Child Sexual Abuse & Anti-Trafficking Project

AWARENESS & EDUCATION

The crisis is hidden. The people are not.

The concealed reality of child sex trafficking and child abuse, their impact on minors, and the United States response.

Warning: This website contains sensitive content related to human trafficking, sexual exploitation, and abuse involving minors. Viewer discretion is recommended. Those under 18 are encouraged to view this material only with a trusted adult present.

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Three Moments That Look Normal

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Person

Maya

Age 15

Maya's Phone
11:42 p.m.

U up? I can help. Don't tell anyone.

4:00 p.m.

You're funny. You seem mature. Want to talk somewhere private?

2:30 p.m.

Instead of playing alone, do you want to play together?

A “friendly” offer in a game that appears harmless.

Abuse often begins with trust.

What We See, What We Miss

The next morning, the world appears unchanged. Child sexual abuse hides in plain sight, blending into everyday life, while the data reflects only what is recognized, documented, and reported. Think of an iceberg:

Iceberg: what we see above water, what we miss below

Above Water

What is reported: police records, prosecutions, convictions.

Below Water

What stays hidden: grooming disguised as a relationship. Coercion disguised as “choice.” Survival mislabeled as delinquency.

Understanding and Deterring Online Child Grooming: A Qualitative Study (PMC)

In a survey about experiences before age 18, 15.6% reported online child sexual abuse.

That’s not “the whole problem.” It’s proof the problem is already in spaces that look normal.

Finkelhor et al., Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Network Open (2022)

Technology Exacerbates Existing Problems

1 in 4 young people report being sexually solicited online before turning 18 — Thorn, Commodified Sexual Interactions Involving Minors, p. 17

Illustration of youth online interaction risk

These connections often begin with requests for friendship, companionship, playing online games, all healthy, wholesome aspects of growing up but imperiled by anonymity that technology and internet enables.

More than 6 in 10 (66%) children with internet access interact daily online with people they don’t know — Save the Children, Protecting Children From Online Grooming, p. 8

Generative AI (Gen AI) can produce new text, images, audio, or video from prompts—so it can fuel believable personas, scaled grooming-style contact, and synthetic or altered sexual depictions of minors in the same DMs, games, and feeds this project examines.

From Jan 1 to Jun 30, 2025, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) reports that generative artificial intelligence (AI) related CyberTipline reports surged year over year from 6,835 to 440,419. – NCMEC

The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children in the United States reported an 846% increase from 2010 to 2015 in reports of suspected child sex trafficking – an increase the organization has found to be "directly correlated to the increased use of the Internet to sell children for sex." — NCMEC testimony to the U.S. Senate, p. 2

Illustration showing a rise in suspected child sex trafficking reports from 2010 to 2015

Specifically, 1,416 people were arrested for sex trafficking of a minor in the United States from 2010 to 2015 – McCain

That is about one arrest every day for four years.

1,416
arrests (2010–2015)
67.3%
used technology
41.8%
used Backpage
Backpage Other tech No tech listed No arrest day

In 2020, over 80% of the United States (U.S.) Department of Justice’s sex trafficking prosecutions involved online advertising. – United Nations

In active federal criminal sex trafficking cases in 2020, among child victims recruited on social media where the platform was identified, 65% were recruited through Facebook, 14% through Instagram, and 8% through Snapchat. – Trafficking Institute

During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) lockdown, the U.S. National Human Trafficking Hotline reported a 125% increase in reports of recruitment on Facebook and 95% increase in reports of recruitment on Instagram over the previous year. – Polaris

Facebook

+125%

Instagram

+95%

Shelter-in-Place Spike

Crisis trafficking cases handled by the U.S. National Human Trafficking Hotline increased by 40%+ during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pre (Feb 14–Mar 15, 2020) ~60 crisis cases
Post (Apr 1–Apr 30, 2020) ~90 crisis cases
↑ 40%+

Crisis cases = situations needing help within 24 hours (shelter/transport/law enforcement).

Polaris (June 10, 2020)

Recent Reports & Investigations

Screenshot related to Character.AI case In February 2024, 14-year-old Sewell Setzer III died by suicide after months of communication with a Character.ai chatbot. His mother, Megan Garcia, later sued Character.AI and Google in a Florida federal case alleging the chatbot contributed to his death. The lawsuit was settled in January 2026. – Reuters

Character.ai is an AI chatbot platform where users can chat with existing AI characters and create their own custom characters with different personalities and themes.

Screenshot related to Meta New Mexico case In 2023, the New Mexico Department of Justice (NMDOJ) initiated an investigation into Meta’s platforms to protect children from sexual abuse, online solicitation, and other harms. – New Mexico’s lawsuit against Meta

On March 24, 2026, a jury found Meta liable for misleading consumers about the safety of its platforms and endangering children, ordering $375 million in civil penalties under New Mexico’s consumer protection laws. – NMDOJ press release

NMDOJ argues evidence in the case showed Meta’s design features enabled predators to engage in child sexual exploitation and that the company ignored warnings about risks to children.

Bigger Than You Think

After Maya, the numbers stop sounding like trivia. International Labour Organization estimates that 6.3 million people are in situations of forced commercial sexual exploitation at any point in time.

If every victim stood shoulder to shoulder...



...It would form a line 2,400 miles long.
That's equivalent to the distance from Los Angeles to New York.


Map showing distance from Los Angeles to New York

Not only is the problem bigger than you think, it's also the second most profitable illegal industry in the U.S., generating $236 billion in illegal profits annually worldwide. (International Labour Organization)

If you stacked $236 billion in $100 bills:

Illustration comparing the height of a stack of bills to mountains

The pile would reach over 160 miles high, more than 27 Mount Everests.

And crises don’t pause exploitation, they reshape it.

The United Nations (UN) Office on Drugs and Crime reports that detected trafficking victims in 2022 were 25% higher than in 2019, with child victims up 31%. In 2024, of more than 29,000 children reported missing, 1 in 7 were likely child victims (National Center for Missing & Exploited Children).

The People Affected

Who Are The Victims?

People want a checklist for who becomes a victim. Trafficking targets a moment: instability, isolation, need, conflict, money pressure.

Victim Profile
Nearly All Victims Are Girls — Average Age 15

In a review of 1,416 federal sex trafficking cases, 941 victims were identified. Nearly all (98.9%) were female, with an average age of just 15 years old at the time of exploitation.

98.9% Female
15 Average age

McCain Institute

Known and Trusted
A Familiar Threat

Of the identified minor victims 45.1% knew their trafficker, and 67.1% were runaways. This isn't stranger danger, it's betrayal by someone familiar: a friend, romantic partner, or family member.

45.1%
Knew trafficker
67.1%
Runaways

Each dot represents 1% of identified minor victims.

McCain Institute

Victims Become Criminals
A System That Criminalizes Survivors

62% of identified trafficking survivors reported being arrested or detained. Among those who were arrested, 71% now carry a criminal record, and 90% said the crimes were committed under coercion while they were trafficked. Instead of being treated as victims, many are pulled deeper into the criminal legal system.

100% Identified survivors

People recognized as trafficking survivors.

62% Arrested or detained

Nearly 2 out of 3 survivors are pulled into the criminal legal system.

71% Carry a criminal record

Of those arrested, most leave with a record (≈44% of all survivors).

90% Crimes under coercion

The vast majority say the crimes were committed under coercion while being trafficked (≈40% of all survivors).

U.S. Department of State

Trafficking Often Starts With Trust
Trafficking Begins With Access

Trafficking rarely begins with kidnapping. Since 2000, only 0.2% of victims in federal human trafficking cases were kidnapped by their traffickers. More often, traffickers are people victims already know and trust. Trafficking often starts with manipulation, emotional control, false promises, or coercion, not an abduction. So Aisha’s in-game message isn’t random. Maya’s direct message (DM) isn’t random. The target is vulnerability, and the tool is attention. – Federal Human Trafficking Report (FHT)

Gaps in the Data
What the Numbers Can’t Fully Show

What the data does not show is also important. Public sources rarely include information about gender identity or sexual orientation, leaving major gaps in how victims are represented. In 2023 cases, 59% of victims had no reported gender. Of the victims whose gender was identified, 37% were female and 4% were male. – FHT

Pie chart: 59% unknown gender, 37% female, 4% male among victims with reported gender in 2023 cases

The People Involved

Demographics
Child Sexual Exploitation Offender Profile

On average, convicted traffickers are overwhelmingly male, in their late 30s, and U.S. citizens — a largely domestic offender population operating in American communities.

94%
Male offenders
🎂
38
Average age
🇺🇸
96%
U.S. citizens

These criminals are not operating far away. They are largely domestic offenders within American communities.

U.S. Sentencing Commission

Prosecution Patterns
Trafficking Defendants Are Overwhelmingly Male

Of the 1,070 defendants charged with any of the three types of human trafficking offenses in U.S. district court in fiscal year 2022, 91.2% were male and 8.8% were female. Among the 203 defendants charged with peonage, slavery, forced labor, and sex trafficking, 74.2% were male and 25.8% were female. Of the 523 defendants charged with sexual exploitation and other abuse of children, 94.1% were male and 5.9% were female.

All Trafficking Defendants (2022)

8.1% Female • 91.9% Male

Child Sexual Exploitation (2022)

5.9% Female • 94.1% Male

Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2025

Criminal History
68.5% had little or no prior history

These are often first-time offenders: neighbors, coworkers, family members, not career criminals with long rap sheets.

68.5% Little or no prior record
31.5% More extensive prior history

Most trafficking offenders are not long-time criminals – they are people with minimal records drawn into these crimes.

U.S. Sentencing Commission

That’s how trafficking stays “hidden”: the harm is extraordinary, but the people causing it often look ordinary and it can happen anywhere ordinary.

People want traffickers to look like monsters. But many look ordinary on purpose.

Calls and messages to the National Human Trafficking Hotline add up: they show how often trafficking surfaces in everyday settings, not only in sensational stories.

Since it its inception, the Human Trafficking Hotline has identified:

Human Trafficking Hotline 0 0

Data based on calls and messages from 2007 to March 2026. (Human Trafficking Hotline)

Hotels: A Normal Door, a Closed Room

75% of human trafficking survivors reported encountering hotels at some
point during their exploitation – Human Trafficking Search

This could have occurred while traveling, as a location of exploitation, or during their escape and rehabilitation.

Warning Signs

Constant guest turnover, low security, and cash payments allow for anonymity. - The Exodus Road

Vulnerable groups staying in hotels (migrants, people facing poverty, families in crisis) are easy targets. - The Exodus Road

How to Tell

Heavy foot traffic in and out of a hotel room, requesting of rooms with a view of the parking lot, paying for rooms with cash or a pre-paid card, frequent requests for fresh towels and linens, extended stay with no/few personal possessions - NewGen Advisory

12 states now require hotel anti-trafficking training. Over 800,000 hotel employees have been trained.

Hotels are Becoming Proactive

Mandates

12

States with mandatory hotel anti-trafficking training

Reach

0

Hotel employees trained

1 square = 10,000 employees

Data Source: The Exodus Road

A case filed in January 2024 stated that plaintiffs in 113 total actions pending in over 20 districts allege that they are victims of sex trafficking that occurred at hotel properties located across the country. Some of them are suggesting the centralization of individual lawsuits into one multidistrict litigation (MDL). – Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (MDL No. 3104)

Hotels across the United States

Some plaintiffs' suggested locations for centralization into one MDL proceeding.

Among states with the highest trafficking victim counts per 100,000 people (2019–2023 data), Nevada ranks first at 58.48 per 100,000, followed by Georgia at 46.60 and Mississippi at 43.07. Florida, California, and Texas also sit among the states with the highest total counts.

Hotels aren't the whole story. They're a reminder that trafficking isn't always far away—it's sometimes off an exit ramp.

Take Action Now

How much do
you really know?

Play an interactive online simulation game to test how you would handle different online safety situations from the perspective of a teacher, child, or parent.

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Access online
safety resources

View emergency hotlines and guidance on reporting sexual exploitation or a missing child, plus additional resources, victim support, human trafficking training, and global research on child protection.

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"Human rights are not a privilege conferred by government. They are every human being’s entitlement by virtue of his humanity."

— Mother Teresa

“Remember that every person on the streets, in a club, on the internet, in a hotel room, WHEREVER they may be, have families and loved ones and hearts just as you do, and that they are worthy and enough. When you see us, could you just offer a small smile? Extend a small bit of compassion even though you may not personally understand? Small, simple actions have the potential to make a large impact, and now is the time more than ever before.”

— Melissa Diehl, survivor of human trafficking

“Human trafficking is an open wound on the body of contemporary society, a scourge upon the body of Christ. It is a crime against humanity.”

— Pope Francis

A Note on the Data

Human trafficking is one of the most
underreported crimes in the United States.

The data presented here represents only what has been documented. Inconsistencies across sources, gaps in reporting systems, and the hidden nature of trafficking mean these numbers tell an incomplete story. The true scale of this crisis remains largely hidden.