In South Dakota, the third Saturday of October, kicks off South Dakota’s annual pheasant season opener, offering access to nearly 4.5 million acres of public land. It is the largest hunting attraction in the state; it’s a time of year filled with tradition, community, and sport. Unfortunately, there is a dark side to South Dakota hunting—sex trafficking occurs.
The reality is whenever there is an event that attracts a large number of men, there is a market for some form of sex trafficking. And, while sex trafficking exists around the nation, there's something distinctive about South Dakota. The peaceful, homegrown mentality that exists here has made it an excellent “cover” for sex trafficking.
Although Native Americans make up only 8% of the state's population, 40% of sex trafficking victims in South Dakota are Native girls and women. The targeted age is 12-14 years old.
Home to nine Native American reservations, South Dakota is steeped in rich Native history and culture. Distressingly, however, the reservations are located in some of the poorest counties in the United States. Sarah Deer, a law professor at William Mitchell College in Minnesota and an expert on domestic violence in Native American communities, stated, “This is a crime of poverty. You've got poverty, you have high, high rates of sexual abuse, which is often a precursor to prostitution and you have just a sense of desperation on the reservation in terms of day-to-day life."
Vednita Carter, founder of Breaking Free, a Minneapolis-based nonprofit dedicated to helping women escape prostitution, states that most victims “were sexually abused as kids before they got with a pimp later in life. They walk around thinking everything that has happened to them is their fault that they simply made bad choices; they don’t see themselves as victims.”
Fear and intimidation are two of the tools that traffickers use to control people in slavery. Traffickers often prevent victims from interacting with the public because the victims might say something that raises suspicions about their safety and freedom. Young victims of trafficking are often entrenched in complicated dependent relationships with their captors, unaware that they're being held in forced prostitution.
These women and children will often spend a lifetime trying to heal from this horrific abuse. Native Hope spoke with a sex trafficking victim who was able to find her way out. She acknowledged the devastating effects of her past by saying, “I wonder just how aware the people who commit these crimes are, of the damage made.”
If some of these signs are present, they may indicate something is wrong:
If you see something, say something.
QUESTIONS TO ASK:
If you or someone you know is being trafficked or assaulted,
CALL 911 so local law enforcement can respond ASAP.
If a person needs to reach out and talk to someone, please call the Sex Trafficking & Sexual Assault Victim Hotline at 1 (888) 352-8511 or 211.
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