Sex trafficking has to be confronted
Share this @internewscast.com


Parents naturally want to ensure the safety of their children. However, an unsettling reality looms: the trafficking of minors is not confined to distant cities or obscure corners of the web. It is occurring right within suburban areas and urban neighborhoods, affecting places we frequent daily—our communities, educational institutions, shopping areas, and bustling main streets. This is not an exaggeration but a call for urgent collective action.

Our perspective comes from both law enforcement and hands-on service delivery. Across Long Island, law enforcement has been proactive in investigating and dismantling trafficking rings. Collaborations with organizations like the FBI, the Suffolk County Police Department, and the EAC Network have unveiled a grim reality: unlike drugs or weapons, human lives can be exploited repeatedly for profit.

The establishment of Suffolk County’s first dedicated Human Trafficking Unit marked a significant evolution in approach—prioritizing the treatment of rescued individuals as victims deserving of protection, support, and empathy. In collaboration, EAC Network and law enforcement forged a pioneering program linking survivors to compassionate social workers and essential services, facilitating recovery for victims while ensuring traffickers face justice.

It is imperative that we all engage in this battle by comprehending the nature of trafficking and learning how to protect ourselves. Trafficking thrives on secrecy; increasing awareness is the cornerstone of our defensive strategy.

During training sessions across Long Island, attendees are often shocked to discover the extent of trafficking within their own localities. Yet, it is a present threat. Educating everyone—from children and neighbors to students, healthcare professionals, educators, coaches, and colleagues—is vital in creating a robust defense against those who exploit the vulnerable.

In the previous year, EAC Network successfully reached nearly 5,000 local students with workshops focusing on trafficking, digital safety, and nurturing healthy relationships. Additionally, they equipped hundreds of parents, teachers, and religious leaders with the skills to identify warning signs, strengthening the community’s ability to combat this issue.

Vulnerability can take many forms. From college students away from home for the first time or under financial pressure, to young people in unstable households or online without guidance — traffickers know how to exploit the cracks in our systems. This is not about strangers abducting children from dark alleys.

Most sex trafficking in the United States does not involve stranger abduction. More often, children are lured and groomed by someone they know — often through social media or gaming platforms, where traffickers can build trust over time and manipulate emotions with precision.

Some still assume trafficking is a “big-city problem.” The truth is far different — and far more dangerous. The same tactics used in urban centers are used everywhere: grooming online, approaching kids at malls or bus stops, and exploiting insecurities. Just as the opioid crisis proved that addiction doesn’t stop at city limits, human trafficking networks don’t either.

At EAC Network we provide trauma-informed care, mentoring, safety planning, bilingual support, transportation, and — most importantly — trusted adult relationships that help youth rebuild confidence and learn what healthy relationships look like.

In 2024, we received 118 referrals and served 191 local youth. Since 2014, our Safe Harbour program has supported more than 840 Suffolk youth — children who might otherwise have fallen through the cracks. Yet even these numbers tell only part of the story: trafficking is chronically underreported. Victims often fear coming forward or go unrecognized by adults who miss the warning signs.

We are also seeing alarming trends — more cases, more warning signs, and more children at risk. Traffickers are increasingly using social media, gaming platforms, encrypted messaging, AI and cryptocurrencies to recruit victims and evade detection. Combating these evolving tactics demands greater awareness, deeper collaboration, and stronger investment in prevention and education.

Protecting children from exploitation is a shared responsibility. Every parent, teacher, coach, elected official, and caring adult has a role to play — by learning the signs, having the difficult conversations, and supporting the organizations doing this work on the ground.

Sex trafficking of minors is one of the darkest challenges we face. But with open eyes, strong partnerships, and a shared resolve, it is one we can — and must — confront together.

These are our children. And it is our responsibility to protect them.

Mukherjee Lockel is the president and CEO of EAC Network. Hart is the associate vice president of public safety and community engagement at Hofstra University and a former Suffolk County police commissioner and former senior supervising resident agent for the Long Island FBI Office.

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like
J6 Vet Joe Biggs Demands Trump Full Pardon

Veteran Joe Biggs Urges Full Pardon for Trump: A Bold Call for Justice

Proud Boys member and decorated combat veteran Joe Biggs says he and…
Hillside crash: Family speaks after Vietnam veteran Edward Price struck, killed by vehicle near Butterfield, Laverne: EXCLUSIVE

Family of Vietnam Veteran Edward Price Shares Heartfelt Tribute After Tragic Accident Near Butterfield

In an exclusive interview with ABC7, the family of an Army veteran…
FTA calls for more aggressive CTA safety plan or risk losing funding as Chicago police begin added patrols

Chicago’s Transit Safety Boost: FTA Demands Action or Funding Cuts as Police Intensify Patrols

In a bold move aimed at bolstering public safety, the Federal Transit…
Congestion pricing = accessible transit

Revolutionizing Urban Mobility: How Congestion Pricing Fuels Enhanced Public Transit Accessibility

New York City’s public transit system is renowned for its ability to…
Baytown, Texas student stabbed: Fight over $21 vape led to deadly stabbing of Sterling High School student Andrew Meismer: Records

Tragic Turn: Vape Dispute Ends in Fatal Stabbing at Baytown’s Sterling High School

In Baytown, Texas, an 18-year-old student faces murder charges following the fatal…
Investigation begins into plane crash that killed NASCAR driver Biffle and 6 others

Authorities Launch Inquiry into Plane Crash Involving NASCAR Driver Biffle and Six Additional Fatalities

Authorities are working diligently to uncover who was piloting the aircraft and…
Families of police violence victims unite for 'Justice for the Holidays' event in Jacksonville

Families Rally in Jacksonville: Uniting for ‘Justice for the Holidays’ Against Police Violence

In a poignant display of unity and sorrow, families in Jacksonville have…
Tucker Blasts Pastors Excusing Innocent Deaths at Amfest

Tucker Criticizes Pastors for Justifying Innocent Deaths at Amfest Event

Tucker Carlson’s 2025 Amfest Address Lays Out a Sweeping, Unapologetically Christian Defense…
Putin claims 'troops are advancing,' will achieve goals as EU approves massive Ukraine loan

Putin Asserts Military Progress as EU Greenlights Major Loan to Ukraine

On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin asserted that the country’s military forces…
What to know about the link between the Brown University and MIT shootings

Understanding the Connection: Brown University and MIT Shootings Unraveled

Authorities suspect the same individual is behind the tragic deaths of two…
Woman, child beaten, seriously hurt on Bensley Ave. near Orville T. Bright Elementary on Far South Side; CPD investigating | Video

Seven Juveniles Charged in Brutal Attack Near Orville T. Bright Elementary on Chicago’s South Side

CHICAGO (WLS) — Following a violent incident near a South Side elementary…
Mexico City lawmakers throw punches and yank hair in heated congress brawl over transparency institute

Chaos in Congress: Mexico City Lawmakers Clash in Fiery Transparency Institute Debate

During a session in Mexico City’s congress on Monday, a debate spiraled…