“Selling Girls,” Original Investigation into U.S. Child Sex Trafficking, Premieres October 19 on TEGNA Station Digital Platforms
While the series focuses on the sex trafficking of underage girls, boys are also victims of the minor sex trade and all children under the age of 18 who are induced to engage in commercial sex are victims of trafficking.
“‘Selling Girls’ tells a disturbing story that no one wants to talk
about, but we must expose and address the issue of trafficking of our
young people in
“We applaud
The six episodes of “Selling Girls” include:
-
“Sex Trafficking 101.” The series opens by answering the core
questions: What is child sex trafficking and how does it happen in
the United States ? - “Motivation” is the nickname of a trafficker who is interviewed for the series from prison. He explains how he coerced a 14-year-old girl into the sex trade, a crime for which he was arrested and only received probation. The young survivor of this trauma received no counseling or services and returned to the trade.
- “Survivors” describes how sex traffickers lure girls into the trade and how these youngsters are so vulnerable.
- “Groomed” takes viewers just beyond the boundaries of a
Houston high school, where sex traffickers give free alcohol and drugs to underage girls to pressure them into the trade. - “Buyers” pulls back the curtain to reveal the sordid and specific business model that connects buyers with young girls. One buyer explains why he purchased sex and admits that he never asked questions about age.
- “Saving Girls.” Viewers will learn the three steps that can be taken now to help change the topic of conversation from selling girls to saving them.
Each station’s coverage is unique, highlighting the crisis in their
community. With complicated and often conflicting local, state and
federal sex trafficking laws,
“Selling Girls” is the latest series from the award-winning producers of the investigative units at WXIA and KHOU. Previously, the “Charlie Foxtrot” series (produced in 2016-17) drove policy changes for how the U.S. Military provides treatment and care for veterans suffering from PTSD. They also took a raw look at the dramatic rise in heroin-related deaths in American suburbs in “The Triangle”(2016), a series that helped to elevate the national opioid conversation and is now used as a regular part of addiction awareness and education.
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