Author, The Slave Across the Street (2010)
					Founder  of S.O.A.P (Save Our Adolescents from Prostitution)
					Appointed to the Ohio Attorney General’s Human  Trafficking Commission in 2009 and testified before the Ohio House and Senate  in supports of Human Trafficking Legislation
					Recognized by Ohio Governor Kasich and received  the Courage Award for her work in human trafficking
					Her story was on The Today Show & MSNBC and SOAP has been featured on Nightline and America’s Most Wanted
					BA, Ball State
					MSeD, University of Dayton
									 			
			 
			
			
					 
		
		
		GUEST
		
		The Sex-Slave Across the Street
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		HOW AN ALL-AMERICAN TEEN FELL PREY TO HUMAN  TRAFFICKING
		Theresa Flores grew up as an All-American  girl in an upper-middle class family.  But when her father’s job moved her family to  an upscale suburb outside of Detroit, she simultaneously lost her virginity and  became a victim of human trafficking. The nightmare started when Theresa was 15,  and a male classmate offered her a ride home.   Since she had a crush on the boy, she accepted the offer.  But instead of driving her home, he took her  to his house where he proceeded to drug and rape her.  The next day, the boy told Theresa that his older  male cousins had taken pictures during the sex-act and that she would have to  “work” the pictures off.  It was sexual  blackmail, and the beginning of two years of heinous sexual exploitation. 
		Classmates and teachers alike feared  Theresa’s perpetrators.  They were not  questioned when they pulled her out of class during the day.   And since she had a private phone in her  room, her parents didn’t notice when the cousins called her at night and  demanded that she come outside, where the boy who raped her waited to drive her  to a converted basement.   There, she  would be raped by up to ten men.  “You  couldn’t look them in the eyes.  I wasn’t  permitted to speak, not even one word.   This one guy came in one time and he asked one of the cousins, ‘What’s  her name?’  And the response really crushed  me; I mean even more than having to do those physical acts, because he said ‘It  doesn’t matter.  She doesn’t have a  name.’  And I think I just wanted to  die.”
		The cousins always knew where Theresa was  and threatened to take her life and her family member’s lives if she said  anything.  So, she wouldn’t talk.  Her parents never knew:  her father was a big executive and travelled  a lot; her mother never heard her sneak out of the house.  When Theresa’s grades dropped dramatically,  they blamed it on hormones and sent Theresa to a counselor, where she kept  quiet.  She was worried about her  reputation and didn’t think anyone would believe what was happening  anyway.  Most importantly, she didn’t  want her father to know about the blackmail pictures. “I believed stupidly that  I was going to be good enough to get them back and then it’d be all over and I  could go on with my life again.”  But  before that happened, she was taken to a dirty motel where she was brutally  raped by upwards of 20 men.  When the  police found her and drove her home, she refused to speak.  Finally, her father got a job transfer, and  Theresa’s time as a sex-slave ended.  She  received a few of the blackmail photos back and was replaced in the crime-ring  by another needy, unsuspecting teenage girl.
        THE LONG ROAD TO HEALING
  Theresa started over in her new high  school, and acted like nothing had ever happened.  She graduated and then went to college, where  she started drinking excessively and became promiscuous.  She had horrid nightmares and frequent  flashbacks.  She felt worthless and tried  to talk to counselors, but nobody knew how to help her.  One counselor suggested she lock all of her  bad memories in a box in her mind, but she feared one day the box would explode  open.  She kept a journal, and after  graduating from college, she married a man who said she needed to earn his  trust.   She realized that she was always  trying to “earn” something:  her father’s  approval, blackmail pictures, trust from her husband.  But she couldn’t--she was never  “enough.”   Even though she had attended  church and had prayed throughout the trafficking, her relationship with God  changed when her uncle invited her to a Bible study.  After she read the “Left Behind” books, she  accepted Jesus as her Lord and savior.   “Everything changed.  I felt just  the weight of the world lift off of my shoulders.  Like I didn’t have to fight so hard and work  so hard.  He would take care of me,  always.  Here I’d been sacrificing myself  all these years to various people, to save my (more) 
        family, save myself from  embarrassment or shame. And I didn’t need to do that.”  Theresa says that if she had known Jesus  while she was a sex-slave like she does now, she would not have allowed the  abuse or let her need for love and approval mandate her life.  Today, because of God’s love, she knows her  worth – but she continues to struggle with memories. 
        “It’s something that I work  on everyday.  There are still triggers,  there are still nightmares.”  She says her  strength to endure the hard days comes from the Lord.  “I want people to know that even when you’ve  been broken and you’ve gone through traumatic things, you can be healed through  Christ.  That’s the only way you can be  healed.”                                                                                                          
        HOW MEN GET INVOLVED WITH SEX TRAFFICKING 
   Theresa says most people “tend to think  the blame is on the kid or the person being trafficked. They think ‘Oh, they  must just be a bad kid, or they must have bad parents.’  They are not looking at, ‘Well, who’s the guy  who’s buying them?’” It’s been reported that many men who buy girls start out  with a pornography addiction.” As far as pornography goes, what typically  happens is a man will start looking at porn magazines and then that elevates  his brain chemistry.  Then after awhile  that becomes normal and it doesn’t do it.   Then he starts watching porn on TV or movies.  And that elevates the excitement.  But after awhile that doesn’t do it and then  he gets prostitutes.  Then after buying a  woman for awhile, that doesn’t do it, so he gets younger and younger  girls.”  Theresa says human trafficking  victims have a 40% higher chance of death than the common person.  Most commonly, victims die from murder,  suicide, or drug overdoses. 
        SEX TRAFFICKING AT LARGE EVENTS LIKE THE SUPERBOWL
  Any time a big event comes to a community  there is an increase in trafficking, especially if the events are driven by  male attendance—i.e.: the Detroit Auto Show, the PGA Golf Tournament, political  conventions, and the Superbowl.  Kara Van  de Carr, executive director of Eden House, a home for trafficking victims in  New Orleans says, “The Superbowl is actually estimated to be one of the  largest human trafficking events in the world and it's because anytime there is  increased demand, there will increased supply."   During  major events pimps bring in girls from across the country.  They often stay in extended stay hotels for  about a week.  They take pictures of the  girls they’ve brought in and post them online, lying about the girls’  ages.  While a classified ad may say a  girl is 19 or 21, in reality she could be 12.   The men attending events are looking for something to fill their time.  “They’re there with their buddies, and we know that separation leads to temptation  when they’re away from their wives and their friends,” says Van de Carr.   The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children  estimates 10,000 prostitutes were brought to the 2010 Super Bowl in Miami. In  2011, more than 100 people were arrested for prostitution in Dallas during  Superbowl weekend.  Last year in  Indianapolis, legislation was put into effect to curb the crime. New laws extended  the definition of sex trafficking and increased penalties. There were also new  training recommendations for hotel employees and cab drivers.  Experts say red flags include young girls dressed  inappropriately, who seem quiet, insecure and avoid eye contact. They also say  it’s suspicious when a girl checks into a hotel with no luggage.  
        All eyes will be on New Orleans with this  weekend’s Superbowl 47.  Advocates say  trafficking is a problem in the New Orleans area year-round, as it's an easily  accessible city known as a tourism destination.   "Between federal law enforcement here in New Orleans, state law enforcement,  non profits, there are a lot of people coming together,” Van de Carr said.  “They recognize this is an issue. There have been multiple trainings,  conferences, and there are people coming in to actually combat the  problem."  There may even be legislation  put into place to combat the crime in New Orleans.  
        THERESA’S MINISTRY “S.O.A.P” (Save Our Adolescents  from Prostitution)
  Theresa started S.O.A.P to reach girls in  motel rooms.   “I remembered that after  each man, you go to the bathroom and clean up.   And that’s the only time you ever get to be alone.  And I thought, ‘I will give the number to  them in the bathroom.’”  She and countless  volunteers label soap with the national human trafficking hotline number  (888-3737-888) and distribute the soap to motels. Between 77 and 90% of the  motels take the soap and receive training on red flags to watch for.  S.O.A.P has been responsible for rescuing  several girls from each event they’ve distributed their soap at.   S.O.A.P will be at the Superbowl with  FREENola, a task force in New Orleans.
        HOW PARENTS CAN PROTECT THEIR CHILDREN FROM  TRAFFICKING
  One study estimated up to 300,000 children  in the U.S. are victimized by Commercial Sexual Exploitation (CSE) each year.  
          As a mother, a licensed social  worker for 20 years, a victim’s advocate, and a member of the Ohio Attorney  General’s Human Trafficking Commission, Theresa offers advice to parents and  teens.  “As our children grow, become  stronger and independent, do not relax your guard.  This is the time to have hawk eyes and finely  tuned radars.  Listen to the unspoken  messages of the child.”   Among other  things, parents should find an activity they can enjoy with their teen, ask  questions, listen, know who their children spend time with, check their beds  each night, know the address of where they are going, have teems carry  identification, visit a child’s school on occasion, watch out of older  boyfriends, look for bruises or forms of physical abuse, sudden changes in  behavior, unexplained absences from school, references to the commercial sex  industry. 
		
		
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