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Rally targets child prostitution

Las Vegas one of nation's major hubs for sex trafficking, group says




Tina Frundt was 13 when it began. The man smiled. He said nice things to her. He pretended to help her.

"He was a pimp," Frundt, now 35, said Friday night. "I didn't know what a pimp was. He didn't walk up and say, 'Hi. I'm a pimp.'"


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So began a decade of hell for the Chicago native. She was raped, beaten, forced into the sex industry, sold and traded like a used car to an out-of-state outfit so she couldn't run back home.

This happens every day. Here, in Las Vegas.

So went the message at a rally and march that began in a gymnasium on East Sahara Avenue across from the Commercial Center and continued later to the Strip.

Shared Hope International, a Virginia-based nonprofit working to prevent sex trafficking and provide support for boys and girls in the industry, organized the rally and march as part of its launch of a national campaign to draw attention to the issue.

The group released reports in 2008 and in May listing Las Vegas as one of the country's major hubs for the sexual trafficking of children and saying the city doesn't have enough services to help them.

The reports focused on American children who have been trafficked within the United States.

Robin Joyce, the pastor at Canyon Ridge Christian Church in Las Vegas, told a crowd of a little more than 100 people that the trafficking of girls for sexual slavery is evil, pure and simple. The rally, he said, would be "the catalyst to destroy the stronghold that Satan has on this town."

Children from across the country are trafficked to cities including Las Vegas, where more than 400 prostituted children were identified on the streets during a single month in 2007, according to the nonprofit's reports.

"Any place where there's a lot of sexuality marketed, you're going to be a hub," said Linda Smith, president and founder of Shared Hope International and a former Washington congresswoman. "If there's a buyer, there has to be a product."

Pimps traffic teenage prostitutes through a network of cities known to attract tourists, conventions and people interested in sex industry services, Smith said. She listed Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, New Orleans, Dallas, and Atlanta as cities in that network, along with Las Vegas.

"A pimp will say you can always raise money in Las Vegas," Smith said. "It isn't hard to make a phone call, meet somebody and get a girl delivered to your room."

For their reports, researchers for the nonprofit compiled information gathered during dozens of interviews in 2007 with representatives from 16 different local agencies that work with minors who have been trafficked.

The agencies included the FBI, Clark County Family Court, Clark County Juvenile Division and the Metropolitan Police Department.

Las Vegas was one of 10 U.S. locations on which Shared Hope International focused its research.

Easy access to alcohol and drugs, nonstop gaming and the highly sexualized entertainment industry contribute to the local problem, Smith said.

Frundt, the woman who said she was traded as a sex slave in her teens, said the pimps often attract girls who are missing something in their lives. And what teenager isn't missing something, she asked.

Those guys, usually much older, are nice to the girls. They buy them things. They tell them they love them.

Then they rape them, threaten them, beat them and force them to have sex with strangers. They move them far away from their homes and give them no way out.

For Frundt, the way out took a long time. She said she finally went to the police after a severe beating when she was still a teenager, only to be arrested and jailed for a year. There was no help.

She founded a group, Courtney's House, based in Washington, D.C., to help girls such as her get out. It is not enough though, she and others said. What's needed is public awareness, which was the purpose of Friday night's rally.

Most of the dozens of people there wore T-shirts with phrases like "End Demand" and "Kids are not for sale."

There were prayers, songs, signs that said "Over 400 child sex slaves sold in Las Vegas in one month," "Not in our city," and "Do you know where your husband is?"

Contact reporter Richard Lake at rlake@ reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0307. Contact reporter Lynnette Curtis at lcurtis @reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0285.

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Today's the Day! wrote on June 13, 2009 09:07 PM: And what's truly sad, it appears that only about 12 people at the rally. Hopefully, some awareness will be raised about Trinity Life Center, and we'll be able to participate. I know I will. Sorry I wasn't aware of it this year.


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Today's the Day! wrote on June 13, 2009 09:04 PM: Visitor, you really are too stupid to breath.


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Vindictive wrote on June 13, 2009 08:15 PM: I don't think it's as much a problem with law enforcement as it is with the Judicial system. Law enforcement is ready, willing, and able to move in on these schmucks, but time and time again, the judicial system lets these guys go free or slaps them with an ineffectual "sentence". You want to point the finger at someone? Look to your bleeding heart judges and the slimy defense lawyers.


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Margaret wrote on June 13, 2009 07:44 PM: dave letterman is one of these perverts that prey on children for sex


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Oscar wrote on June 13, 2009 06:21 PM: I see nowhere in this article, about DRUGS. The reality is, these girls are hooked on powerful addictive drugs like Crack Cocaine and Heroin. Drugs, her pimp always has, since many Pimps and Gangs do some Drug Dealing as well. These girls DO know what a pimp is at 13. To deny that is not believable in this day and age. The drugs and booze are "Free" in the beginning. The Pimp is more like a boyfriend. Until he turns her out, to pay him back. It's the same with the gang hoodrats. First the gang boyfriend picks the girls up at school, and encourages them to cut classes to Party for free. After many sessions like this, the girls fall behind in school, and drop out. The Boyfriend now has control of her. She is required to have sex with all the members of the gang, for Initiation. After awhile, she is required to get a job. If she can't, he gets her a job with fake ID, as a stripper, or turns her out for income. Someone makes a call for a young girl, and off she goes. But, they could quit, if they are willing to leave the Pimp, or the Gang. But, they don't. Are they victims? Yes. Did they know the situation they were getting into? Yes. But, they thought it would be easy to leave that lifestyle when they wanted to, and found, that the Gang or Pimp is OWNS them, and they would not allow them leave.


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clyde wrote on June 13, 2009 05:44 PM: Damn dirty cops! If they would stop arresting these girls (another form of pimping) then it would all stop!


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Joe C wrote on June 13, 2009 04:54 PM: I’m a little curious about the stats the group claims for one month in Vegas. Does Metro and the FBI use the 400 child prostitutes in one-month figure also?

I could hardly blame the city and gaming for adding to the child prostitution problem.
As for many years this was an adult town, until corporations tried to make it a family visit.

The responsibility still falls on the scum that seduced and forced these children into prostitution; along with the scum adults that knowingly solicited a minor.

This is not a problem caused by idiot cops or could strong women solve this issue.
This is a nation wide problem and child abusers have become smarter and more organized using the Internet to exchange info on how to entrap children.

All disgusting, which is why I love the Datelines to catch a predator show.


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Lame wrote on June 13, 2009 02:05 PM: Blame adults? Kids too. Be responsible. Decades ago we grew up with tough challenges, evil strangers and had to decide right from wrong. We knew better. We didn't end up in some motel bed with our legs spread open wide for some stranger. Be responsible.


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Visitor wrote on June 13, 2009 12:31 PM: As long as the idiot cops continue to be the enemy of the people, abusive, out of control and overzellous, this kind of abuse will be the trade mark of Las Vegas Nevada.




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Mama Bear wrote on June 13, 2009 04:59 AM: A few strong women could fix this problem in no time. The public either wants this problem solved or continue to let children be sex slaves for barbaric men of Vegas. Maybe it's time for a return to old fashioned Western justice. That was a time/place where we took care of our own, instead of turning it over to a non-functional law enforcement system.

I vote for the latter. These trash heads need to move our face the full consequences of their actions.