#HUMAN TRAFFICKING???????
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U.S. States With the Most Human Trafficking Victims (2019-2023)
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The Scoliosis Brothers.
I have like two longer comics that will get done who knows when, but they aren't half as funny tbh. Corazon being unreasonably sensitive and petty about Doflamingo is my bread and butter I think.
#one piece#fanart#drawing#op doflamingo#donquixote doflamingo#donquixote rosinante#op rosinante#corazon#maybe cora's hatred is valid#and/or maybe doffy (definitely) traumatized him at a young age#and it's complicated#but as someone with bad taste#i think it's funnier if he has no reason at all#they grew up separated#but while undercover nobody tells Corazon that hating your brother is normal actually#you're being unreasonable#drug/arms/human trafficking what?#what are you talking about?#doffy is normal#SO normal#maybe YOU'RE weird for expecting anything else
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I have to laugh, not because it’s funny but because I’m genuinely losing my mind
Babes wake up the tumblr ceo is being sued for alleged wage theft and human trafficking
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nothing makes me more insane than the phrase "selling your body" btw. like was i not also selling my body at every other job i've had where i had to be on my feet all day, lifting boxes, working in a warehouse, etc. why is it that sex work is uniquely labeled as "selling your body" while every other job is sorted into another category, no matter how much that job might have a physical impact on your body. lmao.
#personal#sw#in fact i have had worse long term physical effects from my jobs that were not sw. as a matter of fact#anyway also related conversation to be had about how most of the human trafficking in the US is not sex trafficking but is in fact other#types of labor that is trafficked#and that if you include prison labor as human trafficking based on different definitions. there is a lot of important connections we can dr#draw. about labor. power. control. and how to build solidarity to actually fight for people's right to free + safe working conditions and#self determination
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#yemen#jerusalem#tel aviv#current events#palestine#free palestine#gaza#free gaza#news on gaza#palestine news#news update#war news#war on gaza#genocide#human trafficking#war crimes
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why do i even bother....
Ko-fi | Shop
#twisted wonderland#trey clover#cater diamond#comic#playful land event#playful land spoilers#treykei#treycater#this event had it all:#third year harem squad with hook up lore#le children (ace ortho kalim) being idols#and#human trafficking./hj#HEY SO WHAT ARE THE OTHER PUPPET HUMANS GONNA DO ARE THEY JUST ALL DEAD NOW///????#also bringing back da angsty treykei moment to remind yall these two are alwayws on teh brink of divorce
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THE TUNNELS
The conspiracy is MASSIVE.
CEO of State Farm & other Insurance companies, Los Angeles Fire Chief, LA Mayor Karen Bass, even CA Governor Gavin Newsom.
Want to know how it all connects?
This conspiracy is related to the other land grabs of Maui & Asheville, however this is no typical land grab.
Well placed sources have said that they are actually being used to destroy the child trafficking tunnels under the Pacific Palisades, all the way to the Playboy Mansion, before Trump gets into office.
Don’t believe there are underground tunnels where children are trafficked?
Sound unrealistic?
Fake?
Research Ally Carter.
Notice how the worst people in the world just got the Medal of Freedom?
It all connects to this.
They were all part of the last 4 years of death, destruction and yes, the big money maker (as well as use for Satanic rituals), child trafficking.
The Medals were given to these people as a way to help legitimize them before Trump gets into office. That way if they’re prosecuted, they’re gonna play up the Medal winner angle. Even the players you didn’t know about, like Denzel, were named. Again, ask Ally Carter.
The plan to destroy the tunnels all started months ago when Gov. Newsom purposely caused a water shortage by diverting water resources into the ocean & “mismanaging” the forestry service to keep the brush in as a way to exacerbate the fires.
At the same time, LA Mayor Karen Bass cut the LA Fire Dept. budget by $17.6 million.
After the water shortage was created & fire budget slashed, no water was coming out of the fire hydrants & firefighters were laid off.
That means no water & no firefighters, as many were laid off before that due to not getting the Covid vaccine.
Once those things were in place, they had the LA Fire Chief prioritize DEI, making sure if any firefighters were hired, they weren’t equipped to handle the job.
Right before the fires started, insurance companies such as State Farm cancelled the policies of homeowners all over LA.
This is to make sure that the tunnels are destroyed & nothing is found in insurance investigations as well as allowing others to come in & “buyout” the land since people can’t rebuild.
They will force them to sell to their friends, protect the secret. The conspiracy goes deep & it DOES NOT take thousands. It only takes a few in well placed positions.
Anyone that wants to dig, I recommend this rabbit hole. Just know that once you learn some of the sinister things lurking below your feet, you can’t unlearn it.
Proceed with caution.
Source: 👇
#pay attention#educate yourselves#educate yourself#reeducate yourselves#knowledge is power#reeducate yourself#think about it#think for yourselves#think for yourself#do your homework#do some research#do your own research#do your research#ask yourself questions#question everything#california#truth be told#fires#rabbit hole#government secrets#government corruption#news#evil lives here#crimes against humanity#underground tunnels#save the children#save humanity#wake up#child trafficking#connect the dots
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We NEED to talk more about Neil's escape from Columbia because I don't think anyone's fully appreciating just how unhinged it really was. Neil really hiked six miles along the freeway in the South Carolina summer heat, face bruised from being knocked out cold dressed like a homeless person carrying a big ass duffle bag and started strolling up to truck drivers like, "Hello there! I'm just a regular sociology student interviewing long haul truck drivers to learn about their culture! Would you allow me to interview you while you drive to your next stop?" And then he did in fact interview a truck driver AND take full notes like he was really doing a presentation on it. That is FERAL
#neil canonically has the best Totally Normal Guy persona but i don't think there's any amount of blank smiling#that could convince someone that was a normal situation no matter how good his lying was#you KNOW that truck driver thought he was escaping human trafficking or some shit lmao#aftg#neil josten#all for the game#the foxhole court#sorry i haven't posted in a while i started going to a different university full time and it was a big adjustment lol
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The Yale School of Public Health Humanitarian Research Lab released a new report detailing evidence of russia's system of coerced deportation and naturalization, reeducation, fostering, and adoption of Ukrainian children.
The key findings:
Yale HRL has identified 314 individual children from Ukraine who have been placed in Russia’s systematic program of coerced adoption and fostering.
Russia’s officials listed children from Ukraine in Russia’s child placement databases.
Russia’s Aerospace Forces and aircraft under the direct control of President Putin’s office transported multiple groups of children.
At least 67 of the 314 children from Ukraine have been naturalized as Russian citizens since being taken to Russia.
At least 208 of the 314 children identified have been placed for adoption or guardianship with citizens of Russia.
Approximately half (46.6%) of the children identified have siblings.
Children have been taken to at least 21 regions throughout Russia.
Russia’s system of coerced adoption and fostering has been ordered and facilitated by President Vladimir Putin and Presidential Commissioner for Children’s Rights in the Russian Federation Maria Lvova-Belova.
Children assessed to be from Ukraine have been listed across three primary child placement databases in Russia as if they are children born in Russia.
Russia utilizes psychologists (психологи) as part of an apparent effort to legitimize the program.
All children identified in this report have been taken from Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts.
At least 80.4% of children from Ukraine listed in Russia’s databases have been taken from Donetsk oblast.
Children taken from Ukraine were transferred to various midpoint locations within Russia.
Children from Ukraine have been subjected to pro-Russia re-education.
Agencies operating Russia’s databases would later limit what personally identifiable information was publicly available about children in the databases.
You can read the full report here.
#Ukraine#russia is a terrorist state#genocide#russian war crimes#war crimes#human trafficking#kidnapping#child abduction#international humanitarian law#IHL
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The audacity to market Yuu and Grim as a 2 for 1 special is truly the most insulting part of this event.
#imagine being told you're going to be turned into a wooden puppet and sold off just to be part of a BOGO sale#add insult to injury#IS YUU NOT GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU HUH#the casual human trafficking in the event is insane btw#twisted wonderland#twst#twisted wonderland fanart#twst fanart#erin#twst yuu#ramshackle prefect#twst grim#twst ernesto#ernesto foulworth#twst fellow#fellow honest#playful land#playful land event#twst event#cheekindraws
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okay i am pretty fucking triggered by it but today's "how is there more matt mullenweg shit happening", quite apart from the (comparatively minor) bullshit he himself has been up to today, is learning that he has allegedly trafficked at least one woman
because that's what this sounds like to me
i'm also a bit upset about the tone that the easiest website to find both complaints on takes, where it's all about matt's mother as a gotcha against him. like it's approaching things entirely sideways, in terms of the seriousness of what's alleged by each complaint. it's (unfortunately) par for the course for people caring for the elderly, especially once there's cognitive decline, to be exposed to bigotry. it's not acceptable for there to be money laundering and falsifying arbitration agreements as is implied in those complaints, and it's certainly not fucking acceptable to engage in human trafficking. so like. i don't actually care what this man says about how smart he is or how rude he is on twitter any more. justice for these two women, and may the truth come to light. jesus fucking christ
(also, if you do go look at the complaints: know that there's a hell of a lot of homophobic, transphobic, and incredibly racist content documented, as well as significant sexual harassment. read with care.)
#tony muses#human trafficking w#tumblr meta#matt mullenweg#automattic#i was already coming up on a trauma anniversary tomorrow and there's a lot of other shit going on for me i honestly. i am so upset
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Stood Too Close to a Devil
Pairing: Tim Bradford x fem!UC!reader
Summary: While investigating a human trafficking ring, you get in too deep. You're abducted and meet a group of women you can't leave behind. After months of fighting, you find your way home to the one safety they couldn't take from you.
Warnings: recommended 16+, human trafficking, child abduction and trafficking, allusions to SA, physical/emotional abuse, imprisonment, r is harmed numerous times, drugging, discussion of scars, depiction of corrupt politicians, comfort and early healing at the end
Word Count: 7.3k+ words
A/N: I used one of @nevereclipse 's fantastic ideas for this! The length clearly got away from me, but I love the idea of Tim being home and providing safety for someone that really needs it. Hopefully this is along of the lines of the original post and please feel free to let me know what you think!🫶🏼
You walk up the metal stairs of the cheap motel, feeling your shirt rise up on your waist with each step. The bag in your hands prevents you from pulling the worn fabric down, but it’s okay. Anything that draws attention is appreciated right now. You knock on the door with one hip pushed out to hold the bag.
“Hey, handsome,” you greet when the door opens. “I got everything you asked for.”
Stepping into the room, you set the overfilled bag on the bed and wait for the door to close. Your shoulders droop as you exhale heavily and pull your shirt down to your hips. “Twenty.”
Nyla’s eyes widen as she repeats, “Twenty? Two-zero?”
Nodding, you push your forefinger and your thumb against your eyebrows. “I know. This is way bigger than I thought.”
“It’s bigger than any of us thought,” the chief of Major Crimes agrees. “How’s your cover?”
Tim interrupts your answer and asks, “How are you?”
Licking your lips, you consider lying. “It’s rough,” you admit. “But I can do it. My cover is intact, no one suspects anything, and I’ve gotten more attention the last three nights.”
“What kind of attention?” Nyla inquires.
“Rich has been watching me while I’m working, and the guy at the front desk of the motel asks me about work every day.”
“They’re prying,” Major Crimes Chief Rodriguez says. “Trying to decide if you’re in a position to be asked.”
“Am I?”
“Not yet,” Nyla answers. “People with steady jobs and the income to stay in a long-term motel aren’t usually desperate enough to traffic.”
“Which we aren’t doing,” Tim reminds you. “We need proof, not for you to get sucked in.”
You nod, chewing the inside of your cheek. “Doesn’t make it easier to watch the twenty women they do choose get trafficked.”
“We’re doing everything we can to recover them,” Rodriguez promises. “Keep your eyes open, head down, get information, and we’ll go from there.”
“Rich got violent last night,” you tell them. “I didn’t see the knife but I heard he had one. Got up in a girl’s face because she asked if he was paying.”
“For?” Nyla asks.
“A dance.”
Tim crosses his arms tightly against his chest. He’d been against the idea of your cover job being in a sleazy bar, but there was no better option. You’re close enough to see what you need to see, yet separated just enough to not be easily pulled into it.
“Any idea when they’re planning to act next?” Rodriguez asks as he jots notes on a small black pad.
“I heard someone say something about ‘payday Friday,’ but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re pulling someone new in,” you reply.
“And it’s still too early for a hotel sting,” Tim complains.
“I’ll ask around with some of the girls, see what I can find out,” you offer. “Anything else?”
“Do you think you could get someone to take you to ‘payday Friday’?” Nyla asks. “I know it’s dangerous, but it they trust you enough, it could help.”
You nod and agree to try, though you know Tim is concerned about it. Tim wraps his hand around your arm as you pick up the emptied bag and prepare to leave. His touch is gentle and warm, and you wish you could melt into it and leave this undercover operation in the past. But you need to infiltrate this organization before they traffic even more innocent women.
“Be careful,” Tim urges you quietly. “This is way bigger than anyone knew, so if you need to get out, pull the ripcord.”
“I will,” you assure. “Thank you. You’ll be close?”
“Always.”
You leave the motel room with the promise that Tim is with you, and though it doesn’t make what you’re about to see any better, it makes your practiced confidence come a bit easier.
The black SUV waiting one block away is probably your backup. Tim’s metro team can’t be far, but as you walk deeper into an alley, following three armed men and their dates, your chest tightens. One of these women may be the target, or they could be compliant witnesses to the cruelty these men get pleasure and monetary gain from daily.
“You’ve met, right?” Rich, a regular at your cover job, asks as he gestures between you and his date.
“I don’t think so,” you answer with a smile. “I’m Jewel.”
“Do you speak Spanish, Jewel?” Rich inquires.
“A little bit.”
“Renata here doesn’t speak any English, but she’s very nice.”
You smile and introduce yourself in Spanish.
“No conozco a estos hombres,” Renata says. Her voice is strained, but her smile remains as she confides in you that she doesn’t know these men.
“What’d she say?” Rich's best friend Kol demands.
With an airy laugh, you answer, “She said she doesn’t know where to meet friends here.” Turning to her, you promise, “Te ayudaré. I told her I’d help her.”
Rich and Kol look at one another, then smile.
“I’m sure she’ll really appreciate your help,” Kol says.
His date snickers as she takes the other woman’s hand. So, they do know, you realize. And I just promised to help a woman who’s probably going to be trafficked while I stand here and watch.
“Hey, is Jewel your real name or just, you know, something you go by?” Rich wonders.
“It’s my real name,” you say, staying close to Renata.
“Sounds like a stripper,” one of the women whispers.
“Do you mind if I ask Renata for her phone number? I’d like to introduce her to some of my friends if she’s free sometime.”
Rich nods before he turns to converse privately with Kol and their dates. You raise your phone and text ‘Landlord,’ who is Tim, that something is about to go down and a woman is in immediate danger. You delete the text from your phone after it says it was delivered.
“¿Tienes un número de teléfono?” you ask Renata.
“Me dijo que la diera a la gente siete números. Me dará un teléfono antes de ayudarme a contactar a mi familia en Venezuela,” she answers quickly.
That’s not good. Rich told her to give seven random numbers and promised to get her a phone after she starts working for him to support her family in Venezuela. You know, like most cops, that if a trafficker thinks someone is willing to work to help their family in another country, they are prime targets.
Given that Rich and Kol are proven traffickers – in addition to committing other crimes – you know that you have to get Renata out of here before it is too late. She’s clearly scared, and if they catch onto her fear or realize that you’re not talking to her about meeting friends, this will go bad quickly. Tim hasn’t answered, and no police have descended on the alley, so you have to think fast. A truck approaches from the southern end of the alley, less than a quarter mile from the freeway. The men are still talking, and you take a deep breath.
“Huir,” you demand under your breath. Run away.
Renata looks at you, then takes off. Kol moves to chase her, but you step out to block his path. You’re too deep, and it will be too late to get out if Tim doesn’t bring Metro in now. But you had to help Renata. Her blood would have been on your hands if you hadn’t. Now, you’re risking your life to let her run to safety.
Rich steps forward and smiles as Kol asks what to do.
“Way I see it?” Rich answers. “We came down here to get another girl. I’m looking at one.”
“I’m not going with you,” you say, stepping back.
Kol pulls a gun from his waistband and replies, “Yeah, you are.”
You prepare to run, hoping that Tim will come around the corner. You’re still undercover, you remind yourself, and whatever happens now could save another life. Your arms are pulled tightly behind you, and you’re pushed into the back of a large white truck.
After the door closes and the truck lurches into motion, someone lights a match, and you see three women huddled in the corner, shaking and scared.
“¿Hablas ingles?” you ask.
“Yes,” one of them answers.
“I’m a police officer, okay? I’m going to do everything I can to help you and get you out of here. Are you hurt?”
“Ilsa is,” the woman with the match says. “They hit her with a metal belt.”
You move deeper into the truck and introduce yourself.
“I’m Maria, and this is my cousin Becca.”
You glance at Becca as you lift the back of Ilsa’s shirt. “How old is Becca?” you whisper.
“Fifteen, she just had her quinceañera," Maria answers.
Exhaling sharply, you examine the swollen red strip spanning Ilsa’s back. As you pull a miniature first aid kit from inside your boot, you say, “We’re going to have to work together, especially to keep Becca safe.”
“Of course,” Maria answers.
“They’re monsters,” Ilsa says. You notice immediately that her accent sounds Russian. “I’ll do anything I can to protect her. She’s only a child.”
“You’ve done more than enough.”
Looking away from Ilsa’s back, you face Maria, who says, “The man with the belt was trying to keep Becca from crying.”
“Least I could do,” Ilsa murmurs before hissing in pain when you swipe an antibiotic wipe across her wound.
“It’s more than that,” you say. “I won’t lie, I’m not supposed to be here, so this is going to get worse before it gets better. Do either of you have any idea where we’re going?”
“Tijuana,” they answer together.
Your eyes widen at the information that they’re moving you across state lines, country borders, and right out of your jurisdiction. The tracker sewn into the seam of your underwear only works for a few miles, so you’re completely disconnected from your station and the people who could help. Worse, you realize as you fall back, is that you have been trafficked. You’re no longer an investigator. You’re a victim.
As the truck shakes while you head south, you remove the jacket tied around your waist and hold it to your chest as you think. It still smells like Tim’s cologne, and you breathe it in as if it will disappear at any moment. Racking your brain for an idea of what to do, you try to think like Tim and Nyla. Every thought you have of trying to stop these men ends with you dead and the women beside you living in fear in a place where they’ll likely never be found.
“Do you need anything?” you ask them.
They shake their heads, and Ilsa’s chin drops as if she’s asleep.
“I’m glad you’re here,” Maria whispers. “You’re the angel we prayed for.”
She closes her eyes as the match burns out, and you tip your head back to look at the dark ceiling above you. I’m not an angel. I just stood too close to the devil.
The truck door rolls open loudly before a blindingly bright light greets you.
“Bienvenidos a Mexico,” Rich greets. “Send the little one, we’ve got someone here who wants to meet our newest helper.”
“Take me instead,” you reply, moving toward your abductors. “I’m new, too.”
“Not exactly what I meant.”
You jump from the truck and move to stand mere inches from Rich. “You just shoved that girl in the back of a truck and drove her to another country, you’re going to have to take it easier with her. She doesn’t know what you’ve done yet.”
“She’ll have to learn,” he seethes. “And we don’t have much time for teaching.”
Leveling your gaze on his, you wait for him to give. Kol mumbles something behind him, and Rich says, “Okay. Let’s go.”
Hours later, your face feels tight from all the dried tears on it when you are shoved into a damp room lined with cots. Ilsa recites a story to Becca while Maria braids her hair, but they look up at you when the door slams and locks.
“Have you seen any other women?” you ask.
“Two more. They came in for a few minutes, then the ugly man came and took them back out,” Ilsa answers.
“They didn’t speak,” Maria adds quietly. “Do you think their spirits are gone?”
You tug the roots of your hair and answer, “For their sakes, I’m beginning to hope so.”
“Are you okay?” Becca whispers.
It’s the first time she’s spoken to you, the first you’ve heard of her voice, and you smile at her. “I’m okay, and you’re going to be okay, too.”
“What is this place?”
“It’s a bad place, and they’re going to try to let bad people do bad things to us, but I’m not going to let them,” you promise.
“You can’t,” Ilsa argues.
“I took an oath to serve and protect, and that didn’t end at the border. They’re not going to do anything to you as long as I can help it.”
“Did…” Maria begins.
“No,” you answer. “He.. No, I’m okay.”
“Knock, knock,” Kol calls obnoxiously. He sets food on the nearest cot and asks, “How’s the little princess?”
Ilsa says something in Russian as Maria moves to sit in front of Becca.
“What do you want, Kol?” you demand.
“It’s a question,” he snaps. “I want an answer.”
“You want to know how she is? She’d be better if you weren’t around.”
Kol looks over his shoulder, then demands, “Come with me.”
“No.”
“Come. With. Me. Or I’ll come in there and get you.”
You clench your jaw as you stand and follow him. The moment the soundproof door is closed, he shoves you against the concrete wall and presses his weight against your back.
“I don’t like people that talk back to me,” he seethes in your ear.
“And I don’t like people who traffic humans,” you argue, pushing back against him.
Kol raises one hand to your head, pulling it back enough to slam your nose into the wall. You can feel it break, but you’re out of tears, and he doesn’t deserve them anyway.
“Beat me, sell me all day everyday, do whatever you want, but I’m not letting you put one more finger on that little girl,” you say though the blood running over your lips.
“Sounds like a challenge!” Rich exclaims. He comes to your side and adds, “I love challenges.”
“Who are you working for?” you ask. “You two morons are barely smart enough to drive, so there’s no way you’re the masterminds.”
“What does it matter to you?”
“When someone smarter than you comes along and gets free, I want to make sure she knows who the police should be looking for.”
“They’ll never find the Vaquero.”
“Doubtful you could find him either,” you reply, attempting to kick free of Kol.
He slams his foot against the back of your ankle, and you buckle forward at the pain.
“You want to work more? I’ll get right on it,” he says before pushing you back into your prison.
In a heap on the floor, you barely manage to tell Maria to back away from you before you puke. Sitting up, you see that Becca is asleep. Ilsa watches you lean against the concrete wall, and you point to the bucket of clothes beside her. There isn’t much in it, but a bra at the bottom catches your attention. It’s wireless, of course, because these people are smart enough to avoid giving scared women anything that could be used as a weapon. You fold it so the cups are together, making it thicker, then place it between your teeth. It holds your tongue down and catches your scream as you use the sides of your palms to straighten your broken nose.
“You’re going to get yourself killed,” Maria chides as she looks for something to stop your bleeding.
“Hand me the jacket?” you ask.
She passes you Tim’s jacket, and you watch a tear fall onto it before you hold it against your face. “I’m sorry,” you whisper into it.
“Will he come for you?” Ilsa inquires, walking toward you.
“I don’t think I left him enough clues,” you admit, though it’s muffled.
“You’re smart, I’m sure you did.”
Looking at Maria, you say, “If I get killed, don’t let it be for nothing.”
“We’ll protect each other,” she counters.
“No matter what,” Ilsa adds.
The following day, no one enters the room. There’s water in the corner and Becca snacks on the food from the night before, but nothing changes. Tim’s jacket still holds the scent of his cologne on the end of the sleeves, and you keep it beside you as you attempt to rest. It dries your tears and holds your blood, but it’s nothing like being near Tim. It’s a reminder that you can get home, and that’s all you need it to be.
“There’s a first aid kit,” Becca says, standing from the corner. “It looks new.”
You extend your hands, and she places the metal box in your hold. Opening it, you sigh at the sight.
“It is new,” you announce. “Ilsa, let me see your back again?”
She lifts her shirt, and you begin treating the stripe. “It looks better. Hopefully this will help more.”
“I can’t feel it,” she says.
“That’s not good,” you reply immediately.
“I should say, I choose not to. We have more important things.”
“Your health is important.”
“And yours isn’t?”
After a month of preventing Ilsa, Maria, and Becca from being removed from the room, you are exhausted. Rich has taken pleasure in coming to retrieve you every time, and when he opens the door for the eighth time in five days, you stumble as you stand.
“If you’re too tired,” he taunts.
“I’m fine,” you answer. “Get out.”
“We have guests coming tomorrow,” he says with a smile. “You’re going to have to get along with me, or they’ll show you a different kind of punishment.”
“It can’t get much worse.”
Rich walks toward you, and you notice a rope in his hand. “Trust me, it can. Now, let’s go.”
“What are you doing?” Ilsa demands.
“Leashing the dog,” he answers darkly. He steps behind you, his breath warm and too close to your skin. “Walk.”
You exit the room and decide not to fight back as he secures your wrists and up to your elbows with the rope. It’s uncomfortable and pulls your shoulders into a dangerous position, but talking too much will only feed his ego and endanger every woman in this bunker.
“Open your mouth,” he says as he walks before you. “Now.”
After you lick your lips, he pries your mouth open and pours something inside. He taps your neck, forcing you to swallow, and you feel your muscles weaken as he leads you toward the exit. You urge yourself to remember the route to reach the door where the sunlight shines beneath it, but each step is heavier than the last and requires concentration.
Rich uses your restraints to pull you to a stop. You tip back and can’t catch yourself with your hands, so you fall to your butt and groan. To stay upright, you cross your legs and wait.
“I said I wanted someone who could look the part of a cop,” someone with a familiar voice complains. “She can barely stand.”
“When the drug wears off, she’ll be fine,” Rich explains. “Did you bring it?”
“You induced myopathy to walk her to the door? What is she, a fighter?”
“She’s an annoyance. Remind her that we’re here alone with her friends. She’ll do whatever you want.”
You can hear the man's smile as he repeats, “Whatever I want.”
However, he doesn’t have to remind you of anything because you do what he asks. There’s a feeling in the air like something big is happening, and you want to be out of your cell for it. You can only hope that Ilsa, Becca, and Maria are safe while you’re gone, but believing they are makes it even more important to obey and keep them safe.
“Put this on,” the man – tall, older, and clearly not Mexican – demands as he tosses a small costume package to you.
You catch it, fully recovered from the drug’s effects, and look at the skimpy black fabric within. As you remove it from the package, you realize who the man is and why he sounded familiar in the bunker. Councilman Brek has been demanding in every interview he’s done, and it’s been rumored he has the city and government employees in Los Angeles in his wallet to stay in office so long.
“You’re Vaquero?” you guess.
“Maybe I am, which means you do precisely what I say. I don’t trust you, so you’re going to have to change here and now,” he instructs slowly.
Nodding, you begin to change as quickly as possible. The so-called police uniform is little more than a too-small vest and a tube-style skirt with a light badge hanging from it.
“Perfect,” the man applauds, blatantly looking at your body rather than your face. “Let me introduce you to the girls. Ladies!”
You follow him into another room where seven women are dressed in similar outfits, in different colors, and bearing agency badges.
“Tonight, you will be known as your badges. So, we’ve got DEA, NSA, CIA, FBI, LAPD, NYPD, ICE, and CSI, how needs some glasses.”
You look at each woman as he speaks and wonder where they’re from. You can't guess if they’re working for him legitimately or if they’re all like you. For all anyone knows, they could be undercover, too, though the pleased smile on CSI’s face after she receives glasses makes you think otherwise.
“Finish your shift without incident and we’ll talk. Anything happens, tell my assistant Mark and he’ll handle it. The rules are simple: You work, they pay. If someone tries to do anything without paying, Mark is your first contact. Understood?”
“Yes, sir,” you reply with the other women.
The clock on the wall says four a.m. when you consider calling for Brek's assistant Mark, but remember Rodriguez’s advice: keep your head down. If you can get through tonight without causing any problems, maybe Rich and Kol will trust you enough to give you more freedom. It’s unlikely, but lives are at stake, including your own.
“Come to papa, LAPD!”
You turn and smile at the short Latino man beckoning you closer. Extending your hand, you wait for him to pay you with one hand on your hip.
“I said come here,” he repeats.
Rubbing your fingers together, you remind him, “I’m supposed to receive payment first.”
He twists his head to crack his neck and then extends his arms. His hands grip your barely covered hips before he pulls you into his lap.
“Let go,” you demand under your breath, looking around for Mark and wishing it was Tim coming to help you.
If you were undercover in LA, Tim would have already had this guy off of you, and tears prick your eyes when you remember how long it has been since you saw him and worked with him.
“Stop fighting,” the man says.
His demand is punctuated by the telltale sound of a switchblade. NYPD slows as she walks behind you, and when the man shifts his hand to squeeze your thigh instead, she screams Mark’s name.
Before he reaches you, you press your hands against the man’s shoulders and shove yourself away from him. You realize then that the knife was closer than you thought. Mark hauls the man out of his chair and disappears. NYPD and DEA escort you back to the room where you got dressed and encourage you to sit.
“Is this yours?” DEA asks, raising Tim’s jacket.
“Yeah,” you answer.
She presses it against your bleeding inner thigh, and you dig your fingers into the chair beneath you.
“This needs stitches,” NYPD says. She looks around before whispering, “Are you working here?”
You shake your head in a small motion, and she chews her bottom lip.
“We have a sewing kit,” DEA whispers. “But I don’t know if that would work.”
“I do,” you interject. “Bring it to me?”
She hesitates but does as you ask. NYPD threads the needle after DEA sterilizes it over a nearby burning candle. You remove Tim’s jacket and put the end of the sleeve in your mouth to bite down on. Each stitch burns worse than the last, and your fight to stay conscious makes your hands shake.
NYPD takes the needle, tugs the jacket sleeve free, and says, “Breathe, LAPD.”
You mumble your name, and she smiles as she says, “I’m Jessica. I’ve been watching, so I can try to finish them if you want.”
“Please.”
“You’ll scar her!” DEA argues.
“It’s going to scar no matter what,” you say. “I’m not that good. Please just help me.”
NYPD nods as you let your eyes close momentarily.
Tim could have kept it from scarring you think just before Mark enters the room to escort you back to work.
Kol doesn’t see the wound when he arrives to take you back to the bunker. Not that you think he’d care, but you covered it just in case he’d make you stop taking the “jobs” intended for Becca, Maria, and Ilsa.
Lowering carefully onto your cot, you let the pain in again and acknowledge it with a groan.
“What happened?” Ilsa asks, rushing to your side.
“I need the first aid kit, please.”
Maria turns away to distract Becca when she sees your patched-together stitches, but Ilsa kneels beside you to help.
“It’s gonna be a long night,” she murmurs.
“It’s been a long month,” you correct her.
She chuckles wetly, and you smile as she wraps bandages around your thigh. The bloody jacket is clutched to your chest, and you once again wish that it was Tim holding you, and not you desperately gripping the idea of him.
“It’s been months without a word, Tim,” Nyla says. “Rodriguez has other cases, but that doesn’t mean he’s giving up on her.”
“He closed the case!” Tim yells. “It has been weeks since he looked at anything related to the traffickers, and suddenly it’s time? She’s still out there, Nyla!”
“I understand, Bradford, I do, but until we can pick up their trail again, there is nothing we can do.”
“So, you expect me to just go back to work while one of our own is being trafficked?”
“I expect you to do what you need to do to make Rodriguez think you’re not undermining him,” Nyla says quietly. “I’ve been looking too. We’re not going to let her disappear.”
“And if she’s already gone?”
“We find the people who took her and make them pay with everything they have left.”
“Everybody pack up and drink up,” Rich demands as he kicks the door open.
“Drink what?” Maria asks, leaning up to look at the clear glasses on his tray.
“You’re going home.”
“What?” you, Ilsa, and Maria exclaim together.
“The Vaquero bailed you out. The drink is a celebration.”
“We’re going home?” Becca asks Maria, gripping her hand tightly.
“Three of you.” Rich looks at you, and you nod. Their freedom is your hush money, and it will work... for now. You'll stay quiet about Councilman Brek being Vaquero if it gets these women home.
“No,” Ilsa says. “I’m not drinking that if she’s not going with us.”
“Yes, you are,” you tell her. “You’re going home because that was always the goal.”
“What about the other women?!” she exclaims.
“I’ll work to free them next.”
“You’d die before you did that,” Rich says. “It took you over five months to free these three. You think we don’t have replacements for them already on the way?”
“You got what you wanted, Rich,” you say. “Ladies, pack and drink. I’ll cheers with you.”
You wrap Tim’s jacket around your waist, tap your glass against theirs, drink, set the glass down, and fall into darkness.
“Where are the tracking records?” Angela asks.
“From the underwear tracker?” Nyla clarifies as she leans over Tim’s table.
“That’s where her tracker was?” Tim asks, furrowing his brows.
“I guess Rodriguez didn’t put them in the file,” Nyla says, frowning. “Or they’re digital and he couldn’t figure out control-P. Let me check.”
Tim looks at surveillance pictures of you as Nyla clicks through the laptop before her.
“Printer is full if you need to use it,” he murmurs.
“Thanks.”
Angela stands to retrieve the papers as Nyla lifts your undercover phone from the charger.
“Tim,” Angela calls, looking at the top page. “Did you get a text from her the day she was abducted?”
“No,” he answers, raising his head.
“She deleted it, but the metadata is still there.”
Nyla extends her hand and reads the information on the page before looking up at Tim. “It says it delivered.”
Tim takes his phone from his pocket and checks, but there are no messages from you. Angela checks the other undercover phone, but there are no messages there either.
“Where did it deliver, then?” Nyla wonders. “It says she sent it to ‘Landlord.’”
“Landlord?” Tim asks. “On the last day she was here?”
“Right.”
“Rodriguez changed our covers the morning before. He told me he let her know. Landlord texts went to Rodriguez.”
Nyla purses her lips before she asks, “Which city council member endorsed Rodriguez for chief?”
“Brek,” Angela answers. “It fueled the pay-off rumors.”
“There’s something else going on here,” Nyla says. “And Rodriguez knows about it.”
“I’ll call-“ Tim begins.
“We don’t know who we can trust,” Angela interrupts.
“Wade,” he finishes. He pauses and looks up rather than making the call.
“Call him,” Angela and Nyla say together.
You blink your eyes open, realize you don't recognize the room around you, and sit up quickly.
“I gave you a very thorough description,” Councilman Brek complains. “She looks nothing like what I asked for. If I’m paying for you to bring them up to LA, I expect to get what I pay for.”
“Sir, we don’t have anyone fitting that description,” Rich explains. “And you liked her before.”
“But this isn’t before, is it? She's cost me enough money without this screw up.”
“Excuse me?” you interrupt. “I- I’m from LA, and I know a lot of women willing to do anything for money. Maybe I can help you get what you want.”
You bite your tongue after you speak to keep your stomach from flipping. You’re offering to traffic someone else, and even though it’s a cover to get these men in custody, it still feels wrong.
“I’m not sure I feel comfortable divulging that information to you,” Councilman Brek replies.
“Who is she gonna tell?” Kol points out. "She's been quiet about everything else."
Brek sighs, then says, “I want a dark woman with natural hair, shorter than me, relatively small, and mouthy.”
You manage to keep your eyes from widening at his precise desire and somewhat racist description. “Yeah, I know someone like that.”
“You do?” Brek and Kol ask together.
“I only know her first name,” you reply. “It’s Crystal. I know where she lives, like geographically, not the address.”
“I want Crystal,” Brek decides, turning toward Rich. “Take LAPD here to fetch Crystal and bring them both back.”
“Yes, sir,” Rich and Kol answer together.
You walk out to the car with them and slide into the passenger seat. They brought your clothes with you during the overnight transport back to LA. Now, Tim’s jacket hangs off one shoulder as you give Rich directions to an undercover residence. He parks, and you’re surprised when he and Kol unbuckle their seatbelts. Your hand moves to release yours, and Rich backhands you. His ring draws blood on your cheek.
“You didn’t really think I’d let you waltz up there, did you?” Rich asks.
“Just surprised you wear seatbelts,” you answer meekly.
He locks the doors behind him, trapping you in the car, and you watch as they walk to the door you pointed out and ask for Crystal. A nearby Metro team that was likely on standby ambushes them nearly immediately after hearing Detective Harper's previous undercover name. Without time to react, they’re cuffed and placed in patrol cars before they even realize what’s happening.
When more officers arrive to keep up appearances, you know you must get out of here. With Tim’s jacket protecting your skin, you break the passenger side window, climb out, and run through the night.
When you finally reach the door you’ve dreamed of walking through for nearly half a year, it is dark, and the city is as asleep as it gets. You haven’t had a home in too long, and thinking of going to the station to answer questions about every little thing you saw and did makes you nauseous. So, you linger outside the one place you can think to go. Raising your hand, you grip your stained jacket sleeve in your fist and knock.
The door opens harshly as if the person is grumpy from being woken or unimpressed by such a late visit. You forget to breathe when you see the man at the door and the first breath you force yourself to take causes a tear to roll over your cheek. Tim steps toward you, his shoulders dropping as his eyes widen and his gaze softens. He sees the blood on your cheek but doesn’t try to touch you.
“I didn’t know where else to go,” you admit quietly.
Tim nods and pushes the door open wider for you. With the sleeves of his old jacket grasped between your hands, you step into his home and wait.
“I… What do you need?” he asks.
You look down, unsure about where to start answering that question. “A shower would be nice,” you reply.
Tim leads you through his house and into his bedroom. He tells you where all of his clothes are, where the fresh towels are under the sink, and invites you to use whatever you want.
“I’ll be close, if you need anything,” he says before closing the door behind him. “You can lock the door,” he adds through the wood.
You lay your hand on the doorknob, then let your fingers slip off without locking it. Navigating carefully and quietly through Tim's room, you take a few pieces of his clothing into the bathroom. The warm shower feels good, but you hate that you can’t hear well over the falling water, so you cut your time in the cleansing stream short. Dressed in Tim’s clothes, you walk through his bedroom and open the door. Tim stands from his position on the floor, where he’d been waiting down the hall in case you called for him.
“I’m not going to ask if you’re okay,” he says. “Do you know what you want to do?”
“Can I just…” You trail off and gesture weakly in an around motion.
“Yeah, of course,” Tim answers. “I’ll be on the couch.”
He listens as you pace through his hallway and into his bedroom. You’re not the woman he knew before, and he understands that, but his worry about you and concerns about what you’ve been through threaten to overwhelm him.
Ten minutes later, you enter the living room and sit on the other end of the couch. You pinch Tim’s sweatpants between your fingers and avoid looking at him, but you’ve never been happier to be in his presence, to be sitting beside him.
“I’m here,” Tim says. “I don’t want to push anything on you, but whatever you need, whatever I can do – or not do – to help you, I am here.”
“Thank you,” you say, looking up to see him. “I missed you.”
“You had my jacket.” Tim’s eyes drop momentarily like he’s trying to place what else is different about you.
“I couldn’t look in the mirror,” you confide. “Is my nose crooked? Or crookeder than before?”
Tim hesitates before he answers. Not because your nose is crooked and he’s preparing to lie, but because he’s wondering what happened to your nose and who caused it.
“It looks perfect,” he says. “Like before.”
You place your hand gently over your nose and say, “Kol broke it.”
“I’m sorry,” Tim whispers.
You drop your hand and nod at him. Moving closer, you close some of the distance between you. “I want to feel like me again.”
“You will,” he promises. “You’re the strongest person I’ve ever met.”
“I might’ve used all that strength.”
“Then you’ll use ours. Everyone around you is ready to help you.”
“Until they find out what I did and have to hear my word against his,” you murmur.
Tim wants to know more about what that means, but your head drops against his shoulder, and suddenly, you are the only thing in the world that matters.
“How’d it go?” Tim asks as you exit the locker room a week later.
“Okay,” you answer carefully. “I don’t think the DA completely believed me about Councilman Brek, but everyone else in the room did. Hopefully Rich and Kol are cowardly enough to take a plea deal and testify against him.”
Someone calls your name as you enter the station’s lobby with Tim.
“Ilsa?!” you exclaim, rushing to hug her. “Are you okay? What are you doing here?”
“My father hired a PI after my return, and the man found more women. We are here to talk to the detective.”
“Which detective?” you inquire, hoping it isn’t Rodriguez.
“That would be me,” Nyla says. “Major crimes was stretched a little thin, and when I saw your name in Ms. Alekseev’s report, Lopez and I jumped on it.”
“Thank you. Ilsa, here’s my number,” you say, handing her a card.
She hugs you again and turns around just before she reaches the door. “Thank you for saving our lives. Maria and Becca went to the embassy when we returned. They’re with their family.”
Nyla mouths safehouse and you nod in understanding.
“You’re brave, Ilsa. Thanks for keeping me safe.”
“I don’t think one bandage makes us even.”
“We’re survivors, that makes us even.”
She waves and follows Nyla into the station as you and Tim exit. He leads you to his truck and opens the passenger door for you, repeating one bandage over and over in his mind. Realistically, he knew you had to have received injuries, but other than the broken nose, he doesn’t know exactly what you went through. Only that Councilman Brek was involved.
“Want me to order dinner?” you ask as Tim backs out of the parking space.
“Whatever you want,” he answers, meaning it in more ways than dinner.
An hour after you wish Tim goodnight and retreat to his extra bedroom, you knock on his partially open door. He invites you in, and you don’t hesitate to enter and tuck one leg under you as you sit on his bed.
“Can we talk?” you ask.
“Of course,” he answers, turning to focus completely on you.
“First, thank you for letting me stay here. I’m working on finding a new place, but I really didn’t want to be alone.” Tim nods, so you continue, “The day they took me, I texted who I thought was you, as you know, but when they put me in the truck, there were three women inside.”
“Ilsa?” Tim guesses.
“Yeah, and she had just been injured. And then Becca and Maria. Becca- She’s 15, Tim. I couldn’t leave them in there, defenseless.”
“Wait,” Tim murmurs, laying his hand over yours. “No one blames you for getting trapped. You were abducted, that’s not something anyone is going to be mad about.”
“I probably could’ve fought and gotten out. I couldn’t leave them.” Tim nods, so you tell him about your first few nights in Mexico, about the bunker and Rich and Kol, and about how you kept Becca as far from everything as possible.
“And Brek bought their freedom to keep me quiet about him being Vaquero,” you finish, leaving out the worst of your experiences. “I think about it a lot, but the worst memories come when I’m trying to sleep.”
“I get it,” Tim assures you. “I’ve got a past that plagues me too. It gets better, and you’re not alone.”
“I feel safe with you,” you admit, dropping your eyes to where Tim’s hand rests on yours. “When I convinced them to let me lead them to Crystal, I was scared I’d never find who I was before.”
“And now?”
“I know I can,” you say. “With you.”
“Can I ask something?” Tim requests. “You can say no, and you don’t have to answer.”
“Of course.”
“There was dried blood on your clothes when you showed up. Was it all yours?”
You nod and unconsciously shift closer to Tim.
“Some of it was from the broken nose. Tim, your jacket kept me alive. It held a lot of blood and tears, but it reminded me of home, of you, and it helped me fight when I thought I had nothing left.”
Tim swallows, and his eyes drop. You follow his gaze, then lay your hands over the jagged scar on your thigh.
“You’re safe,” you repeat. “I can be me again with you. And I can never thank you enough for that.”
Tim slowly raises his hand to your face to catch the escaping tear with his thumb. You lean into his touch, and Tim promises to stay close.
“Brek has some illegal strip club or bar, I don’t know exactly what it is, down there,” you begin. “I was there for a night, dressed – which is a generous term for the uniform – like a cop, and some guy didn’t like the order of how things happened.”
“You’re okay,” Tim promises.
You lean into him, resting against his chest as he shifts his arms to hold you. With your shoulder tucked beneath his, your face on his chest, and your legs pulled over his, Tim holds you like he never wants to let you go. You’re a cop and are far from naïve about the dangers and the evil of the world, but right here, you feel completely safe and more at home than anywhere else. Tim’s finger drags lightly over the scar as he kisses your forehead.
“We’re going to get him, and get all of those women home,” you say. “Nyla told me that you didn’t give up on me, even when Rodriguez tried to sweep everything.”
“Of course not. I knew you’d be fighting even harder to get home.”
After a moment, Tim asks, “Did you get a tetanus shot?”
You laugh. For the first time since returning home, you truly, joyfully laugh. “Yes, I did,” you answer with a smile. “Thank you for seeing me through the scars.”
Tim smiles, gently tracing your cheekbone and jaw, and silently promises to make every single person involved pay for what they did. He'll start with the man who assaulted you with a knife and work down the list.
“Tim,” you say. It draws his attention back to this moment. “Do things have to go back to exactly how they were before?”
Tim looks down your body, then raises his brows. Clearly, your position says no, but you want confirmation from Tim that you’re more than you were before.
“Can I show you?” he asks.
“I’d love that.”
Tim flattens his palm against your cheek and drops his chin to kiss you. It’s slow, and though his hands are on you, it’s different than before. You’re not scared of touch, you realize, leaning into his hands. Tim Bradford is home, he’s safe, and you love him. Despite the scars, the trauma, and the unforgettable horrors you’ve seen and experienced, he loves you too.
“Does that answer your question?” he whispers against your lips.
His hand drops to your leg once more, and when he doesn’t hesitate to brush it over your scar, you smile and say, “Maybe repeat it? Make sure I got everything?”
Smiling, Tim says, “If anything ever feels wrong, or brings up something you don’t like, promise to tell me?”
You offer your pinky to promise, and Tim takes your wrist gently in his hand. The scars circling your wrists and forearms have lightened, but the deep rope burn carved into them will never disappear entirely. After Tim kisses a darker scar, he hooks his pinky in yours.
#tim bradford x reader#tim bradford x y/n#tim bradford x you#tim bradford fic#tim bradford the rookie#tim bradford imagine#tim bradford#tim bradford angst#the rookie x reader#the rookie abc#fem!reader#hanna writes✯#cw human trafficking#tw human trafficking#cw injury
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Sheriff Grady Judd Reveals How US Federal Government Provides Unlimited Free Plane Tickets To Illegals
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Ladies don't travel to another country with a man if your legal status is uncertain. If you do hold onto your passport and make sure your ticket isn't a one way.
Exit trafficking: Western Sydney man abandons his wife overseas after she fell out with his mum
Western Sydney man convicted over 'exit trafficking'
He took his wife abroad, but only he had a return ticket
READ MORE: Human trafficking gang that operated a string of brothels jailed
By PADRAIG COLLINS FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA
PUBLISHED: 06:40 EDT, 27 June 2024
A western Sydney man who abandoned his wife overseas after she fell out with his mother has been convicted over what is known as 'exit trafficking'.
It is a type of modern slavery where women are tricked or coerced into leaving a country, in this case Australia, and prevented from returning.
The 44-year-old man, who lives in Merrylands in Sydney's south-west, took his wife on 'a charity mission' to their home country of Afghanistan in January 2018, police said.
But the man, known as AR to protect his family, only had a return ticket for himself. His wife did not realise that her ticket was one-way to Afghanistan.
The day after he returned to Australia, AR wrote to the Department of Home Affairs, cancelling the sponsorship of his wife's visa, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.
He did so because his mum didn't like his wife, and it resulted in the woman he had been married to for four years being stranded overseas.
The woman's relatives helped get her back to Australia, where she reported her husband to the police.
AR's conviction last Friday was the third such exit trafficking conviction in Australia.
He was sentenced to two years jail with 12 months of it to be served in the community on a good behaviour bond.
Human rights activist Helena Hassani said there has been an increase in such oppression of women, often in migrant communities, in Australia.
While there are many cases involving men from Afghan and other migrant communities taking their wives abroad and leaving them there, she said there are also many cases where 'Aussie men marry women from Asia, bring them here, but marry them into servitude, or treat them like sex workers'.
Many women, such as AR's wife, are only in Australia on partner visas, leaving them reliant on their husband's sponsorship to stay in the country.
Some women in these communities are discouraged from using money, getting an education or working outside the home because the men want a 'servant'.
'It's a cultural practice where the less educated women are, the happier men are, because then no one is challenging them, no one is confronting them, and they just live the way they want to live,' Ms Hassani told the publication.
Acting Detective Sergeant Sarah Manning of the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said exit trafficking often goes unreported.
No one has the right to 'cancel' another person's visa, including the visa sponsor,' she said.
'This type of behaviour is a Commonwealth offence and carries a potential 12-year jail term.'
The first exit-trafficking conviction was in 2021, when a man from Lidcombe in western Sydney threatened to murder a woman unless she boarded a flight to India with her infant child.
The horrific interaction was captured on Sydney Airport's CCTV after the anti-human trafficking group Anti Slavery Australia told the AFP what happened.
Anyone with information about potential modern slavery or trafficking is urged to report it to Australian Federal Police on 131 237.
#Exit trafficking#Human trafficking#Traveling with a man#Only a year for leaving his wife in Afghanistan?#Australia#Partner visa#Men marrying impoverished women to have a servant not a partner#Anti Slavery Australia
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Oprah recently told her base that “black people need to vote Democrat because black people used to not have the right to vote”. Ahh…
1. Stop telling people who to vote for. Tell them why they should choose to vote for a candidate.
2. Oprah is a smart woman; she knows what she’s doing. Hollywood’s pimp didn’t reach the top without brains. She didn’t climb the dick ladder like Kamala. She led young girls to the dick ladder (Harvey Weinstein & Jeffrey Epstein & P Diddy), but she didn’t need that ride.
3. Black people were kept from voting by Democrats. The Civil War was fought to free slaves (more than blacks) from Democrat ownership. When the North won the war, Democrats kept the slaves enslaved and fought like hell to keep them from voting.
4. The Democrats fought against the civil rights movement, hoping to keep their slaves.
5. Most black people still vote Democrat. Why? Makes no sense.
Democrats and Globalists keep people enslaved.
Think about this. Why do Democrats (and all Globalists) scream about ending human trafficking and the sex slave trade as much as they scream about guns? There are rape trees at the border laden with the panties of kids and adults used by cartels, yet the media’s silent. One trans, mentally unstable kid shoots up a school, and guns aren’t safe for the average person.
Wake up!
#truth#common sense#msm is the enemy#globalist playbook#modern day slavery#modern slavery#slave trade#child sex trafficking#sex trade#human trafficking#democrats#globalists#the great awakening#use your brain#think for yourself
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