Be advised this piece contains adult themes and content. 

Request for Assistance

This past weekend, I received a request for assistance from a counter-human trafficking organization operating primarily in the northwestern U.S. Consequent to a recently discovered human trafficking ring that is national in scope and is an operational node here in Albuquerque. I was, therefore, provided with a link to a post on an adult dating website and needless instructions on what to collect and report on the matter.

In the day, the go-to website for organizations such as the LionHeart Foundation, which hunts traffickers, was www.BackPage.com. That page was so flagrant in its violation of human rights and trafficking of persons that the FBI promptly seized the web servers and arrested the owners. Similar dating sites scrambled to fill the void left by BackPage, and when the music finally stopped, the new king was www.SkipTheGames.com.

Back Page

All my former persons of interest, whom I watched from BackPage, now reside in some capacity on SkipTheGames—same photos, same narratives, same angles. At the time of BackPage’s demise, we felt elation as hunters of traffickers—a feeling that gave way to immediate panic at the loss of our staple resource for hunting those traffickers. Ah, but we were delinquent in recalling that nature abhors a vacuum, and the next “BackPage” came right along in short order.

The representative site above was the only info I was given, along with a request to find the pimp! That may seem rather difficult — but at face value only. There had to be a way to contact the victim of this trafficking event and to make an appointment with (in this case) her on that page somewhere. And as anticipated, I found the options at the bottom of the page.

To schedule an appointment, you can call or email. I first sent an email using a ghost email account from Yahoo.com. My comfort zone in these cases doesn’t immediately include talking in person with these women, but I do it without hesitation to progress the case.