I asked myself that question when I stumbled over W.T. Stead’s article series in the Pall Mall Gazette while researching for my next Victorian vigilante thriller.
W.T Stead was an investigative journalist reporting on sex trafficking in Victorian Britain. He found that girls and young women are trafficked directly from prisons, and that law enforcement doesn’t care one bit.
One hundred thirty years later, The Guardian reports on sex trafficking in US American jails as though it’s a brand-new thing.
They also mention that law enforcement shrugs it off.
Remember, we’re talking about vulnerable girls and women, most of them with a background of abuse, drug addiction, and poverty, and no place to go once they are released from jail. What would you do if you had nothing and no one you could ask for help, no money, no roof over your head, and then a pimp offers you a room, food, and drugs to forget your shitty life?
I struggled to understand why law enforcement isn’t interested in the fate of these girls and never has been. I tried not to file this under “No one gives a shit because they’ve already been labelled as prostitutes.”
So I dug a bit deeper and found this: NHI — No Human Involved, is an unofficial term used by law enforcement to describe murders of people in marginalised communities, including sex workers, sex trafficking victims, Indigenous peoples, and people of colour.
Looks like my initial assumption of “No one gives a shit because they’ve already been labelled as prostitutes” was correct. Now I just have to add “plus anyone who is not white and straight.”