Community Corner

Board of Supervisors Vote to Support Legislation Inspired by Oceanside Case

The Child Protection Act of 2013, authored by Rep. Juan Vargas, D-San Diego, would remove a requirement that the alleged trafficker knew the victim was a minor.

The San Diego County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously today to support legislation aimed at closing a loophole in federal child sex trafficking laws and speeding prosecution of suspects.

The Child Protection Act of 2013, authored by Rep. Juan Vargas, D-San Diego, would remove a requirement that the alleged trafficker must have known the victim was a minor. The bill is also known as "Hazel's Law."

Under existing law, the trafficker's knowledge of the victim's age at the time the crime was committed is a major factor in determining the length of a sentence imposed, according to Supervisors Greg Cox and Dianne Jacob.

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"These children have suffered enough," Cox said. "They shouldn't have to suffer more waiting for justice to be delivered."

The average age that girls become prostitutes in the United States is between 12 and 14 years old, and most are runaways, former foster youth or homeless, which make them prime targets for sex traffickers, according to the supervisors.

Find out what's happening in Oceanside-Camp Pendletonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"Child predators target vulnerable youth who might have a history of problems or who have escaped a home of parental abuse and neglect," Cox said. "Through mind games and manipulation, these children are forced into the sex trade."

Cox and Jacob contend prosecution of alleged child sex traffickers is frequently delayed because law enforcement has to spend time looking for evidence that they knew their victims' ages.

"Hazel's Law" is named after a San Diegan identified as Hazel C., who at 17 was abducted by 41-year-old Maurice Lerome Smith of Oceanside and forced into prostitution.

"This wasn't an issue of prostitution or choice or drugs," Hazel told the board. "This was a snake in the grass -- and I got bit."

—City News Service

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