5 Things Every Minnesotan Should Know About Sex Trafficking This January
This January marks National Human Trafficking Prevention Month, and understanding how sex trafficking works matters urgently right now. ICE raids in Minneapolis are pushing exploitation underground while funding cuts destabilize safety nets. Everyday people are our strongest defense in recognizing trafficking and connecting people to help.
There’s reason for hope. Mikki Mariotti directs The Family Partnership’s anti-sex trafficking program PRIDE. After 30 years of working with people who have experienced trafficking, she joined researchers from Clemson University, the University of Minnesota, Northeastern University, and RTI International as a subject matter expert in a groundbreaking project that did something different: it brought survivors onto the research team as experts.
Mariotti and others in the survivor-centered advisory group shaped research questions, challenged assumptions that don’t match reality, and ensured trauma-informed processes throughout. Their goal: make academic findings useful for practitioners, not just other academics.
“Everyone on the team valued one another’s knowledge,” Mariotti says. “It was a level playing field where we all learned and taught each other. That made the research actually useful in the real world.”
The team also created a toolkit for other survivors engaging in research. Their work revealed numerous insights about how trafficking networks operate. Below, we’ll share five that are particularly relevant to Minnesota communities right now and practical ways you can help.
1. ICE presence puts everyone experiencing trafficking at greater risk
Nearly 3,000 ICE agents are now operating in Minneapolis, almost three times the size of the Twin Cities’ police forces combined. This affects everyone experiencing sex trafficking in our community, not just immigrants.
Here’s why this matters: these federal agents have been told they have absolute immunity. That means limited accountability for their actions. For people already in exploitative situations, this creates serious safety concerns.
The concerns are based on documented patterns. An ICE agent was indicted on charges of trying to sexually exploit a minor here in Minnesota. In Louisiana, an ICE officer pleaded guilty to sexually abusing a woman in detention, repeatedly, over many months. And right now, reports are coming from our own Minneapolis community about civil rights violations and abuse of power during ICE operations.
For people being trafficked, this changes the calculation about seeking help. They’re already being controlled and threatened. Now reaching out for help means approaching agents who may not be held accountable for misconduct. For immigrants or anyone who might be seen as an immigrant, there’s added concern about detention or deportation.
Traffickers understand this dynamic and use it to maintain control, threatening people with ICE contact when fear of authorities now feels justified.
What you can do:
- Share know-your-rights resources from organizations like the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota
- Offer practical support to neighbors that reduces vulnerability: rides, groceries, childcare. Fewer pressures mean less leverage for traffickers
- Connect anyone experiencing exploitation to PRIDE at The Family Partnership or the National Human Trafficking Hotline: 1-888-373-7888

2. Someone you know might be at risk for human trafficking right now
Many people imagine trafficking happens somewhere else, to people unlike them. But exploitation is happening in our community right now—in schools, workplaces, apartment buildings, and faith communities we share.
Economic hardship can push people to seek extra income in risky situations. Stress and instability can lead to substance use that creates new vulnerabilities. Your neighbor, someone at your child’s school, or a person you sit next to at church might be facing these pressures right now.
Trafficking doesn’t usually begin with kidnapping or force. It begins with offers that sound like help: a place to stay, a ride to work, help paying bills, quick cash. And it often begins in everyday relationships, with someone you might already know.
By the time the “help” comes with strings attached, leaving can be genuinely dangerous. Traffickers rely on isolation, threats, and fear to maintain control. When someone feels they have no safe options, abuse can go unseen for months or years.
When we show up for our neighbors, our relationships become a protective barrier that makes exploitation harder.
Watch for these signs:
- Someone whose living or work situation suddenly changes
- A teenager with an older “boyfriend” who controls their phone
- A coworker who seems fearful or controlled by someone else
- Someone who expresses fear of authorities, even when they need help
3. Some people being trafficked are also forced into theft
When ICE raids intensify, two things happen. The heightened enforcement makes commercial sex riskier. And buyers—unwilling to risk arrest or deportation themselves—pull back. This reduces demand and cuts into traffickers’ income.
Traffickers pass the pressure on to the people they are exploiting. They force people into other criminal activity that draws less attention and doesn’t depend on buyers willing to take risks. Research shows theft increases by 10-40% during disruptions like this.
This matters because as trafficking goes underground, you’re more likely to encounter someone being trafficked through theft or fraud than through obvious signs of sexual exploitation. The teenager shoplifting may be experiencing trafficking. The person caught with drugs may be controlled behind the scenes. The individual committing fraud may be too terrified to explain what’s really happening.
If you work in retail, healthcare, education, or criminal justice:
- Watch for repeated theft where the story keeps changing
- Notice if someone seems controlled or fearful
- Ask: “Are you safe?” or “Is someone making you do this?”
- Connect them to resources: 1-888-373-7888

4. Your conversations can help disrupt human trafficking
ICE raids and funding cuts are increasing stress and isolation while cutting access to housing, mental health services, and substance abuse treatment. When these systems fail, traffickers fill the gaps, offering what seems like help, then using that dependency for control.
Immigrants and those who may be profiled face compounded risks: fear of deportation can make accessing services or reporting abuse more dangerous than staying trapped.
Communities that speak up can help break this cycle. Your voice matters in addressing these root causes.
Make your voice count:
- Share the 4-minute research video explaining how trafficking really works
- Talk about how fear of enforcement pushes people toward exploitation
- Advocate for stable housing, accessible mental health care, and economic support that reaches all community members
When communities understand how systemic failures and enforcement fears create vulnerability to trafficking, we can address the conditions that make exploitation possible.
5. Coordinated action creates lasting change
Minnesota’s approach to trafficking prevention spans a statewide network of partners providing services, housing, shelter, outreach, and support. The Family Partnership is part of this network. Ian Smart, PRIDE Program Supervisor, describes the people we serve: “Our participants are strong people that are really just looking for love and support and for guidance as well.”
Smart also names what stands in the way: “Access to resources is one of the barriers, and it’s a lack of knowledge. The more organizations there are like this, the better things we can do to help change the tides.”
The research confirms this: implementing three or more anti-trafficking interventions together has exponentially more impact than single efforts alone.
Long-term community safety requires:
- Survivor support and leadership
- Public awareness and education
- Policy advocacy
- Economic stability and access to basic needs
What you can do:
- Take care of your own well-being so you can stay present and support neighbors safely
- Keep talking with friends, family, and community. Connection reduces isolation and helps prevent exploitation
- Support organizations that address immediate needs while building systemic change
Why this matters now
Sex trafficking happens in Minnesota, in our communities. Right now, ICE raids and cuts to basic services are making more people vulnerable while pushing those currently being exploited deeper into the shadows. But when we understand how trafficking actually works and listen to people who have survived it, we can prevent it more effectively, spot it sooner, and help people rebuild their lives.
“When we center survivor expertise, we create solutions that actually work,” Mariotti says.
This January, support survivor-centered solutions. The Family Partnership’s PRIDE program provides long-term, survivor-led services and advocacy. Learn more about our anti-sex trafficking work and how you can help.
