Jeff Humphrey

Mayor Calls Attention to Human Trafficking

Jeff Humphrey, Media Manager, 509.625.6308


Tuesday, January 7, 2020 at 3:47 p.m.

Mayor Calls Attention to Human Trafficking

In one of her first official acts as Spokane’s new mayor, Nadine Woodward declared January 2020, as Human Trafficking Awareness Month.

Woodward appeared before the Spokane City Council as an invited guest of Council President Breen Beggs.

Mayor Woodward then read her proclamation before the Council in the hopes of calling attention to the problem she says, “Is a crime hidden in plain sight”.

Members of Spokane’s Jonah Project briefed Woodward on how human trafficking has become a global, $32 billion criminal enterprise.

“Victims of human trafficking a lured by false promises of employment, educational opportunities or even loving relationships,” warned Woodward.

Police say gang members view human trafficking as a less dangerous way to make money without exposing themselves to penalties associated with large-scale drug dealing.

Meanwhile Spokane’s Safe Streets Task Force is periodically using decoys or surveillance details to catch men patronizing prostitutes.

The ongoing effort is designed to keep “johns” guessing about who’s a prostitute and who’s an undercover officer.

“And therefore, drive down the demand by increasing the risk to people going out there, that it actually might be a police operation,” explained Captain Brad Arleth of the Spokane Police Department.

In 2015, the Spokane City Council passed an ordinance allowing police to tow the cars of anyone picking up prostitutes on Sprague Avenue from Fiske Street to Hamilton Street.

The johns have to pay a $500 fine not to mention impound fees.

“We’re trying to blunt the demand by targeting johns and people who are engaged in purchasing the traffic victims,” Arleth said of the costly patronizing- a- prostitute citations.   

Pimps demand their prostitutes earn up to a thousand dollars a night. So if police can scare away their customers, it makes human trafficking a less attractive criminal enterprise.

“Our other interest is in building neighborhood efficacy. We have businesses out there that are flourishing. We have residents out there who deserve to have a good quality of life without finding needles and some of the other criminal activity that goes along with prostitution and human trafficking out there,” Arleth said of the East Sprague Neighborhood.

Police are also concerned about the women themselves.

“I’m fighting cancer and the bills are huge. I’ve been doing the heroin because, it’s for the pain,” said a woman named Linda.

The 51-year-old was caught in the middle of a sex act inside a john’s SUV in the industrial area just north of Sprague Avenue.

“I don’t like having to do this. But if I want to eat… my normal social security or disability hasn’t been coming in,” Linda lamented.

Police don’t arrest Linda, but Detective Harlan Harden does offer to connect her to services that could help Linda find a way out of the darkness and off Spokane streets.

Harden gives the woman his business card.    

“If you call me tomorrow or send me a text at that number, and just say, ‘hey this is Linda from last night,’ I’ll have her give you a call and you guys can talk about what different resources are available,” Harden said of a social worker.

“They also work in partnership with outreach advocates from Lutheran Community Services who are doing the same thing.  So that offer always stands, to be called, to come and get the victim into services that they need,” said Arleth.

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