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AG files first charges under state's new human trafficking law

By Rick Pluta, Michigan Public Radio Network

http://stream.publicbroadcasting.net/production/mp3/wkar/local-wkar-979126.mp3

LANSING, MI –
The state attorney general's office has filed the first charges under the Michigan's updated law against human trafficking. A man is accused of forcing two teen-aged girls in Detroit to become prostitutes. We have details from Michigan Public Radio's Rick Pluta.

AUDIO:
The man is charged with two counts of inviting teen-aged girls to parties and then forcing them to work as prostitutes, collecting all of the money, beating them for not earning enough, and sexually assaulting them himself. The attorney general's new Human Trafficking Unit is trying to extradite him from California.

A study done last year for the Michigan Women's Foundation found as many as 160 cases a month of girls being sold online or through escort services in Michigan. The study did not track how often teen-aged girls and boys are offered on the streets or in hotel rooms. But human trafficking is becoming more common across the country.

The Michigan Women's Foundation says the new charges and penalties are useful - but the state should also have a "safe harbor" law that ensures people forced to become prostitutes are treated as victims and not as criminals.

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