Archive for the ‘crooks in high places’ Category

Child sex trafficking alive in Washington

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

It’s one of the most horrific crimes imaginable, and it’s growing worldwide. An estimated 300 to 500 children are for sale in Seattle and other Washington cities.

Thanks to the explosion of child pornography, the demand for sex with minors and sexual materials featuring children is skyrocketing. The demand far outweighs the supply.

As a result, children and young teens are being kidnapped and forced to perform for money under threat of death.

As unbelievable as this may sound, this is happening in virtually every country and every state in the union, including at least five cities in Washington.

Buyers will pay hundreds–sometimes thousands–of dollars for a young child or teen. The market is unimaginably lucrative. To criminals, children and teens are expensive products that can be sold repeatedly, yet cost little or nothing to acquire and maintain. That’s the formula for modern day sex slavery.

ANOTHER KIND OF SEX PREDATOR

The youngest children are simply being kidnapped and moved from one part of the country to another. The older ones, generally age 12 to 17, are befriended by a good-looking young man or woman, who acts friendly and gives them expensive gifts.

After a reasonable period, the “friend” suggests a sleepover or weekend trip. The girl is then taken to secret location where the actual pimp takes possession of her. She is then drugged, raped and child sex trafficking.jpgbeaten regularly and forced into prostitution. She is threatened with death if she tries to escape. She is then moved from city to city and sold to an endless stream of strangers.

In an attempt to stem the tide of child sex trafficking in Washington, I have introduced a bill to help rescue these exploited children and severely punish those who take their innocence.

Senate Bill 6476 would dramatically increase penalties for recruiting, selling, transporting or purchasing underage children for sexual purposes.

SEVERE PENALTIES FOR SEX TRAFFICKING

The bill would raise the penalties for commercial sex abuse of a minor (“pimping”) to a Class A felony, carrying a 7- to 26-year prison sentence and a maximum $5,000 fine. Currently it’s a Class B felony, which carries a minimum sentence of just 1.75 years. The bill would elevate commercial sex abuse of a minor (buying) from a Class C felony with a $550 fine to a Class B felony, with a 1.75- to 12-year sentence and an additional $5,000 fine.

In the case of adult prostitution, law enforcement officers are trained to arrest and charge the prostitute, while only marginally addressing the seller and buyer. In the case of minors, or those who were kidnapped or coerced into prostitution as minors, police are dealing with victims.

As children and teens, they had no choice. These kids have been so abused they don’t know who to trust. They have no safe place to go. To treat them as criminals simply adds another bad dream to an already nightmarish existence.

CHILD VICTIMS NEED SAFETY

My bill would provide these exploited children with a safe haven, where they can be helped out of bondage and into a new life. It would also help focus law enforcement attention where it should be: on the recruiters, buyers and sellers.

The bill was heard by the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee and will likely move on to the full Senate for a vote. I’ll keep you posted on what happens.

Sincerely,

This Cartoon From 1934 Describes Our Government Today

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

This cartoon is just as true today as it was in 1934. Government makes the problem, blames private enterprise and offers the solution of greater regulation and taxes. To think we can spend our way to prosperity will surely lead us into slavery to our leaders.

Elderly scam in Lewis County

Saturday, December 27th, 2008

This just in from my friend, Don Lynch:

I don’t know how widespread this is, but I do know it is happening on a continued basis right here in Lewis County. I don’t know all the parties either. I had thought it was centered on Riverside Nursing and Rehab Center in Centralia. However, I have since come across a case where the man is not in a nursing home, he has home care. The one name I see most often is attorney Scott Blinks of Vander Stoep, Remund, Blinks and Jones in Chehalis. But he is not the only one.

How it works is an elderly, disabled person with money and/or assets is identified. Someone goes to court and alleges the person is not competent and petitions for appointment of a guardian. A guardian ad litem is appointed for the victim. The guardian ad litem then bring a doctor to interview the victim to see if he is competent. The interview consists of firing questions at the victim so fast he or she cannot answer.

The guardian ad litem then makes his report to the court that the person could not answer questions and is not competent to take care of his or her own needs. The judge, looking at all these reports, and not having the victim in the court, approves the arrangement.

Everyone who put the scam together gets paid, full bore, out of the assets of the victim. Heck of a deal, isn’t it?

I first became aware of this about a year ago when I was asked to notarize a document for an elderly woman here in Winlock. She had been in Riverside, and in spite of having family close by, she also had assets and they were going to get them. She escaped, but everyone who was in on the scam against her got paid out of her money. She couldn’t get around much, but her mind was clear. Since then, more and more cases keep coming up.

This has got to be stopped. Someone has to take an interest in protecting these vulnerable people. Does anyone care? What is going to happen to me for bringing it up? Or is it already happening?

Don Lynch
360-785-4519