[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 39 (Monday, March 9, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1327-S1328]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HUMAN TRAFFICKING
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Ernst). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. CORNYN. Madam President, we spend a lot of time, as one would
expect in a legislative body, talking about the technical aspects of
legislation and the procedure we use to consider it and pass it, a
subject which perhaps many of us enjoy but which probably turns the
public--puts a glaze in their eyes and bores them because they don't
see the relevance of it.
We talk about motions to proceed and cloture and filibusters, but
what is important in the Senate is the subject matter of the
legislation that we apply this procedure or these rules to. This week
in the Senate we will be undertaking a very important subject; that is,
how to protect our fellow citizens, many of them children, who are
needing our help and waiting to be rescued. Those are children who are
being trafficked in the commercial sex and forced-labor trade--not over
there, not necessarily just in some other country, but right here in
the United States of America.
I believe that we are all created in the image of God, that all human
beings are entitled to be treated with dignity and respect. But the
criminals who traffic in human flesh treat these same human beings
created in the image of God as a thing. They treat these children as a
commodity to be bought and sold. To me that is the very definition of
evil. A few weeks ago the Judiciary Committee heard from several
witnesses on what has been called modern day slavery--human
trafficking.
I know many of us thought that slavery was an ugly part of our
Nation's beginning but certainly only something in the past. But the
truth is that there exists today something that you could legitimately
call modern day slavery, and that is human trafficking. Now, even
though institutionalized slavery has long been cast into the dustbin of
history and is something we read about in our history books, human
trafficking, particularly sex trafficking, still affects the lives of
hundreds and thousands of our children.
Tragically, many of them are young girls. As the father of two
daughters, it turns my stomach to realize that a majority of the human
beings who are trafficked are girls who are of middle-school age. In
the Judiciary Committee, we heard from Malika Saada Saar who represents
a wonderful organization called Rights4Girls.
Malika spoke of a young woman named Aviva. According to Malika, Aviva
was in foster care when a trafficker kidnapped her and held her hostage
for almost a year. During this time, we learned in the Judiciary
Committee during that hearing, Aviva was sold to as many as 10
different men a night. Of course, she did not understand. She could not
comprehend why an adult man would want to buy her body when she was
just a child.
When law enforcement officials found Aviva, she was arrested for
prostitution at the age of 15. Let me repeat that because it is
important. This young girl who was kidnapped, raped, and sold nightly--
daily--was treated like a criminal, not a victim. In 1992 Holly Austin
Smith ran away from home and was forced into a sex trafficking ring the
summer before her freshman year of high school.
Within hours of running away, 14-year old Holly was sold for $200 to
a man who wanted her for sex because he said she reminded him of his
granddaughter. When police eventually found Holly--still only a child,
scared and confused, as you can only imagine--they treated her as a
criminal, not as a victim. Too often these children, who are not of the
age of consent, are treated as child prostitutes.
As many of us who have worked on this issue for some time know, there
is no such thing as a child prostitute. If you are not of the age of
consent, you cannot consent, and you cannot agree to be used in such a
horrific way. These are children who are bought and sold for sex--plain
and simple--as nauseating as that truth is. Malika powerfully said
during our hearing: ``There should be no difference between raping a
child and paying to rape a child.'' Now, the individuals who commit
these crimes--not just the people who traffic in them but the people
who purchase these services--too often pay a fine and get on with their
lives. Yet they are the child rapists who should be treated as the sex
traffickers they are.
If it were not for the demand, sex trafficking would not have a
business model. But unfortunately, there is too great of a demand. But
often the people who purchase these children are treated with impunity.
Tomorrow, I expect the Senate will move to consider legislation that I
have introduced with a number of our colleagues from Minnesota,
Illinois, and Oregon. Indeed, there are a number of Senators who have
already contributed a lot of very good and constructive work to the
product we will turn to tomorrow.
The bill is called the Justice for Victims of Trafficking Act. The
most important thing that it does is that it ends the culture of
impunity for the people who purchase children and other victims of
human trafficking. It holds the so-called johns and the pimps
accountable, and it does not focus on the victim who should be treated
like a victim and helped to heal and get on with their lives. But too
often they are the ones who are prosecuted and treated as a criminal.
Instead of being treated as criminals, this bill makes sure that the
future Avivas and Hollys are treated for what they are, and that is as
victims. What this bill also does is it takes the money and assets
forfeited from convicted human traffickers and directs it to services
for the victims. So future Avivas and Hollys would have a shelter, a
place to live, a roof over their head, a bed to sleep in, and somebody
who loves them and cares enough to help them heal and get on with their
lives. That is the kind of treatment these victims of human trafficking
deserve--not jail time.
We know that Washington can be a dysfunctional place more times than
we would like to admit. So often there are political issues or
ideological issues that divide us. But the fight against human
trafficking reminds us that it does not have to be this way. Indeed, I
was heartened a few weeks ago when this particular piece of legislation
passed the Judiciary Committee with unanimous support. All Republicans
and all Democrats on the committee voted to support it.
Indeed, Republicans and Democrats--not just in Congress but across
the country--support this legislation, as evidenced by the more than
200 different organizations, from victims' advocates to law enforcement
groups, which have joined forces to fight this modern day slave trade
and to support the legislation we will turn to tomorrow. It is a fight,
sadly, that must be acknowledged and it must be fought. But it is a
fight we can win, finally delivering our Nation's promise of freedom to
those who are enslaved.
[[Page S1328]]
It is not the kind of slavery we read about in our history books or
the kind that resulted or helped precipitate the Civil War, but it is
the kind that goes on unbeknownst to most Americans and most people but
which represents that seamy underbelly of society, one that we must
expose and one we must reveal as the evil that it is.
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