Six Children Recovered, 52 Johns Arrested in the Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO—Officials from the FBI and 30 Bay Area law enforcement agencies have recovered 149 underage trafficking victims and arrested 153 pimps in a nationwide human trafficking operation conducted throughout the United States last week. The initiative, dubbed Operation Cross Country IX, is a national effort spearheaded by the FBI and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, along with state and local law enforcement partners across the country. The initiative, now in its ninth year, targets the criminal enterprises responsible for the commercial sex trafficking of children.

The youngest victim in this year’s operation was 12 years old. Of the 149 victims recovered, three of those minors were transgender, and three were males. During the operation, 90 victim specialists provided on-scene direct services to the victims of sex trafficking, while 105 child victims received on-site direct services, which may have included crisis intervention and resources for basic needs like medical, food, clothing and shelter. Due to the size of the operation, FBI victim specialists coordinated with local law enforcement victim advocates and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) who provided additional support to the victims.

In the Bay Area, FBI officials recovered six underage victims and arrested eight pimps as part of the takedown. Additionally 52 johns were arrested, more than any previous year as the FBI is now able to prosecute johns under new laws passed under the Federal Human Trafficking Bill. During the operation, a 16-year-old juvenile from Milpitas who had been missing for almost a month was recovered in Oakland.

“Human trafficking is a monstrous and devastating crime that steals lives and degrades our nation,” said Attorney General Loretta Lynch. “As a result of the FBI’s outstanding coordination and exemplary efforts alongside state and local partners during Operation Cross Country, more children will sleep safely tonight, and more wrongdoers will face the judgment of our criminal justice system. The Department of Justice will continue to aggressively and persistently fight this heinous crime and to hold its perpetrators accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”

Operation Cross Country IX is the largest in the nine-year history of the initiative, with 53 FBI field offices and 73 Child Exploitation Task Forces, which include federal, state. and local law enforcement agencies, taking part in the operation in 135 cities across America, including the San Francisco Bay Area. Nationwide, more than 500 law enforcement officials, including investigators and officers from federal, state, and local law enforcement organizations, conducted both “in-call” and “out-call” operations in hotels, casinos, truck stops and in other areas known to be frequented by both prostitutes, sex traffickers, and their customers.

“The success of this operation in the Bay Area was made possible because of the strong partnership between multiple law enforcement agencies,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge David J. Johnson. “Selling children for sex is a heinous crime and will not be tolerated. Protecting children is one of the FBI’s highest priorities because every child deserves to be safe and sound. Through targeted measures like Operation Cross Country, we can work together to rescue and provide services for children who become victims of crime.”

Operation Cross Country is part of the FBI’s Innocence Lost national initiative, which began in 2003. Since the program’s inception, more than 4,800 children have been recovered from underage prostitution and prosecutors have obtained more than 2,000 convictions, including at least 15 that have resulted in life sentences.   back...