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The Alliance to End Human Trafficking (AEHT) (formerly U.S. Catholic Sisters Against Human Trafficking) and the National Advocacy Center of the Sisters of the Good Shepherd (NAC), continue our work this congressional session to end human trafficking, keeping the needs of those vulnerable to being trafficked and those who have survived at the forefront of our work.

Earlier this year, one of the three bills we featured in the 2025 conference and worked to enact – the Trafficking Survivors Relief Act – was signed into law!

Now this session (year two of this elected Congress) our other two bills remain active and we intend to see them across the finish line too!

AEHT and NAC continue our efforts to pass:
  • Frederick Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization Act of 2025 (TVPRA)  (H.R. 1144)

  • Kids Online Safety Act (S. 1748)

These meaningful, bipartisan bills build on the foundation of human trafficking policy, raise up the pillars of support for survivors, and strengthen the protective layers against online predators.

In particular, TVPRA is universally supported and even passed the House of Representatives in 2024 by a vote of 414-11. It is nonsensical that this seminal reauthorization bill is not already law. We will not be deterred. This bill must pass.

Registration

 
Registration is required if you do not have a congressional badge.
 
Please email info@alliancetoendhumantrafficking.org to register.
 
Deadline for registration is a hard COB Friday, July 10.
 
Human Trafficking Congressional Briefing
Tuesday, July 14, 2026  |  9:30 – 11:00 am
Capitol Visitor Center – 215

Must have ID and must have preregistered to attend

Honorary Co-Chairs

 
Our 2026 bipartisan honorary congressional co-chairs are:
 
Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)
Congressman Chris Smith (R-NJ)
Congressman Michael McCaul (R-TX)
Congressman Kweisi Mfume (D-MD)
Congresswoman Maria Salazar (R-FL)

Speakers

 

Speakers include Jessie Boye-Doe, Gina Cavallo, Mary Graw Leary, and Members of Congress. The event will be moderated by Sr. Ann Scholz. 

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Jessie Boye-Doe, LCSW, is the Vice President of Mental Health Services Impact and Strategy at Good Shepherd Services in New York. She is an advocate, trainer and clinician specializing in human trafficking prevention, intervention, survivor support, and trauma-informed care.

 

 

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Gina Cavallo is a survivor and is the founder and executive director of the survivor-led nonprofit organization, We RISE USA. She serves on the Survivor Advisory Council of the Alliance to End Human Trafficking and has been working actively for the passage of H.R. 1144, Frederick Douglass Trafficking Victims Prevention and Protection Reauthorization Act.

 

 

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Mary Graw Leary, JD, is professor of law at the Catholic University of America’s Columbus School of Law. Professor Graw Leary is a former federal prosecutor. Her scholarship examines the intersection of criminal law and procedure, technology, and contemporary victimization. She focuses on the exploitation and abuse of women, children, and the marginalized. She is a recognized expert in the areas of criminal law and procedure, exploitation, human trafficking, missing persons, victimization, technology and the Fourth Amendment.
 
 
Name Withheld is a survivor dedicated to supporting other survivors of human trafficking.
 

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Sr. Ann Scholz, SSND, PhD, is a School Sister of Notre Dame and Director for Corporate Social Responsibility for the SSND Cooperative Investment Fund. In addition, she consults with nonprofit organizations engaged in faithful advocacy for systemic change. Sr. Scholz previously served as Associate Director for Social Mission at the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, where she was responsible for research, education, and action to help shape public policy.

Human Trafficking Overview

 

Human trafficking is a $276 billion world market that impacts an estimated 50 million people worldwide. This affront to human dignity happens through force, fraud, or coercion. Victims of human trafficking are hidden in our neighborhoods. They are being recruited from our schools. They are growing our food, working in our nail salons, and they are there when we go on vacation and stay in hotels. They are hidden in plain sight.

Traffickers thrive where vulnerability is high; where people are desperate and their options are limited or nonexistent, traffickers are present and waiting to take advantage.

People on the move and recent immigrants are at particular risk of exploitation by traffickers because of their precarious social and economic circumstances.

The International Organization for Migration estimates that the number of international migrants is at least 281 million. They are refugees, asylum seekers, labor migrants, and those displaced by conflict or natural disasters. They are fleeing floods, famine, war, violence, endemic poverty, organized crime, political corruption, and the effects of climate change. They are both desperate and resilient. The adverse circumstances that force people to flee their homes can lead migrants to be deceived in exploitative recruitment abroad. Migration routes too often lead migrants into the hands of organized trafficking networks, exploitative employment, or situations of extortion.

However, immigrants are not the only ones who are forced into a life of servitude. It’s happening to our youth in our communities.

Human trafficking is the fastest-growing criminal industry in the world. It is the second most lucrative and is soon expected to surpass the illegal drug trade.

Drugs can be sold once, but people can be sold multiple times, with many victims being sold 15 to 30 times a day.

Child online sexual exploitation is rampant. Furthermore, it’s hard to detect, threatens lives, especially of the most vulnerable, and if unaddressed, has daunting and irreversible impacts on families and society.

Download our Take Action! flyer here.

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