
Human trafficking in Virginia could not be in worse then anywhere else. Here exact numbers are difficult to obtain since human trafficking is illegal in Virginia. … From December 2007 to June 2015, they received 2,803 calls on human trafficking in Virginia, which resulted in 628 cases. The most common type of trafficking was sex trafficking, domestic work and traveling sales crews.
The numbers behind how many children go missing a year in Virginia. There are 329 missing children in Virginia as of May 22 and the … at-risk thing and that’s the pipeline into sex trafficking,” More then over 300 children have went missing in Virginia this year. Yes, you are reading this right 300 children.
In 2018 there were 33 active human trafficking cases in Virginia. … Virginia’s 33 active human trafficking cases in 2017 generated 401 federal charges involving 74 defendants. Of those 33 cases, 75 percent involved sex trafficking and the remaining 25 percent of cases involved labor trafficking. When we hear about cases of human trafficking, we don’t necessarily consider it a local issue, but human trafficking in Virginia may be a bigger issue than you thought. In 2018, Virginia was ranked sixth in the nation for active human trafficking cases, with almost 200 reported cases within the 2018 calendar year.

Statistics indicate that the vast majority of these victims were women and the highest percentage of cases were in the sex trafficking category. Virginia’s central location along the Eastern highway corridor serves as a reason for the prevalence of trafficking in the state, with Interstate 95 being one of the main points of concern. State government and law enforcement have paid special attention to this phenomenon in recent years, and many independent organizations throughout the state work closely with victims and officials in handling situations of human trafficking. Human trafficking is categorized as a modern form of slavery.
The International Labor Organization estimates there to be over 21 million human trafficking victims around the world and over 150 billion dollars generated in forced labor per year. Anyone can become a victim of human trafficking, but immigrants, LGBTQ+ youth, those in poverty, and victims of domestic violence are among the groups that are most commonly affected. Victims of human trafficking find themselves in a range of situations, and forms of forced labor include sex work, street begging, agricultural work, and even things like dangerous mining and quarrying in certain countries.
The human trafficking hot-line number is 1 (888) 373-7888
SMS: 233733 (Text “HELP” or “INFO”)Hours: 24 hours, 7 days a weekLanguages: English, Spanish and 200 more languagesWebsite: humantraffickinghotline.org