Operation Northern Spotlight - Phase 2

krazyplayer

Member
Jun 9, 2004
485
1
18
They raided at least 7 spas in Barrie last Wednesday and didn't find any problems, they just scared the hell out of people working there.

http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/..._rescued_from_crosscanada_sex_trade_ring.html

A months-long investigation into human trafficking has led to the rescue of 18 women who were forced to work in the sex trade against their will, police said Tuesday.
Nine people are facing 33 charges, including forcible confinement, making and distributing child pornography, assault, trafficking in persons, withholding or destroying documents, living off the avails, uttering threats, obstructing police and failing to comply with court orders and conditions of bail and probation.
Ontario Provincial Police Sgt. Peter Leone said vulnerable groups, like newcomers to Canada, are often the targets of exploitation.
“These (18 victims) are individuals who were preyed upon, that were very vulnerable and certainly exploited,” he said. “A lot of promises can be made to people if they come along, and they don’t realize until they go with them, what they’ve gotten themselves unfortunately into.”
Twenty-six police forces were involved in the operation on Oct. 1 and 2, including those in Edmonton, Calgary, Regina, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Halifax, Quebec City, Toronto and other parts of Ontario.
They interviewed hundreds of women some as young as 15 since January, focusing on hotels, motels and massage parlours along major thoroughfares in 30 cities and towns across the country, police said. Many of the women had been threatened with violence, extortion and drug dependency, among other forms of coercion by men.
Ontario Provincial Police and the Winnipeg police said in a news release that a 12-year-old Winnipeg girl was among the people rescued during Operation Northern Spotlight II, but Winnipeg police later said that the girl was not part of the group.
The girl was interviewed by police in a separate investigation unrelated to the human-trafficking probe, said Sgt. Cam Mackid of the Winnipeg Police’s Counter Exploitation Unit.
According to Ontario’s Durham Regional Police Service, some of the women were being forced to perform sexual acts multiple times a day for paying male customers.
It said it interviewed 31 sex trade workers, with an average age of 26, and investigators believe nine were under some level of control.
“Although the Criminal Code section refers to this activity as ‘Human Trafficking,’ the public may better understand this issue as ‘sex slavery,’” the police force said in a release.
“Although many of the women appear to be making their own decisions to participate for financial gain, investigators found several teenagers and young women were being forced to perform through threats of violence, physical intimidation, drug dependency and other forms of coercion.”
Part or all of the money from those sexual acts were kept by their adult male controller or pimp, it said.
Leon said police provided the women they interviewed with information about support agencies in their area that could assist them, Leon said.
“Hopefully we’ve made a difference in their lives and given them a fresh start as well,” he said.
Note to readers: This is a corrected story. An earlier version had police saying a 12-year-old Winnipeg girl was among the 18 people rescued in a human-trafficking investigation. Winnipeg police later said that she was part of a separate investigation unrelated to the human trafficking probe.
 

wilbur

Active member
Jan 19, 2004
2,079
0
36
They raided at least 7 spas in Barrie last Wednesday and didn't find any problems, they just scared the hell out of people working there.

http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/..._rescued_from_crosscanada_sex_trade_ring.html

A months-long investigation into human trafficking has led to the rescue of 18 women who were forced to work in the sex trade against their will, police said Tuesday.
Nine people are facing 33 charges, including forcible confinement, making and distributing child pornography, assault, trafficking in persons, withholding or destroying documents, living off the avails, uttering threats, obstructing police and failing to comply with court orders and conditions of bail and probation.
Ontario Provincial Police Sgt. Peter Leone said vulnerable groups, like newcomers to Canada, are often the targets of exploitation.
“These (18 victims) are individuals who were preyed upon, that were very vulnerable and certainly exploited,” he said. “A lot of promises can be made to people if they come along, and they don’t realize until they go with them, what they’ve gotten themselves unfortunately into.”
Twenty-six police forces were involved in the operation on Oct. 1 and 2, including those in Edmonton, Calgary, Regina, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Halifax, Quebec City, Toronto and other parts of Ontario.
They interviewed hundreds of women some as young as 15 since January, focusing on hotels, motels and massage parlours along major thoroughfares in 30 cities and towns across the country, police said. Many of the women had been threatened with violence, extortion and drug dependency, among other forms of coercion by men.
Ontario Provincial Police and the Winnipeg police said in a news release that a 12-year-old Winnipeg girl was among the people rescued during Operation Northern Spotlight II, but Winnipeg police later said that the girl was not part of the group.
The girl was interviewed by police in a separate investigation unrelated to the human-trafficking probe, said Sgt. Cam Mackid of the Winnipeg Police’s Counter Exploitation Unit.
According to Ontario’s Durham Regional Police Service, some of the women were being forced to perform sexual acts multiple times a day for paying male customers.
It said it interviewed 31 sex trade workers, with an average age of 26, and investigators believe nine were under some level of control.
“Although the Criminal Code section refers to this activity as ‘Human Trafficking,’ the public may better understand this issue as ‘sex slavery,’” the police force said in a release.
“Although many of the women appear to be making their own decisions to participate for financial gain, investigators found several teenagers and young women were being forced to perform through threats of violence, physical intimidation, drug dependency and other forms of coercion.”
Part or all of the money from those sexual acts were kept by their adult male controller or pimp, it said.
Leon said police provided the women they interviewed with information about support agencies in their area that could assist them, Leon said.
“Hopefully we’ve made a difference in their lives and given them a fresh start as well,” he said.
Note to readers: This is a corrected story. An earlier version had police saying a 12-year-old Winnipeg girl was among the 18 people rescued in a human-trafficking investigation. Winnipeg police later said that she was part of a separate investigation unrelated to the human trafficking probe.
Total of 9 persons charged in at least 8 cities? If trafficking is so prevalent, doesn't sound like the operation was that much of a success. Or maybe there is little trafficking and coercion going on?
 

nobody123

serial onanist
Feb 1, 2012
3,568
5
38
nowhere
Total of 9 persons charged in at least 8 cities? If trafficking is so prevalent, doesn't sound like the operation was that much of a success. Or maybe there is little trafficking and coercion going on?
18 women rescued from forced sex work. Big numbers or not, that can only be regarded as a good thing. If only LE continued to focus on this sort of shit post C-36 instead of... well, who the fuck knows what's going to happen. But I fear that the resources dedicated to sex trade investigations will be further divided, with less going to this kind of good work and some going to the "new and improved" category of punishing johns.
 

Scarey

Well-known member
It's a shame this quote will get lost in the article"Although many of the women appear to be making their own decisions to participate for financial gain....."
 

Aardvark154

New member
Jan 19, 2006
53,768
3
0
Total of 9 persons charged in at least 8 cities [18 victims of trafficking found]? If trafficking is so prevalent, doesn't sound like the operation was that much of a success. Or maybe there is little trafficking and coercion going on?
It's a shame this quote will get lost in the article"Although many of the women appear to be making their own decisions to participate for financial gain....."
Unfortunately there is a significant portion of society which just doesn't want to hear these truths.
 

cdnsimon

New member
Oct 11, 2013
170
0
0
This is excellent news.

Unfortunately there is a significant portion of society which just doesn't want to hear these truths.
There are many reasons why a victim will withhold the truth from law enforcement. Perhaps there is fear that admission of certain aspects may bring about further harm to her, or harm to her family or loved ones. Evidence of some of this can be seen in domestic assault cases. Alternatively, perhaps she has been in this situation before only to be pulled back into the same work by the same people (there are many problems/limitations within the justice system).

Many women are probably escorts by their own choice, but that doesn't mean that human trafficking isn't prevalent or the reported operation was a failure. If 7 people appear to be coerced out of 18, that's 39%, and it sounds like a prevalent problem to me (if I can use these reported numbers to extrapolate into the larger Canadian society).
 
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