafficking at the Washington State Legislature;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, That the Washington State Senate
recognize those people and organizations that fight daily against the
scourge of human trafficking, and encourage others to observe the
National Slavery and Human Trafficking Prevention month with
appropriate ceremonies and activities to combat human trafficking; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That copies of this resolution be
immediately transmitted by the Secretary of the Senate to former
Representative Velma Veloria; the Asian & Pacific Islander Women &
Family Safety Center; the Department of Commerce's Office of Crime
Victims Advocacy; Dr. Sutapa Basu, Executive Director of the University
of Washington Center for Research on Women; the Washington Advisory
Committee on Trafficking (WashACT); former State Senator Linda Smith
and Shared Hope International; Attorney General Rob McKenna who
convened summits in combating human trafficking in Washington; Seattle
Against Slavery; the Refugee Women's Alliance; New Horizons Ministries;
the City of Seattle Division of Violence & Sexual Assault Prevention;
the Not for Sale Campaign; The Polaris Project; the Washington
Anti-Trafficking Response Network; the National Human Trafficking
Resource Center; Rani Hong with the Tronie Foundation; Soroptomists
International; and the Seattle Bridge Program.