Long Beach, CA
File #: 13-0828    Version: 1 Name: CD4,2,9 - Sex Trafficking
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 9/9/2013 In control: City Council
On agenda: 9/17/2013 Final action: 9/17/2013
Title: Recommendation to respectfully request City Manager to work with appropriate staff to add language to the City of Long Beach State Legislative Agenda that enables staff to lobby the California Legislature to increase penalties for individuals paying a minor for sex, including examining the creation of a felony for this crime, increasing monetary penalties, requiring registration as a sex-offender, forfeiting certain assets, and other appropriate measures that can prove effective to curtail this crime.
Sponsors: COUNCILMEMBER PATRICK O'DONNELL, FOURTH DISTRICT, COUNCILMEMBER SUJA LOWENTHAL, SECOND DISTRICT, COUNCILMEMBER STEVEN NEAL, NINTH DISTRICT
Attachments: 1. 091713-R-17sr.pdf, 2. 091713-R-17 Correspondence-Don Knabe.pdf, 3. 091713-R-17 Correspondence-Andrea Eaton.pdf, 4. 091713-R-17 Correspondence-Mary White.pdf
TITLE
Recommendation to respectfully request City Manager to work with appropriate staff to add language to the City of Long Beach State Legislative Agenda that enables staff to lobby the California Legislature to increase penalties for individuals paying a minor for sex, including examining the creation of a felony for this crime, increasing monetary penalties, requiring registration as a sex-offender, forfeiting certain assets, and other appropriate measures that can prove effective to curtail this crime.

DISCUSSION
The growth in the trafficking of children for sex and labor within Long Beach is an injustice that blights our community. A recent report released from the Los Angeles County Probation Department states that a significant percentage of children arrested in Los Angeles County for sex trafficking are arrested in the South Bay and local areas.

A disproportionately large number of these youth have been under the jurisdiction of the Department of Children and Family Services (DCSF) at some point in their experience. Panderers, often known as pimps, frequently abuse the foster care system as a means to target vulnerable children to sell for sex. The sale of children for sex has become, in some cases, more profitable than selling drugs, and has increasingly been used as a source of income for gangs. Pimps, on average, profit $162,500 annually for each child illegally trafficked for sex. The growing demand for sex with minors can, in large part, be attributed to the lack of effective and appropriate legal consequences for consumers of illicit sexual encounters with children.

Current laws prosecute children for prostitution and prostitution related offenses, and erroneously punish the victims rather than the customers paying for sex- also known as johns- who are perpetrating and financing these crimes. In order to address this systemic cycle of sexual violence, the appropriate parties involved must be held accountable to the highest letter of...

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