Can you spot the signs of human trafficking? Set Me Free Project has learning resources
SHREVEPORT, La. (KTAL/KMSS) – As energy around Super Bowl LIX ramps up, local, state, and federal law enforcement will provide safety for visitors. Many others will look for signs of human trafficking.
Events like the Super Bowl, NBA All-Star, and other major sports and entertainment events are often a playground for sex traffickers to hide in plain sight, preying on and manipulating victims that they have an emotional or physical strong hold on.
Louisiana's I-20 and I-49 corridor is referred to as 'victim's corridor' by experts who say the quick access points to interstates that quickly take you into and out of Louisiana through Shreveport is one they will be watching as sports fans descend upon the Bayou State.
Report details federal human trafficking arrests, prosecutions, and demographics for traffickers
A national organization is working with healthcare, victim's services providers, and law enforcement using data, lived experience, and trauma-informed care to provide educational resources and courses for those looking to understand better how human trafficking presents itself daily.
The Set Me Free Project provides human trafficking prevention education and was founded by Stephanie Olson, who also serves as the organization's CEO.
'We started because I had – personally, I'm a survivor of sexual and domestic violence, and I had personally been working in the area of – working with women in sexual violence, addiction, things like that,' Olson said.
The idea of taking on the dark underworld of human trafficking was not on Olson's radar until a colleague suggested they help sex trafficked victims. Olson said she and her team started researching to educate themselves on what trafficking looks and does not look like.
While many people are focused on international cartels and gangs that incorporate trafficking into their money schemes, experts will tell you the real danger is usually not presented by strangers. Many people are trafficked by spouses, family members, or love interests or fall into online recruitment; they have already developed relationships, so when they are told to participate in sex acts, forced labor, or criminal acts, they oblige because the trafficker has worked hard to create isolation and feelings of distrust.
'We had this mindset of, you know, the movie Taken; and kidnapping people and shipping overseas and when we realized that wasn't what it looked like at all, and that we were in a hotspot in our community at the time,' Olson said. 'I had kids in middle, you know, in the middle school ages, elementary. And realized, gosh, only one to two percent of individuals are recovered and restored.'
Survivor shares how sex trafficker lured her from Texas to southern California at 15 years old
Recovered refers to the victim's ability to escape their traffickers, and once restored, victims have received services such as health care and mental health resources and regained control of their lives that the trafficker once controlled.
Olson calls the low number of victims who escape trafficking 'strikingly low,' and it triggered her to understand that education on how to prevent trafficking in all forms is what was needed most, especially educating young people.
The Set Me Free Project provides an age-appropriate curriculum to offer young people the tools, understanding, and language to help them communicate and recognize potential human trafficking threats when or if they encounter them.
'Our goal is not to be fear-based, but to really empower people to understand what human trafficking is, what it's not, and how to really prevent it in your community,' Olson said.
Olson said 'human trafficking' is not part of the kindergarten through sixth-grade curriculum. At that level students are learning about consent, trustworthy people, navigating social media safely. Rudimentary learning that lays the foundation for the courses designed for the middle and high school curriculum.
'Once we hit middle school to high school, we're talking about human trafficking, both sex, labor, and forced criminalization,' Olson said. 'Healthy relationships and what those look like and what they don't.'
Safe navigation of social media sites is also taught to older students because, according to Olson and other human trafficking experts, social sites provide a window of opportunity for recruitment into trafficking.
Set Me Free Project also provides courses for parents, caregivers, and educators to help them separate facts from myths and spot signs that someone may be at risk or involved in trafficking.
VIDEO: Human Trafficking in Our Community – a Beyond the Headlines special
Corporations, especially hotels, casinos, coffee shops, and even financial institutions, can also contact them for training as traffickers exploit every imaginable industry to achieve their ends.
The value of accurate information and trauma-informed training that communities have gained through programs like Set Me Free and others that provide training is unmeasurable. Survivors, law enforcement, and medical community members work hand-in-hand with Set Me Free to draft the evidence-based curriculum.
'We make sure that not only are we putting our expertise in there on the topic, but we are getting expertise from really – expert sources, and were excited because we have a fantastic grant through the CDC and some incredible researchers,' Olson said.
To learn more about the Set Me Free Project or sign up for online human trafficking prevention courses, visit the website.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 hours ago
- Yahoo
NFL, NFLPA continue to hide ruling from collusion grievance
The NFL benefits from an endless stream of bright, shiny objects. Even in the offseason, there's always something to distract fans and media from taking a closer look at something the powers-that-be are trying to hide. As it relates to a significant collusion grievance that resulted in a 61-page written ruling from an arbitrator, both the NFL and the NFL Players Association continue to conceal the document. Advertisement The grievance focused on the refusal to give fully-guaranteed contracts to specific veteran quarterbacks — with primary focus on Lamar Jackson, Russell Wilson, and Kyler Murray. The arbitrator found, we're told, that the NFL encouraged teams not to give those players fully-guaranteed contracts. However, the evidence presented regarding the impact of this approach on the three quarterbacks at the heart of the case wasn't strong enough to trigger damages. So it was a mixed result. The NFLPA won, to the extent that evidence of collusion was found. The NFL won, to the extent that no money was awarded to any of the players. But neither side felt sufficiently good about the outcome to disclose it. The NFL danced around it in January. The NFLPA has said nothing about it, either. If this dispute had played out in court, the ruling would be a matter of public record. The NFL and NFLPA have created a private system for resolving disputes. And while the arbitrators who handle such matters typically insist on confidentiality while the cases are pending, there's nothing that prevents either the league or the union from publishing the ruling. Advertisement From the Super Bowl to the Scouting Combine to free agency to the draft to OTAs, it's been easy to forget about the 61-page collusion grievance ruling. A ruling that apparently contains something they don't want us to see. So what can it be? It could be (and we're not saying it is) that the evidence in the case includes some frank and candid internal communications that one side doesn't want to see the light of day — and that the other side has gone along with that. It also could be that the two sides were at one point actively negotiating redactions to the 61-page order to ensure that such frank and candid internal communications would not be communicated externally. Whatever the explanation, there's an important document that the NFL and the NFLPA are hiding from everyone. Despite the private nature of the arbitration agreement, pro football is an inherently public entity. It has millions of customers. It finagles billions in taxpayer money. It has a federal antitrust exemption that results in significantly more valuable TV rights. The NFL should be expected to release this document. The union should be, too. But with no one pressuring them to do it, they can jointly continue to hide behind the various bright, shiny objects that will continue to keep us properly distracted.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Human Trafficking Conference inspires community action, education, and awareness
SHREVEPORT, La. (KTAL/KMSS) — The South-Central U.S. Human trafficking Conference brought a sense of awareness. It was a free event with sessions on recognizing the signs of human trafficking, reporting suspicious activity, supporting survivors, and understanding the complex trauma. Human trafficking has no demographic, as many traffickers look for vulnerable citizens. 'It's not age, race, or even gender specific. My daughter is 17, and so that does hit home for me as well, because that's something I always look at. Because there are so many social media platforms now, and you don't know who they are talking to,' said Brandy Foshee, a judge's assistant at the Caddo Parish Juvenile Court. With social media, people can be groomed over the course of years before they are trafficked. Lindsey Rayl, a human trafficking advocate, shared her personal story of being trafficked at 15 years old. Additionally, the conference moderators were individuals who work directly with agencies combating human trafficking. Watch: Human Trafficking in Our Community 'We see that there are the social workers, there are the attorneys, there are multiple people doing multiple things, including the survivors, and so when we all come together, it's a big piece of the puzzle that creates a community for not only addressing the issue, but moving forward to make strides,' said Helen Marrs, assistant district attorney at the Caddo Parish District Attorney's Office. The mission of the Free Coalition to End Human Trafficking is to rescue victims and empower them to live full, meaningful lives beyond their trauma. The coalition says having knowledge of the risks, as well as open and honest communication with loved ones and children, can prevent the inhumanity that is human trafficking. Heather Courtney, president of the Free Coalition to End Human Trafficking Board of Directors, said, 'Being aware of who your loved ones are with, who they are around, what they are doing, you know, video games. Everybody's kids play video games, but I think like the chat features on these video games, it's terrifying. The access people have to your children, so I think being vigilant about who has access to your children. Being aware of what they're looking at, what they're playing.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Proposed bill to allows parade goers to carrying concealed handguns
SHREVEPORT, La. (KTAL/KMSS) — A proposed bill is changing the rules for carrying concealed handguns. The legislation now allows concealed carry at public parades and demonstrations that require permits. House Bill 393 has not yet passed, but local leaders say it raises some concerns. 'Nobody asked for this bill, but the NRA, and those who are super pro-gun to where they put guns over people, right?' said State Representative Joy Walters. HB 393 has some lawmakers asking questions. District 4 state representative Walters, who often rides in Mardi Gras parades, says the bill creates a double standard for those participating in the parade versus spectators. 'This coming season, this coming Mardi Gras season, it will be where people who are spectators, yes, they can conceal carry, you know, with their permits and whatnot, however, those of us who are on floats, we won't be able to,' said Walters. 'I look at it as a betrayal. The fact that this person in front of me that I'm waving to, that I'm throwing to, you can have a gun, but I cannot on the float.' La. bill to criminalize 'intentional exposure' to STDs, advances The Shreveport Police Department (SPD) states that the proposed bill raises concerns, but urges residents to remain mindful of safety in crowded areas. 'A parade is not really a place to bring a handgun or a firearm, any areas like that that have large populations like that, bringing and introducing firearms to those facilities in those areas can be problematic and it sometimes can be illegal depending on where these events are located,' said Shreveport Police Public Information Officer Corporal Chris Bordelon. Bordelon says that while the bill may change the policy, they will still enforce the law. 'As law enforcement officers, the thing that we do is enforce the laws that are on the books, and whatever house bill gets before our legislators and whatever gets signed into law is what we will enforce.' Cpl. Chris Bordelon. The proposal awaits deliberation by the Senate on Sunday, June 8th. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.