Wave Staff and Wire Reports
SOUTH LOS ANGELES — As part of ongoing efforts to address human trafficking along South Figueroa Street, Los Angeles City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto is urging state leaders to support a bill targeting child prostitution.
During a morning news conference at City Hall East March 28, Feldstein Soto said AB 2419 needs to clear a hurdle through the State Assembly Committee on Public Safety.
Assemblyman Mike Gipson, D-Gardena, introduced the bill to expand the parameters for issuing search warrants in cases involving child prostitution to include communications that facilitate the solicitation of minors.
“Eradicating sex trafficking along the Figueroa corridor in South L.A. is a priority of mine because the activity — which can involve minors — can be violent and devastating,” Feldstein Soto said. “AB 2419 will give our law enforcement partners a crucial tool which will make it easier to hold predators accountable while protecting children from sexual exploitation.”
She added, “I urge the public safety committee to pass this bill, and am grateful to Assemblymember Mike Gipson for his partnership and dedication to strengthening our laws, especially those that will protect minors.”
According to Feldstein Soto, the state law currently says that a search warrant may be issued when the items to be seized were used as a means to commit a felony. The solicitation of a minor for prostitution is a misdemeanor, she said, and it is not permissible grounds to issue a warrant.
She argues that AB 2410 will fix this loophole and allow for communications regarding the possible trafficking or solicitation of a minor to be listed as grounds for a search warrant.
“Search warrants are an essential tool for reducing crime and ensuring the safety of our communities, especially the ones I represent,” Gipson said. “Adding this tool to help locate possible trafficking or solicitation of a minor will create an avenue toward combating the entire ring of human trafficking.”
The State Assembly’s public safety committee was expected to hold a hearing on the bill April 2. Gipson described AB 2419 as “an essential step forward for protecting the health and safety of the children of California.”
Feldstein Soto said since last year she’s been helping to lead a multi-agency, multi-jurisdictional trafficking task force focused on South Figueroa Street. This group includes L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, Councilman Marqueece Harris-Dawson, whose 8th District includes this area, the Los Angeles Police Department, the FBI, the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Department of Homeland Security.
The mission of the task force is to locate and assist trafficking victims, shut down illegal activity, identify, arrest and convict pimps and traffickers, and stop the solicitation of sex services from minors and trafficking victims, the City Attorney’s Office said.
Last month, Feldstein Soto announced that her office had secured a guilty verdict against a 49-year-old male charged with three violations of the state penal code, including solicitation of prostitution from a minor. The defendant was found guilty on all three counts and is scheduled to be sentenced April 19.
“For far too long, the Figueroa corridor has been an epicenter of trafficking and violent criminal activity and the community had enough.” Feldstein Soto said.
Officials emphasized that the task force is not aimed at prosecuting commercial sex workers.