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The Psychology of Pimping

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Title: The Psychology of Pimping


1
The Psychology of Pimping
  • M. Alexis Kennedy, Ph.D.
  • University of Nevada, Las Vegas

2
Purpose of Presentation
  • Identify who the victims are lay the groundwork
    for how people would become pimped
  • Look at routes of recruitment into prostitution
  • Characteristics of and techniques used by pimps

3
California Penal Code
  • Every person who inveigles or entices any
    unmarried female, of previous chaste character,
    under the age of 18 years, into any house of ill
    fame, , or to have illicit carnal connection
    with any man is punishable by imprisonment
    not exceeding one year, or by a fine not
    exceeding two thousand dollars (2,000), or by
    both

4
Human Trafficking Defined By Federal Law
  • Severe Forms of human trafficking is
  • (a) sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act
    is induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in
    which the person induced to perform such an act
    has not attained 18 years of age or
  • (b) the recruitment, harboring, transportation,
    provision, or obtaining of a person for labor or
    services, through the use of force, fraud, or
    coercion for the purposes of subjection to
    involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or
    slavery.1
  • 1 These definitions are from the Trafficking
    Victims Protection Act (TVPA) of 2000

5
Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking Defined By
Federal Law
  • Domestic minor sex trafficking occurs when a U.S.
    citizen or legal permanent resident who has not
    attained 18 years of age is engaged in a
    commercial sex act.2
  • Commercial sex act means any sex act on account
    of which anything of value is given to or
    received by any person. This includes
  • Prostitution
  • Exotic dancing/stripping
  • Pornography
  • 2 This definition is from the Trafficking
    Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (TVPRA) of
    2005

6
Victims
7
Street Prostitution
  • Street Prostitution, not
  • Stripping
  • Pornography
  • Phone sex
  • Brothels
  • Escort agencies
  • Massage Parlors

8
  • 12-14 is the average age of entry into
    pornography and prostitution in the U.S.
  • U.S. Department of Justice - Child Exploitation
    and Obscenity Section (CEOS) www.usdoj.gov/crimina
    l/ceos/prostitution.html

9
Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking in the U.S.
  • According to Ernie Allen, Executive Director of
    the National Center for Missing and Exploited
    Children (NCMEC), data shows 100,000 to 293,000
    children have become sexual commodities.
  • Nationally 450,000 children run away from home
    each year. 1 out of every 3 teens on the street
    will be lured toward prostitution within 48 hours
    of leaving home. Statistically, this means at
    least 150,000 children lured into prostitution
    each year.
  • NISMART (National Incidence Studies of Missing,
    Abducted, Runaway and Throwaway Children)

10
US Hot Spots
  • 2004 USDOJ Annual Report - FBI identified 14
    field offices located in areas where there is a
    high incidence of prostituted children
  • Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Las Vegas, Los
    Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, San Diego,
    San Francisco, St. Louis, Tampa, and Washington
    D.C.

11
Case Study Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking in
Nevada
  • 181 cases of juvenile prostitution were brought
    before Hon. William O. Voy between
    8/24/05-12/31/06.
  • 69 cases were trafficked within Nevada 112 were
    trafficked from out-of-state.
  • Ages ranged from 12 to 17 years old.

12
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13
Who are the victims of domestic minor sex
trafficking?
  • Youth of any ethnicity, race, or religion
  • Youth of any socio-economic class
  • Female, male, and transgender youth
  • Youth of all ages, including teenagers
  • Vulnerable youth

14
Who are especially vulnerable to domestic minor
sex trafficking?
  • Youth with histories of abuse
  • 59 of minors arrested for prostitution in Las
    Vegas (1994-2005) had been victims of sexual
    assault and/or familial molestation.
  • 74 had run away from home prior to arrest. (From
    Las Vegas Metro Police STOP Program, Las Vegas.
    2005. )
  • WestCare Nevada treated 46 minors involved in
    prostitution from 2004-2005 45 of them had a
    history of physical and/or sexual abuse.

15
Who are especially vulnerable to domestic minor
sex trafficking?
  • Homeless, runaway or throwaway youth
  • As many as 2.8 million children live on the
    streets, a third of whom are lured into
    prostitution within 48 hours of leaving home.
    (The National Runaway Switchboard)
  • Youth within the foster care system child
    protective services
  • - Over 500,000 children in the U.S. currently
    reside in some form of foster care. (The American
    Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry)

16
Adult Street Prostitutes
  • 41 of adults in my research reported started as
    minors
  • 32 prostitutes from the drug area
  • Routes of Recruitment Pimps techniques and
    other circumstances that lead to street
    prostitution
  • Kennedy et al., 2007
  • Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment Trauma
    15(2), 1-19
  • On my website www.alexiskennedy.com

17
Traffickers/Pimps
18
Who Are the Pimps?
  • Can be a pimp/trafficker, a boyfriend, father,
    mother, brother, uncle, a coach, a teacher or
    anyone exerting control over a prostituted adult
    or child, even a peer
  • Not always organized criminals
  • Both men and women of varying ages
  • Any ethnicity or race

19
Pimps
  • 75 of prostituted children reported that they
    were pimped
  • Department of Justice CEOS
  • 40-80 of adults report being pimped
  • Barry, 1995 Norton-Hawk, 2004 Silbert Pines,
    1983b Williamson Cluse-Tolar, 2002

20
Routes of Recruitment
21
1. Pimps - Love
  • 16 of adults interviewed reported an emotional
    attachment to their pimp (Kennedy)
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vZvnRYte3PAk

22
Turned out at age 16
  • I was dating someone who was 31. I had a legal
    job and was in school and one day he came home
    and he said he needed money for his daughter from
    his first marriage. And I told him I couldnt do
    anything because I wasnt getting paid till next
    Friday so he came home that night with a pair of
    heels and mini skirt and took me outside and told
    me to take what they gave me.

23
  • Seduction process
  • 6-12 months but in as little as 24 hours
  • Grown up boyfriend taking her away for the
    weekend
  • Most common method for non-abused minors

24
2. Pimp - Debt
  • -19 of adults interviewed reported a friend as
    turning them out
  • -often the main girl for the pimp (wife-in-law,
    bottom bh)

25
3. Pimp - Drugs
  • Drug dealers come up with a solution to help them
    pay for drug or repay for drugs already provided
  • Using drugs prior to being prostituted

26
4. Pimp - Gorilla
  • Brute force and kidnapping
  • Reported both domestically and internationally
  • Movie Trade

27
5. Pimp Authority Figure
  • Parent, foster parent, older sibling
  • 12 of adults interviewed reported being turned
    out this way
  • TVPA anyone under 18 is a trafficking victim

28
6. Substance Abuse
  • Chose to prostitute to earn money for drugs

29
7. Financial Difficulties
  • No other source of income
  • Prevalent among runaways
  • 80 reporting financial needs lefts them no other
    option to entering prostitution (Bagley Young,
    1987)
  • 55 of street girls work in prostitution as a way
    of earning money (Department of Justice, CEOS)

30
  • 19, reported being stranded in a strange city
    after a fight with her boyfriend and stated I
    just was at a restaurant having coffee and, um, a
    rich man made me a very generous offer. Asked me
    if I was all right, if there was anything I
    needed help with. I explained that I had no means
    of getting home, and he bought me a ticket home
    and gave me money as well in return for sex which
    took about four minutes.

31
8. Socialization/Normalization
  • Attracted to glamour and easy money
  • 7 of 14 drawn to thrill and adventures of the
    life (Potterat, Phillips, Rothenberg Darrow,
    1995, p.333)

32
9. History of Sexual Abuse
  • Consistent finding in research, high levels of
    sexual abuse
  • 96 of my sample reported being sexually
    assaulted prior to entering prostitution
  • 73 reported childhood sexual abuse

33
  • A friend of my mine she got out and got money
    and I had been approached while I was waiting.
    And I figured Im getting molested at home so why
    not get paid for it and get my rent covered.

34
10. Sex Trade Hierarchy
  • Escort -gt Massage parlors -gt Streets

35
Me/myself
  • I turned myself out. It was just me. It was me.
    Im responsible.
  • -started at age 10

36
Who turned you out, or how did you begin working
on the streets?
n 32
37
Techniques of pimps
38
Amazon.com
39
Perpetrators of Violence
  • Blacks (1990) law dictionary simply defines a
    pimp as someone who obtains customers for a
    prostitute
  • Reality take their money through manipulation,
    threats and violence
  • Silbert Pines (1983)
  • 66 of prostitutes were physically abused by
    pimps, over 50 were beaten regularly
  • Pimp stick

40
Based on information from Domestic Sex
Trafficking The Criminal Operations of the
American Pimp. Polaris Project. 2006
41
Traumatic Bond
  • Why dont they leave?
  • the development of strong emotional ties between
    two persons, with one person intermittently
    harassing, beating, threatening, abusing, or
    intimidating the other (Dutton, 1995, p. 190).
  • deny or emotionally numb themselves to the level
    of the violence that they are experiencing
    (Walker, 1998)

42
Psychopaths
  • The Psychopath as Pimp
  • Spidel, A., Greaves, C. Cooper, B. S., Hervé, H.,
    Hare, R. D., Yuille, J.C., The Canadian Journal
    of Police and Security Services, 4 (4) 205-211
  • Behaviorally
  • Irresponsible, criminally versatile, parasitic
  • Interpersonally
  • Manipulative, deceitful, glib, display
    superficial charm
  • Lack of empathy

43
  • 22 offenders
  • 36 of pimps compared to 20 of comparison
    populations met the cutoff of 30 for psychopathy
    on the PCL-R
  • 75 were above 22.1 (mean for comparison sample)
  • offenders who engage in acts of pimping exhibit
    many psychopathic traits

44
Why dont pimps victims seek help?
  • Captivity, confinement and isolation
  • - Victims have been locked in rooms and trunks
    of cars and isolated from friends and family
  • Use and threat of violence
  • - Victims have been beaten, raped, tortured,
    assaulted and threatened with weapons
  • Fear, shame, self-blame and hopelessness
  • - Victims have been so traumatized, they blame
    themselves for their abuse and/or see no way out
    of the situation

From Understanding Victims Mindset. Polaris
Project 2006.
45
Why dont pimps victims seek help?
  • Dependency
  • - Victims have become physically, financially or
    emotionally dependent on the trafficker they
    have bonded with the abuser through traumatic
    bonding (a.k.a. Stockholm Syndrome)
  • Distrust of law enforcement.
  • - Victims are told that law enforcement will
    arrest or harm them

46
Why dont pimps victims seek help?
  • Debt bondage
  • - Victims are trapped in never ending cycles of
    fabricated debt and are made to believe they
    cannot leave until this debt is paid off.
  • Misinformation/false promises
  • - Victims are promised love, money, safety or
    other desires if they stay with the pimp.
  • Lack of knowledge of social systems
  • - Victims dont know how and where to seek help.

47
Resources
  • www.sharedhope.org
  • www.polarisproject.org
  • www.alexiskennedy.com
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