Regarding the Trafficking of Minors
Adopted at the 80th Annual Meeting in 2012
WHEREAS, human trafficking remains a daunting challenge to governments and communities across America and the world; and
WHEREAS, according to studies by the University of Pennsylvania and Shared Hope International, children numbering in the hundreds of thousands are trafficked for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation in cities throughout America; and
WHEREAS, human trafficking victims are often not identified as trafficking victims or are often mischaracterized as criminal offenders; and
WHEREAS, among those are victims brought into the United States under false pretenses, and coerced into commercial sexual exploitation; and
WHEREAS, according to the Children Community Intervention Project, here in the United States, the average age of first exploitation through prostitution is 13, and 75 percent of minors exploited through prostitution have a pimp; and
WHEREAS, the advent of the Internet has made the sex trafficking of minors easier for those who sell children for sex; and
WHEREAS, the people who exploit these children for their own profit regularly use online classified advertisements as a way to offer children for sale in cities across an entire region, simultaneously; and
WHEREAS, the most prominent of these classified services, Backpage.com, owned by the Village Voice Media corporation, operates hundreds of classified services in cities and towns in all 50 states; and
WHEREAS, across the United States, local papers and websites link to Backpage.com, and other like classified service providers that create additional avenues for the commercial sexual exploitation of minors; and
WHEREAS, despite the documented evidence of numerous cases of children being trafficked on Backpage.com, the service's parent company has repeatedly refused to institute measures that would effectively address the issue of the sex trafficking of minors; and
WHEREAS, in response, the City of Seattle ceased advertising in the Seattle Weekly, a publication owned by Village Voice Media; and
WHEREAS, the State of Washington recently created a new law that makes advertising the commercial sexual abuse of a minor a felony offense, and requires advertisers to verify the age of the person being advertised; and
WHEREAS, Connecticut and other states have recently introduced similar legislation; and
WHEREAS, a wide range of Americans, from elected officials and advocates to journalists and clergy, has called on Backpage.com and other classified services to change their practices,
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that The United States Conference of Mayors calls on Backpage.com and other classified services nationwide to implement in person age verification and end the sale of children through their services; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that The United States Conference of Mayors calls on Congress, state legislatures, and local elected bodies to pass legislation to address commercial advertising over the Internet for sexual abuse of minors.