Meet the Heroic Trucker Who Saved a Young Woman From Sex Trafficking

Kevin Kimmel never expected he would encounter something as horrific as sex trafficking, or that on one of his truck routes he would end up saving a life.
In January of 2015, Kimmel was taking a break at a Virginia rest stop when he noticed something out of place: an RV parked nearby, rocking back and forth, its inhabitants hidden by blackout curtains.
“It didn’t really fit what I usually see in my world,” Kimmel said.
At first, Kimmel tried to ignore it. Other people’s recreational activities were none of his business, he thought. But that’s when he saw the face of a young woman peek out from behind the RV’s curtains, only to be immediately jerked away.
“That’s when I started thinking there was a problem next door,” the trucker said.
Watch the video above to find out how Kimmel stepped into action to save the young woman, and read our full article for more information on how truck drivers are doing their part to stop sex trafficking.
Homepage photo by Andre Kudyusov/Getty Images.

How to Talk to Working People About Preventing Human Trafficking

Brad Owen manages about three dozen chapels across the United States, all serving one mission: provide a place of worship and faith — for truck drivers.

But three months ago, Owen, the vice president of operations for Truckstop Ministries Inc., got a call from one of his chaplains in Amarillo, Texas; there were police everywhere and the chaplain was being questioned.

“They were asking him what he was doing there and why he was there,” Owen tells NationSwell. “After he showed his credentials and the police were satisfied, they explained what was going on.”

What was going on was a sex-trafficking ring near the chapel, located in a white cargo trailer just off Interstate 40, which winds through the southern half of the U.S. The police were investigating.

Owen wanted more information, so he called Truckers Against Trafficking, or TAT, a nonprofit that enlists the help of truckers to spot and report sex trafficking. Owen asked if the trafficking near the Amarillo chapel was real.

It was. And it was happening in a whole lot of places outside of truck stops too.

Worldwide, there are approximately 25 million people who are forced or coerced into labor every year in some capacity, according to the International Labour Organization. The U.S. is by no means immune to the trade. In the past decade, 40,000 trafficking victims’ cases have been flagged to the National Human Trafficking Hotline, with over 26,000 calls made this year alone.

Though underground sex trafficking is often concentrated in larger cities — an Urban Institute report found that in just eight major U.S. cities, the local sex-traffic economy amounted to an estimated $290 million — there are thousands of cases of women, men and minors being trafficked in areas that are more rural and remote, such as truck stops, hotels and convention centers. For years, efforts have focused on beefing up police probes around activity at truck stops with the help off the FBI, which has an arm dedicated to investigating sex-trafficking rings.

That has forced the trade to move even farther underground, leading to sometimes deadly consequences for victims, who are often killed or beaten if they try to escape. But now, thanks to TAT, truckers — a group that used to be piously referred to as the “knights of the highway” — are being heralded as saviors of the road once again. Thousands of truckers around the country, along with trucking schools and truck-stop workers, are signing up for TAT certification, which includes a 30-minute instructional video on how to to spot victims while on their driving routes. They’re given a wallet-sized card to keep with them, with helpful tips for what to be on the lookout for, such as seeing someone get dropped off at a truck and then picked back up again 20 minutes later.

Truckers Trafficking 2
Through Truckers Against Trafficking, drivers can become TAT certified and train their colleagues and peers at trucking events.

To date, TAT has certified more than 573,000 people in and around the trucking industry and law enforcement. Others become certified through TAT’s partners, like UPS, which trained over 97,000 of their employees last year.

All that training is clearly having an impact. In 2017, out of the 1,058 victims who were identified by truckers and reported to police, 324 were minors, according to the organization.

“Truck drivers show to be a great solution. They’ve been trained to be vigilant and they’re on the city streets, pulling into areas and being put up in hotels where this happens,” says Kylla Lanier, deputy director for Truckers Against Trafficking. “Even though most of these men don’t buy sex, they’ve been quiet on the issue. We want to turn these passive bystanders into an interrupting force.”

In sheer numbers, the truckers are pretty much an army of their own. By enlisting the help of truckers nationwide, TAT is utilizing the eyes and ears of almost 1.7 million people, a force that rivals the size of the U.S. military.

Currently, five states rely on TAT’s training and education materials, including Arkansas, which was one of the first to mandate truckers be certified as of August last year.

“It’s like a neighborhood watch, where you have people who are the eyes and ears of an area,” says Arkansas state Rep. Charlotte Douglas, a Republican who spearheaded the bill after a similar one was presented in another state. Arkansas has the highest quotient of truckers across the nation per capita. “Truckers extend our police force when they are aware of dangerous situations and know what signs to look out for.”

HUMANIZING THE VICTIMS

Tajuan McCarty, a field trainer for TAT, is one of a handful of survivors who shares her story with truckers. McCarty believes it’s important to put a face to the crisis.

“I knew women who were decapitated, their heads placed in between their legs as a sign to other women to not cross their pimps,” McCarty tells NationSwell.

Her own bleak story started when she was raped at 12, as she recalled to Good Housekeeping in 2015. Despite being a smart and eager child, she ended up angry and rebellious, running away from home for days at a time. At 15, she was approached by an older man who coaxed her into sex work. By the time she was able to escape almost a decade later, she had been sold off over 42,000 times, she says.
A key role of McCarty’s job is to humanize the victims of trafficking who, for decades, have only been construed as prostitutes or hookers. “I was never a prostitute. I will tell you that.”

As society slowly begins to change the way it views trafficking victims, reframing the debate between sex work and sex slavery, McCarty is adamant: “There is no such thing as a sex industry,” she says. “People say they have a choice. But sit down with any person who claims they have control over their [bodies], and I will guarantee you it is a matter of circumstance, that they had no choice but to go into this. There is no choice.”

Still, those who work as high-priced escorts or seem to be acting of their own volition are not the target for Truckers Against Trafficking, says Lanier.

“You’re not finding a lot of independent people working truck stops, rest areas or locations where professional drivers tend to be at,” Lanier says. “That percentage is pretty small who have other viable options and who are not sexually traumatized or being trafficked.”

Truckers Trafficking 3
Truckers Against Trafficking Deputy Director Kylla Lanier (left) with trucker Kevin Kimmel after Kimmel was awarded the TAT Harriet Tubman Award for fighting trafficking.

WHO YOU GONNA CALL?

As he learned more about human trafficking, Kevin Kimmel, a 60-year-old trucker from Florida who logs over 120,000 miles per year, found himself changing his view of the women he’d see loitering around rest stops on his routes.

“I can count on one hand the times I’ve come across prostitution in my nine years on this job. And I figured it was a choice — a choice I wouldn’t agree with, but still, a choice,” he says. “But the more educated I got, the more I saw that these were actually victims.”

A few years back, Kimmel was at a rest stop, and while finalizing some paperwork he noticed an out-of-place RV; drivers usually park at the front of the rest stops, but this one was parked in the far back. He saw a man walk in, and soon after the RV started to rock.

“It was pretty clear what was going on there,” he says. But after everything was finished, he noticed a young girl stick her head out of the RV window only to be immediately yanked back.
He called the police.

“A couple officers came, and then I saw a young woman being placed into the front seat of a police car … and two others, a man and a woman, being taken out with handcuffs,” he says. “I stuck around for questioning since I was the one that called. … They said that she had about two days left before she’d have been dead.”

It’s that kind of simple action that TAT asks drivers to do.

“All we’re asking them to do is make a call from the safety of their own truck,” Lanier says.

But sometimes, even making a call can be fraught when it’s not clear who to call. For example, a 2016 survey conducted by TAT found that out of 532 cases of commercial sex reported, only 3 percent were called in to the National Human Trafficking Hotline, whereas 40 percent were reported to the police.
And calling the police, it turns out, has its own set of drawbacks. The National Human Trafficking Hotline is the only central database that can be used to log individuals and track them down. The FBI even recommends calling the hotline to streamline information.

“You have different jurisdictions — state police and local sheriffs, for example — that respond differently to a call. Sometimes it’s the local law enforcement,” says Lanier, explaining that truckers are advised to call the hotline so the information can be properly sent to whatever agency needs to respond. “I think in the heat of the moment, when adrenaline is running and you don’t know what to do, you just immediately call the police.”

For McCarty, the field trainer, the success of the TAT certification program gives her hope, both for its potential to help other victims but also for empowering the victims themselves.

“They should know that she is a princess, he is a prince, and that they are worthy of love,” McCarty says. “There are so many people who have been heard and been blamed. But if there’s anyone out there reading this, know this: It’s not your fault.”

If you or someone you know is a victim of trafficking, visit the National Human Trafficking Hotline’s website or call 1-888-373-7888.

Meet the Guys Tackling Sexual Assault on Campus

While most twenty-something males are concerned with the athletics, girls and grades, Eric Barthold has something else on his mind: stopping sexual violence on college campuses.
Since 2010, Barthold’s Mules Against Violence (MULES) has been raising awareness among Maine’s Colby College student body about the issue. The idea came to Barthold one day while sitting in his “Boys to Men” class where a girl was presenting research concerning sexual assault on campus. In that moment, Barthold realized something needed to be done and that it had to start with men.
Originally, he and two other students formed the group Male Athletes Against Violence, but they changed the name to accommodate female members. (The mule is the school’s mascot.) With that, the group set on their mission to educate the student body and “challenge male athlete stereotypes,” according to Collectively.
So far, group activities include joining the college’s Quilting Club to knit a giant quilt in the middle of the Student Center and encouraging male athletes to attend the Take Back the Night rally every year.
Unique to MULES, though, is the Man Box activity. This hour-long presentation, which targets men, starts with one simple question: What does it take to be a ‘real’ man? From there, a conceptual box is drawn with the responses being written inside it. On the outside are the answers to the question about what characteristics aren’t thought of as being associated with men.
“You almost always get: strong, powerful, controlling, drinks beer or can hold his alcohol, can get lots of girls, heterosexual, no emotions,” Barthold tells Collectively.
On the outside, though, are all the traits that aren’t considered masculine, such as emotional, sensitive, caring, drives a Prius or skinny jeans.
“The exercise shows the anxiety that guys feel to be manly,” Barthold explains. “If they’re in the box, they’re OK. But if they fall outside the box, they get targeted.”
The final questions Barthold asks the group concern how men protect themselves from being perpetrators of sexual violence and how women protect themselves from being victims. While the men have an answer about women, they can’t answer it about themselves.
Due to the success of his program, Barthold has expanded it to all-boys middle and high schools with the hopes of starting change at a younger age.
MORE: How to Fix Alaska’s Culture of Sexual Violence

How to Fix Alaska’s Culture of Sexual Violence

Alaska is America’s “Last Frontier,” one of the most breathtakingly beautiful states. But it also has a dark side: the highest rates of rape and sexual violence in the country. According to 2012 FBI crime data, an estimated 80 rapes are reported in Alaska for every 100,000 people. That’s nearly three times the national average. To determine why these violent acts are occurring so often — and more importantly what can be done to stop them — CNN columnist John D. Sutter spent two weeks in the state for his investigative report, “The Rapist Next Door”, interviewing perpetrators, victims and politicians, as part of the Change the List project.
MORE: In Alaska, a Plan to Help Patients Brave the Winter and Get Medical Attention
Sutter tells the story of Sheldon, a man who raped and molested his stepdaughter, Alice, but still lives in a shack directly next door to the family home. (Names have been changed to protect the subjects’ identities.) This may seem counterintuitive, but the proximity is part of a new treatment program centered on offenders. In this program, Sheldon has a “safety net” of five community members, including his wife, Ruth, who make sure that he cannot hide from what he did, but more importantly, won’t be able to harm someone again. According to the program’s director, of 90 sex offenders who have entered the treatment — to be fair, a small sample — the recidivism rate is about 2 percent. To put that in perspective, 5.3% of 9,691 sex offenders nationwide re-offended within three years.
DON’T MISS:Amazing Sculptures Out of Alaska
Ruth thinks that Sheldon can change, and Alaska can, too, with more programs that attempt to rehabilitate and support offenders. But the transformation won’t be easy. Sutter hypothesizes that the rape rate is so high because the crimes are tolerated, especially in some remote areas, where law enforcement is scarce and alcohol abuse is common. So, these are some logical reasons, but how can the culture be changed? Sutter writes: “Policy shifts are important, to be sure. The state should broaden the power of tribal courts; expand law-enforcement in rural Alaska; increase the number of women’s shelters, so fewer victims will have to hop a plane to find safety; and expand sex-offender treatment programs like the one in which Sheldon participates.”
MORE: Making “Made in America” Cool Again
But you can help, too. CNN has a comprehensive (and vetted) list of five simple ways to make a difference. To get started, here is the condensed version:

And to better understand the realities of Alaska’s rape problem, don’t forget to read Sutter’s extensive report on CNN.