Teenagers as young as 14 years-old rescued from sexual exploitation during Super Bowl, FBI says - Los Angeles Times
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Teens as young as 14 rescued from sexual exploitation during Super Bowl, FBI says

A Super Bowl 50 sign rests on the beach near the Golden Gate Bridge. The FBI and more than 30 other law enforcement agencies rescued seven teens in a Super Bowl sex-trafficking sweep.

A Super Bowl 50 sign rests on the beach near the Golden Gate Bridge. The FBI and more than 30 other law enforcement agencies rescued seven teens in a Super Bowl sex-trafficking sweep.

(Charlie Riedel / AP)
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Seven teenagers, some as young as 14 years old, were rescued from forced prostitution in the San Francisco Bay Area during Super Bowl week, authorities announced Tuesday.

Some of the victims had previously been reported missing by their parents, Federal Bureau of Investigation officials said. They ranged in age from 14 to 17.

More than a dozen pimps and their associates were arrested in multiagency sweeps intended to crackdown on sex trafficking, the FBI said.

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Some of those arrested came to the Bay Area from Las Vegas and from other states to capitalize on the large crowds gathering for the Super Bowl, authorities said.

In all, 129 adults were picked up or cited for prostitution and 85 clients were arrested.

“High-profile special events, which draw large crowds, have become lucrative opportunities for sex trafficking criminal enterprises,” said Bertram Fairries, an assistant special agent in charge of the FBI in San Francisco.

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The FBI’s Super Bowl operation is part of the Innocence Lost National Initiative established in 2003 to address the growing problem of human trafficking.

Over the last 13 years, the FBI and its partner agencies have recovered nearly 4,800 children and helped convict about 2,000 people in human trafficking crimes, which the agency described as “the most common form of modern day slavery.”

“Though we think it’s important to focus on this issue in light of a high-profile event, the sad reality is, this is a problem we see every day in communities across the country,” FBI Special Agent in Charge David J. Johnson said.

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