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Home>Latest News

April 29, 2026 by Guest

Reflections: My time at the Cook County Sheriff’s Office

Rev. Dr. Marian Hatcher 
Shared Hope Policy Consultant

When I was asked to write on this subject, I didn’t realize how many times I would start and stop. Think and rethink. Be triggered, no matter how much time has passed. I had to go all the way back to the beginning.

With that said, I did not expect two champions of this story to pass away during this writing. One larger-than-life public figure, The Reverand Jesse Jackson and the other The Honorable Judge Lawrence P. Fox, larger than life to those who stood before him on the bench in drug court.

Reverend Jackson, partnered with the jail for decades providing ministerial support and hosting programs for men and women. He supported our program when Cook County Government considered removing the Department of Women’s Justice Services (DWJS) from the budget. Other local leaders and my own mother used voices and influence, as well as real life success stories to save the program God used to save my life.

Judge Fox, while a strong and at times foreboding presence on the bench, had a fatherly and interactive courtroom. He not only spoke with those of us in custody, but he also talked to family in the gallery about things related to our lives. I remember when he told me “Marian, you’re too smart for your own good”, when I was trying to pull a fast one on him, regarding my location for probation.

Reflections for a survivor, even with my Christian faith can be and were triggering. However, the comfort of the Holy Spirit and a colleague provided support I needed.

Strategy, Policy and Programs were different when I entered Jail based treatment programming in August 2004. I wasn’t an employee; I was an inmate. Surrendered literally to get my life back and better.

The focus on women’s programming was substance use disorder primary and secondary was mental health. Over time that would change. It would evolve.

This structure was interdependent on achieving goals with WRAP (Women’s Rehabilitative Alternative Probation) Court. A nationally known Drug Court model was the blessing God used to stabilize me.

Participants would spend a certain amount of time of time in custody for treatment and a certain amount of time on Sheriff’s Female Furlough, on electronic monitor coming to the jail daily for treatment.

Once I was formally sentenced into the program, I chose to serve my entire 120 day in custody time—“upstairs” as we called it. That meant I would remain in custody, in the residential program in jail and not go home on electronic monitor daily after the 60 day period.

My decision was made by listening to the Holy Spirit. I was returning home to disappointed parents and angry children. The critical communication and other peer groups were of great benefit.

At that time women were arrested for prostitution and literally no buyers were the focus. Connecting the dots of substance use disorder, prostitution and trauma were not even on deck.

Safeguards for adult trafficking victims and child victims established in the Trafficking Victims Protection Act in 2001 took years to make their way to jails and prisons.

Until I reflected on this, it hadn’t occurred to me that the Lord had me there at the appointed time…2004

[My time in custody was one of the results of domestic violence being the precursor to substance use disorder and eventually running to the street to get away from my abuser. Once there, I was sucked into the dark places of criminality associated with addiction and survival.

It was that criminality that led to facing 3-7 years in prison. Turns out, God blessed me with the Drug Court mentioned above. I was a good candidate with no criminal history and verified trauma/addiction criteria.

For those of you wondering how this manifests in working for the same program God used to save my Life, here’s how. It starts with my personal surrender to start over, and a program dedicated to helping those ready to start over.

I was released on probation Friday November 19, 2004, showed up to DWJS to volunteer the following Monday and never left. I came everyday Monday through Friday and grew new wings from broken ones, in a loving, caring and nurturing environment.

An environment that combined my experience as a once successful financial professional with a now recovering addict who experienced extreme trauma through domestic violence and sex trafficking.

By August of 2005, I was hired on a contractual basis and as of May 2008 I was hired as a full-time Cook County Sheriff’s Office employee (Due to multiple sclerosis I retired November 30, 2022).

The Cook County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) made a commitment to leading the country in promising an evidence-based treatment in jail.

Following the lead of Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), programming changed to mental health primary and substance use disorder secondary.

Not surprisingly there was increased data coming in that focused on child and adult exploitation. A great deal of attention on how many of the women were arrested for the charge of prostitution. Unfortunately, children were also being arrested for prostitution as well. Not being treated as victims of sex trafficking.

The correlation between prostitution and sex trafficking intensified the focus on systems of prostitution and the fact that sex trafficking doesn’t exist without prostitution,

Delving into societal failure and economic inequality that is the basis for homelessness, poverty, prostitution, lack of education and more, CCSO redesigned programming and policies accordingly.

Once we focused on systems of prostitution from a practical perspective we began focusing on buyers as fueling prostitution/sex trafficking.

Partnering with local, state and national partners we established a policy driven effort to arrest buyers and offer services to exploited women. This effort also included identifying trafficking victims, providing appropriate specialized services, and legal remedies.

Additionally, we were forward thinking in establishing the Child Protection Response Unit (CPRU). In 2023 the now named Child Response Unit was awarded the National Sheriff’s Association (NSA)recognizing exceptional work in locating missing and exploited children, particularly the foster care system.

CCSO established an ordinance which penalized sex buyers, as well as an ordinance establishing zero tolerance so the vehicle would be towed. These deterrence measures were very effective.

Accordingly, women were no longer arrested, they were treated as victims and provided resources such as treatment both mental health and substance use disorder, temporary housing and so much more.

Additionally, CCSO was among the first law enforcement agencies to utilize Artificial intelligence (AI) to identify, arrest and waste buyer time having them communicate with a chatbot and not a potential victim (this was always my favorite statistic).

This became a national model between 2011 and 2020 arresting more than 10,000 sex buyers, arresting hundreds of pimp/traffickers and rescuing/restoring thousands of children and adults.

In 2014 I was the recipient of the Shared Hope International Pathbreaker Award for Antitrafficking Leadership. In 2015 Sheriff Thomas J. Dart was the recipient for his bold efforts to stop Backpage.com.

As I look back, I can only say, to God be the Glory!!! What stands out as I reflect is the absolute need to include survivors to be included in this work. As an inmate. I was respected; we were referred to as ladies. Our input, no matter where we were in our recovery process, was valued.

My experience was miraculous as God used me to carry out his assignment on my life. Just know, I wasn’t the only one. Many others were and are being used today. It’s all about him. Jesus my Lord and Savior and Soon Coming King.

April 14, 2026 by Sidney McCoy

From a High School Paper to State Law: The Story Behind Today’s Win

Today, Virginia became the 33rd jurisdiction in the United States to pass Safe Harbor protections—ensuring children who are exploited are treated as victims, not criminals.

At the same time, the state expanded vacatur relief, allowing survivors to clear nonviolent offenses connected to their exploitation.
It’s a milestone worth celebrating.
But this moment didn’t happen overnight.

Where This Journey Began

When I was in high school, I watched Taken.
Like many people, I believed trafficking looked like that—abductions by strangers, happening somewhere far away.
But when I started researching, I discovered something very different:

Most trafficking happens locally—often through manipulation, coercion, or someone the victim knows. That realization changed everything.

Since 2014, I’ve been committed to fighting this issue.

What Changed in Virginia

This year, Virginia took two critical steps forward:

  • Safe Harbor protections ensure that minors who are exploited are no longer arrested or prosecuted for prostitution-related offenses.
    Instead, they are treated as victims and connected to support and services.
  • Expanded vacatur relief allows survivors to clear a broader range of nonviolent offenses tied to their exploitation—removing barriers to employment, housing, and stability.

These changes reflect years of collaboration with lawmakers, partners, and survivors to build a more just, survivor-centered response.

The Reality of Systems Change

I had the privilege of working alongside partners to help pass initial legislation in 2021.
And each year since, we’ve come back—working to strengthen it.
Because real systems change doesn’t happen all at once.

It requires persistence.
It requires partnership.
And it requires a willingness to keep showing up—even when progress feels slow.

Why This Work Extends Beyond Policy

While laws like this are critical, they are only part of the solution.
Prevention starts long before exploitation happens.

That’s why we are also investing in initiatives like Keep Our Kids Safe—equipping communities with the knowledge and tools to recognize risks and respond early.

Just last week, we gathered professionals, parents, and community members in Southwest Washington for a full day of training.  And this week, young people are stepping up to lead awareness in their own community.

This is what it looks like to build a protective response—not just in law, but in everyday life.

The Work Ahead

While we celebrate this progress, we also recognize:

  • 18 states still lack Safe Harbor protections
  • Laws still need strengthening and implementation
  • Survivors continue to face barriers

Moving Forward

Moments like this matter.
Because they represent something bigger than a single bill.
They represent what’s possible when people stay committed—over years, not just moments.
Children should never be treated as criminals for their own exploitation.

Today is a step forward.

And tomorrow, we keep going.

April 10, 2026 by Guest

Social Media Liability: How to Protect Children from a New Avenue of Exploitation

A post collectively written by the Shared Hope staff:

Social media, now more than ever before, has become a constant in young adolescents lives. According to one study conducted in 2025, nearly 70% of children between the age of 11 to 15 years old have at least one social media account, with growing competing options from TikTok to Instagram, Snapchat, and YouTube 1. While some social media use could be beneficial with connecting us to different parts of the world, there is increasing concern around the systematic overuse and reliance of children on these platforms.

Studies show us that children’s brain are not fully developed until around age 25. In between birth and adulthood, there is a surge of adaptations that cause rewiring in a child’s brain that is directed dependent on, among other internal influences, its environment. During early adolescence, there is a surge of “synaptic pruning,” where the brain removes connections in the brain it identifies and not needed for its environment. As adolescence progresses, pruning continues while increased myelination of synapses cause faster communication between connections in the brain that are more frequently used. During this time, developing brains are more prone to influence as the connections in their brain are directly dependent on the information it continuously perceives as relevant. 2

The awareness of platforms of this feature of developing brains should encourage them to add protective measures around the interaction and targeted material to children. If platforms, instead, played to these vulnerabilities of developing brains to further promote and facilitate habitual reliance on social media for their own profit and user engagement, then these companies should no longer be celebrated for their ingenuity, but instead be held responsible for the foreseen consequences they have inflicted on children.

In the past few years, free speech, social media liability, and the protection of children have become, at times, seemingly juxtaposed to each other, with courts and legislators attempting to strike a balance between corporation versus individual duties of care. With increasing litigation and pressure on those capable of implementing change, the landscape for how social media platforms operate pertaining to child data collection and their chosen methods implemented in order to protect children against predatory exploitation seem to be under crushing pressure to change.

Various prominent cases have been filed in recent years by both State Attorneys General and individuals affected by social media. In 2023, plaintiff K.G.M. filed a lawsuit against various social media companies, including Meta Platforms, Inc. and Google, claiming that these companies intentionally designed and deployed features in its social media platforms to addict users to their product. K.G.M. claimed that she started using social media products at an early age, with an Instagram account at age 9 and using YouTube at age 6. She claimed that these platforms addicted her to their products, and that these products additionally caused her depression, anxiety, and eating disorders. The trial began February 2026. The jury took 9 days in deliberation before they found Meta and Google liable for all counts. Both companies were ordered to collectively pay $3 million in damages, and additionally another $3 million in punitive damages.3

Another lawsuit, filed by New Mexico Attorney General in 2023, alleged that Meta mislead users about its product safety qualities and knowingly facilitated a design that enabled child exploitation on its sites. The state claimed that Meta had violated New Mexico consumer protection statutes, deceive the public about child safety on its platforms, engaged in deceptive trade practice, and acted “unconscionably” towards minors. This case similarly went to trial in February 2026. The jury took one day to deliberate to reach a verdict holding Meta liable for all counts, finding that Meta willfully violated New Mexico’s Unfair Practices Act. Meta was ordered to pay $375 million in damages. 4

Some experts in the area of social media and child protection suggest that one federal statute, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996, has enabled companies to evade liability for any conduct resulting from the content provided to users on their platforms. 5 6 Termed “the 26 words that created the internet” Section 230(c)(1) states “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”7 This establishes that providers of internet services cannot be liable for speech published by a third-party.

While Section 230 worked well at creating a way to protect free speech concerns at the time of the internet’s creation, the use of the legislation as a shield for platforms from obtaining liability for their content placement has been the focal point of several debates.

Matthew Bergman of the Social Media Victims Law Center made this point during this witness testimony at a Senate hearing early in March. Mr. Bergman, along with other advocates holding social media companies liable for their effect on young users, makes the argument that social media is a product. Similarly, the algorithms deployed in these products, those that are responsible for providing users continuous content that they many find interesting based on their monitored interactions, are argued to be a deliberate design of the product. Many advocates in this area argue that when the deliberate design of the product feeds young users exploitative or harmful information, that is conduct that social media companies should be held liable for, especially when facilitating this harm is intended to maintain engagement and maximizes profits. 8

As Section 230 turned 30 years old in 2026, two congressional hearings in March have been held to revisit the effectiveness and previously unperceived risks that this legislation may have on individuals rights and safety. The two primary concerns are how to balance the free speech of user content, with the need for prevention from exposing children to harmful content or creating another avenue of facilitating child exploitation material.

Mr. Bergman offered a potential solution to Congress during his testimony. He stated the Congress’s original intent for this statute “sought to maximize user control over what information was received by individuals,” and to “empower parents and embolden law enforcement.” “Clarifying the original legislative intent to [] encourage the development of technologies that maximize user control of what information is received by individuals” along with “vigorous enforcement of federal criminal law to deter and punish trafficking and obscenity, stalking, and harassment” are one way, Mr. Bergman states, for Congress to take effective measures today that can strike the balance between free speech and child protection. 9

Today, we are facing issues and avenues of child sexual exploitation that was not imagined when online communication was first introduced. In 2023, Shared Hope International began a campaign about internet safety titled The White Van Campaign. It consists of an educational PSA video, along with a toolkit for the aimed at community members and those who are in protective capacities around children. It aims to show that child exploitation is not synonymous with the stereotypical windowless “white van” that had been warned about for decades. In today’s generation, with areas of the digital world rapidly advancing and, inadvertently, creating more avenues for abuse, parents and children should be aware of the dangers that are facilitated online under the guise of typical digital interactions.

For more information about Shared Hope International’s White Van Campaign, watch the PSA video or review the internet safety toolkit here.

 

References:

1 Prevalence and Patterns of Social Media Use in Early Adolescents – ScienceDirect

2 Maturation of the adolescent brain – PMC

3 A $6 Million Jury Verdict Ruled Social Media Is Addictive. Now What?

4 Jury finds Meta liable in case over child sexual exploitation on its platforms | CNN Business

5 Written-Testimony-of-Matthew-P.-Bergman-Before-Senate-Commerce-Committee.pdf

6 WATCH: Meta, TikTok and other social media CEOs testify in Senate hearing on child exploitation | PBS News

7 47 U.S. Code § 230 – Protection for private blocking and screening of offensive material | U.S. Code | US Law | LII / Legal Information Institute

8 Liability or Deniability? Platform Power as Section 230 Turns 30 – U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation

9 Liability or Deniability? Platform Power as Section 230 Turns 30 – U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation

February 9, 2026 by Linda Smith

Washington Must Hold Sex Buyers Accountable to Stop Trafficking

Pass HB 2526

By Linda Smith  

Founder and President, Shared Hope International  

Former U.S. Congresswoman, Washington’s 3rd District  

 

One to two children every week. That’s how many Seattle Police pull from sex trafficking on Aurora Avenue North alone—while many more are recruited online. Detective Maurice Washington told state lawmakers the crisis has worsened; “the tools we currently have are not enough.” The Legislature has a chance to change that: making the purchase of sex a felony. 

According to the National Human Trafficking Hotline, among Washington sex trafficking victims who reported their age, 89 percent were children when first exploited—not adults making informed choices. Buyers are demanding younger and younger victims. 

Following 15 years in elected office, I founded Shared Hope International in 1998 after witnessing children sold in brothels overseas. I thought that horror happened “over there.” It happens here, in our state, and now, in our children’s bedrooms, online. 

Children are targeted on their mobile devices. I recently worked with a family in SW Washinton  whose 12-year-old daughter was groomed online for months, talking with her trafficker nightly from 1-3 AM. Police arrested him in Florida with a ticket to Portland Oregon, just right across the river from her home.  

House Bill 2526, sponsored by Rep. Chris Stearns, takes a comprehensive approach: holding buyers accountable while protecting those being exploited. The bill renames “patronizing a prostitute” to what it actually is: commercial sexual exploitation. Words matter. 

HB 2526 makes purchasing sex a Class C felony on the third or subsequent offense, punishable by up to five years in prison, and raises fines to $3,000–$10,000 based on prior offenses. Critically, 98 percent of these fees fund community-based, survivor-led organizations providing housing, trauma therapy, job training, and legal assistance. 

Just as important, the bill protects those being exploited. For first and second violations, law enforcement must refer individuals to services—trafficking support, crisis intervention, housing, legal aid, or treatment.  

Right now, buying sex is a misdemeanor—carrying fewer penalties than shoplifting. When purchasing sex has minimal consequences, trafficking remains profitable and demand grows. HB 2526 addresses both: increasing accountability for buyers while ensuring those being sold aren’t punished when they seek help. Some worry that increasing buyer penalties will push exploitation underground. Law enforcement will tell you: it’s already there. Online classified sites, social media, encrypted apps—that’s where most trafficking happens today. HB 2526 applies to all commercial sexual exploitation, not just street-level transactions. 

Washington has been a leader in anti-trafficking responses, but we have not held buyers accountable with penalties that match the harm they cause. HB 2526 closes that gap. 

To legislators: Pass HB 2526. To law enforcement: You’ve asked for better tools—this gives you one. To community members: If you see something, report it to the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888. To survivors: We see you. You deserve safety, services, and support—not criminalization. Increased fees from HB 2526 help fund housing, medical care, trauma therapy, job training, and legal assistance. 

The Legislature has a choice: maintain the status quo where buying another human being carries fewer penalties than shoplifting, or declare that in Washington, we protect the vulnerable and hold exploiters accountable. 

Pass HB 2526. Do it now.  Click here to add your voice.

 

###  

Linda Smith is founder and president of Shared Hope International, a nonprofit dedicated to preventing and eradicating sex trafficking. She represented the 18th Legislative District in the Washington State House and Senate (1983-1994) and Washington’s 3rd Congressional District in the U.S. House (1995-1999). 

Research and publications: “Demand” and “Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking: The Prostitution of America’s Children” 

Member, Washington State Task Force Against Trafficking in Persons 

Member, Youth Human Trafficking State Coordinating Committee 

January 28, 2026 by Guest

Restoration and Healing 

Bob Williams, Just Like Me Leader 

As a survivor, I’m reminded every day of a journey that stretched over twelve difficult years. Looking back, I can now see that God had been planting seeds of knowledge, strength, and hope within me, even when I couldn’t recognize them. During that time, I felt like I was only existing. Substances were first used to control me, and later I relied on them to numb the pain and simply get through each day. Eventually, that wasn’t enough. 

My journey began at 17, after a traumatic event left me feeling isolated and without support. In those days, there were few resources for boys, and it wasn’t something people talked about. That path led to homelessness, survival by any means, and being taken advantage of in ways no one should experience. 

I’m often reminded of Isaiah 40:29
“He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.”
I was both weak and weary, but I held on. I got clean and sober at 29, and it was one of the hardest battles of my life. In the early years of sobriety, I realized that the circle around me had to be made of people who truly wanted to see me healthy, happy, and growing—people who would walk beside me as I learned boundaries, self-respect, and, most importantly, hope. Those were things I didn’t have before. 

Someone shared Jeremiah 30:17 with me:
“For I will restore health to you, and your wounds I will heal, declares the Lord.”
It helped me recognize that even though I was broken, God could bring healing. With faith, I realized I could step into the light rather than remain in the darkness. That was when I accepted Jesus Christ into my heart and understood that all things are possible through Him. I came to trust that healing would take time, that God had a plan, that my past did not define me, and that I could hand my struggles over to Him. 

I was told relapse was part of recovery, but deep down I believed that didn’t have to be my story. I learned to treat myself with kindness, to forgive so that true healing could begin, and to love the person I am becoming. I learned to be proud of the man I am today. 

To anyone reading this: you were born pure and beautiful. You are one of God’s children, and your life is not a mistake. We cannot change the past, but we can shape the future. God heals the brokenhearted and lifts up those who feel crushed in spirit. Never give up. You matter, you are important, and your journey may one day be someone else’s source of hope. 

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