“She told me what crime was committed, and it felt unbelievable,” Hannah said.
Hannah thought sex trafficking meant being kidnapped, taken overseas, held hostage, beaten, sold.
Her experience highlights a gap in Washington’s efforts to stop child trafficking. Dating sites and social media have become the top recruitment locations for sex trafficking in the nation, according to data from the National Human Trafficking Hotline, yet state legislation has done little to address cases like Hannah’s. Meanwhile, local police departments like Lynnwood often lack the resources to investigate abusers who recruit kids online, and tech companies have been slow to enact safety measures that prevent online child sexual exploitation, experts and advocates say.
In 2021, the national hotline recorded 583 cases in which a sex trafficking victim’s recruitment location was known. Two-thirds of them were recruited over the internet, including 14% on dating sites and 16% on Facebook and Instagram, according to an analysis by Polaris, a nonprofit that operates the hotline.
“Unfortunately, social media and these dating apps — Tinder and Bumble and things like that — are just fertile ground for people who want to exploit minors,” said Alex Voorhees, the lead prosecutor for commercial sexual exploitation cases at the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. Voorhees estimates at least half of her cases start with alleged abusers meeting their victims online.
The trend is increasing at an alarming rate, data shows.
The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s CyberTipline, the nation’s centralized reporting system for online exploitation of children, received 17,353 reports of child sex trafficking in 2023, a 47% increase since 2019.