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'Lost all credibility': Nonprofit CEO delivers demand to Trump HHS amid 'failed' human trafficking hotline

'Lost all credibility': Nonprofit CEO delivers demand to Trump HHS amid 'failed' human trafficking hotline

Yahoo10-02-2025

A group of anti-human trafficking advocates called "Safe House Project" is urging the Trump administration and Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to reform the National Human Trafficking Hotline.
The hotline, which is run by HHS, was started in 2007 to provide 24/7 help for victims of human trafficking.
According to Safe House Project, which offers victims a range of services, including a network of shelters, the hotline has "lost all credibility" and simply does not accomplish the goal of ending human trafficking.
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After Kennedy cleared a committee vote on Tuesday, bringing him one step closer to confirmation, the nonprofit released a statement celebrating the step, saying that "our nation is in dire need of leadership that will restore it [the hotline] to fulfill its purpose of identifying victims of trafficking, supporting victims escaping from their traffickers, and helping bring swift justice to those who abuse and victimize desperate and vulnerable populations."
In line with the Department of Government Efficiency's mission to slash government waste, Safe House Project says HHS can reform the hotline to conserve its tax-dollar funding and save more lives at the same time.
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"The American taxpayers funded the National Human trafficking hotline, and the reality is it has failed," Safe House Project CEO Kristi Wells told Fox News Digital.
Wells claimed that people who call the hotline often have to wait upwards of 45 minutes, resulting in many people hanging up before even reporting a human trafficking incident. She also said that in many instances, hotline staff fail to return calls or to share tips with law enforcement.
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If he is confirmed by the Senate, Wells said Kennedy will have a "phenomenal opportunity" to save thousands of lives by moving quickly to increase the efficiency of the hotline.
"The National Human Trafficking Hotline, again, has the potential to save thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of lives," she continued. "And so, [since] the Department of Health and Human Services is the one that oversees the effectiveness of the hotline, it's really important that the current administration prioritizes and really holds the current hotline accountable and making sure that the services are operating the way that they need to be operating."
In place of the current hotline, Wells is urging HHS to leverage modern technology – such as cellphone apps and AI – to create a new system that is "fast, actionable and easy to use."
After conducting extensive research with law enforcement entities and related NGOs, Wells said she believes a new system could be created using modern technology that would make the tax dollars being spent by the government on this go much further and accomplish more.
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"When you're leveraging technology, you are really creating efficiencies of scale and really increasing scale," she said. "And so, I don't believe that this is a solution that would cost the government more money. I think it would allow them to use the dollars that are currently being spent on a national hotline more effectively and see more effective results."
Wells said the Trump administration "has already shown an encouraging willingness to tackle human trafficking," but noted, "We want to do our part to make sure that this is a top priority for them and make sure that correct actions are taken to bring victims out of the shadows, to increase reporting and to increase law enforcement and prosecution of traffickers and buyers."
"Human trafficking is happening all around us and we as community members have the opportunity to identify and respond to human trafficking and a new tool is really vital to us making sure that that happens," she continued. "Whenever we have proper reporting mechanisms and we are 'seeing something and saying something,' then this idea that human trafficking is undercover and goes undetected is no longer the reality."
"The reality is we'll be able to see it more and when we start seeing it more, we're able to empower our lawmakers with more effective data to create more effective policies. And so, I am excited about the trajectory that a more robust reporting mechanism can bring to the objective of eradicating trafficking in America."Original article source: 'Lost all credibility': Nonprofit CEO delivers demand to Trump HHS amid 'failed' human trafficking hotline

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Veterans, supporters hold D-Day demonstration in Longmont
Veterans, supporters hold D-Day demonstration in Longmont

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Veterans, supporters hold D-Day demonstration in Longmont

A group of demonstrators gathered at Sixth Avenue and Main Street in Longmont on Friday, the anniversary of D-Day, to advocate for veterans' jobs, benefits and health care under the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs at a time when VA jobs have come under threat of significant cuts by the Trump administration. It's been 81 years since that fateful day when U.S. troops invaded Normandy in 1944, and some local protesters say they are still fighting for the same rights and protections that were promised to U.S. veterans back when the federal government first passed the GI Bill. Longmont Community Drummers members Mary Rose, right, and Ann Hartzler, not pictured, play as demonstrators wave and hold signs during a rally to recognize the 81st anniversary of D-Day and to support veterans at Sixth Avenue and Main Street in Longmont on Friday. (Matthew Jonas/Staff Photographer) Protesters huddled together on the sidewalk, holding American flags and signs that said 'Support Our Veterans' and 'Protect the VA.' Some of them played drums. Several cars driving past the busy intersection honked their horns or rolled down their windows to lend a whoop or cheer. Mary Kathleen Rose, a Longmont resident and local activist, brought her drum set and said she was out protesting to help drive change in the country. Richard Kellog, a veteran who served in the Air Force during the 'secret war' in southeast Asia, was among the demonstrators. Kellog benefits from VA medical care, a disability pension and the college education he received through the GI Bill. Kellog said he knows many veterans who are already being negatively affected by cuts to the VA, like the roughly 6,000 or more veterans whose firings have already reportedly hit. Due to labor cuts, the VA isn't as responsive as it needs to be, he argued. 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Trump Reprises One of the Worst Things He Did in His First Term
Trump Reprises One of the Worst Things He Did in His First Term

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Trump Reprises One of the Worst Things He Did in His First Term

Sign up for the Slatest to get the most insightful analysis, criticism, and advice out there, delivered to your inbox daily. Donald Trump won the presidency in part on promises to deport undocumented immigrants with criminal records. But his earliest executive orders—trying to undo birthright citizenship, suspending critical refugee programs—made clear he wants to attack legal immigrants, too. In our new series, we'll track the Trump administration's attempts to exclude an ever-growing number of people from the American experiment. One of President Donald Trump's defining moments during his first term was a travel ban against Muslim-majority countries. Now in his second term he's reprised that policy, introducing a new travel ban on Wednesday night that bars nationals of 12 countries from entering the U.S. starting on Monday. That announcement came on the heels of the administration's assault on international students, banning them from enrolling at Harvard University. 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Rubio also announced he would be 'aggressively' revoking visas of Chinese students specifically who are currently studying in the U.S., targeting 'those with connections to the Chinese Community Party or studying in critical fields.' The new action prompted over 30 higher education groups to come together and send a letter to Rubio, noting that in the 2023–24 academic year there were over 1 million international students in the U.S., which resulted in $44 billion worth of nationwide economic impact. Over the last few weeks, the Trump administration has deployed a new strategy in pursuit of the president's mass deportation goals. Undocumented immigrants will show up to court hearings in an effort to follow the rules and find a way to remain in the U.S. legally. But as they stand before a judge, they learn that the government has dropped their immigration case. As they go home, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents ambush them and promptly arrest them. 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‘We Are Taking Away Elon's Friends'
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‘We Are Taking Away Elon's Friends'

The MAGA right has responded to the explosive feud between Donald Trump and Elon Musk largely with pleas for the American president and world's richest man to reconcile, if only for the greater good of Republican Party dominance. That doesn't seem like that's going to happen anytime soon considering the attacks Musk leveled against Trump on Thursday, Trump's media tour bashing Musk on Friday, and the fact that White House staff and the president's proxies are actively pressuring people who've been allies to both to pick a side in MAGAland's ongoing divorce proceedings. 'We are taking away Elon's friends,' a senior Trump administration official bluntly tells Rolling Stone. 'If he wants them back, he will need to kiss Donald Trump's ass harder than he's ever kissed anybody's ass before in his entire life.' This official adds: 'Even then, it's not a given he gets to come back from this.' On Thursday, another source with knowledge of the matter told this magazine that Trump White House staff had already started making phone calls and sending messages to certain high-profile allies (big donors in the party, conservative luminaries, and so forth) of both Trump and Musk, demanding they choose pick sides in this melodrama — adding that it would likely be the easiest choice they'd ever make. 'Nobody even has to ask me; it's no choice at all: I am Team Trump all the way. He is my friend and he's my president,' says Darrell Scott, a Cleveland, Ohio-area pastor who has advised Trump on different matters and initiatives ever since 2016. 'What some people don't understand about Trump is that he is a very gregarious person. But when he needs to be the boss, he can switch to that mode pretty quickly. And I don't think Elon was able to deal with that … Now, he's probably got a lot of people in his ear about this right now. All I've done since this all blew up on Thursday so far is send him a text, telling him: 'Be encouraged.'' It appears that the administration's high-school-cafeteria-style pressure campaign and popularity contest is — even at its very infancy — working out for them. Another Trump official notes that since this all exploded into full public display on Thursday, members of Trump's government and inner sanctum have been inundated with messages from outside allies and collaborators in the business, media, and political elite stressing their allegiance to the 45th and 47th U.S. president. The onrush of fealty is getting so intense that some of the messages, according to this administration official, include lines like: 'In case the president didn't see my text…' and 'Elon is dead to us.' But the Trump administration's response may ultimately involve more than just a pressure campaign for the duo's mutuals to choose a side. The president personally threatened on Thursday to cancel Musk's government contracts, and MAGA diehards like Trump's former top strategist Steve Bannon have called for Musk's immigration status to be investigated, and even for the government to seize control of Musk's company. The Trump team at least seems open to the idea of reopening federal probes into Musk's empire. 'THIS ADMINISTRATION COULD ALWAYS START THE INVESTIGATIONS AGAIN,' one senior Trump appointee messaged Rolling Stone after the Tesla and SpaceX billionaire, who ruffled (to say the least…) his share of feathers while serving as the head of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), turned on the president. It is unclear how many of these important 'friends' the world's richest person will be able to hold on to in the near and long term — but so far, it's not looking too great for him. (On Friday night, Musk started deleting his posts criticizing Trump.) Right-wing influencers, meanwhile, have been divided in their response to the breakup. Most of them have lamented that Trump and Musk are fighting while urging them to figure out a way to reconcile, while some have dug in on one side of the feud or the other. 'Broooos please noooooo. We love you both so much,' rapper, outspoken Hitler fan, and on-and-off Trump ally Kanye West posted to Musk's social media site X. Bannon, for his part, told Politico that he's 'going to fucking war' against Musk. The former Trump official is not showing Musk a hint of empathy, despite the fact that Bannon once went through his own (albeit temporary) excommunication from Trumpworld's upper crust. Furthermore, influential MAGA commentator @catturd2 has been lashing out at commentators sympathetic to Musk, as well as conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, who said Trump must respond to Musk's allegation that the president's name appears in the government's files related to Jeffrey Epstein. 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