Durham police unit honoured for work to free girls from sex slavery
Police Appreciation Dinner in Ajax
http://www.insidehalton.com/news-st...ured-for-work-to-free-girls-from-sex-slavery/
DURHAM -- A team of cops dedicated to freeing young women from sexual slavery were among the officers honoured when Durham police saluted their finest Thursday.
Detective Ron Kapuscinski and his fellow officers of the human trafficking unit were recognized for their efforts to assist young women being exploited by pimps and johns. Since the spring of 2013 the unit has undertaken several ambitious projects, including an initiative that saw police across the country target human trafficking.
“Their motivation is the fact they can help victims,” Det. Kapuscinski said of his team. “Catching a bad guy is good, but being able to help a victim and get her out of a situation like that is very gratifying.”
Durham police sharpened their focus on human trafficking in early 2013, looking into the sex trade that operates out of hotels and motels along the Hwy. 401 corridor. What they found was startling: dozens of young women, some in their early teens, are being shuttled in and out of cities and turning tricks around the clock. And many, lured by promises of money and affection, were being coerced through violence and threats.
The unit undertook two major projects locally and last year coordinated Operation Northern Spotlight, which saw police across the country tackle the issue by identifying women being coerced into sex work and offering them help in finding their way out. That national effort was repeated this year.
In Durham, what began as a four-month project has led to a full-time unit. Det. Kapuscinksi now heads a team of seven officers whose mandate is twofold: assisting exploited women, and educating girls about the perils of human trafficking.
He’s particularly interested in the education aspect, which will see his team working with school-based officers to reach out to girls before they’re drawn into a lifestyle that may entrap them.
“The trend with young girls is very disturbing,” Det. Kapuscinski said. “We’re getting girls recruited as early as Grade 8.”
The unit’s mandate is not to bust women willfully involved in prostitution, he insisted.
“My team doesn’t investigate prostitution, it investigates forced prostitution,” he said. “Our primary focus is to remove girls from situations they don’t want to be in.”
The award for the human trafficking unit was one of six handed out during Thursday’s Police Appreciation Dinner and Awards Night, held at the Deer Creek Golf Course in Ajax. The event, now in its 12th year, recognizes good work done by Durham police and raises money for their community projects, said organizer Bob Pinkney.
“With the proceeds this year, we’ll have been able to put back over $1 million into the Durham community,” he said.
Proceeds from the event fund officer-driven initiatives that benefit the community and foster bonds between police and residents. The projects -- such as one that saw prom gowns provided to girls unable to afford fancy dresses -- fall outside the normal policing mandate but are of value, Mr. Pinkney said.
“It’s very important, especially with high-risk youth, that you reach out to them,” he said.
Jeff Mitchell is the justice reporter for Metroland Media Group in Durham Region, Ontario.
How do johns 'exploit women' if they have treated them fairly?