❓WHAT HAPPENED: A tip about a suburban home in California led to a statewide human trafficking takedown, rescuing nearly 20 children and resulting in over 600 arrests.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Multiple law enforcement agencies, Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna, Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Deputy Chief Alan Hamilton, and Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman.
📍WHEN & WHERE: California, including Los Angeles County, during a week-long operation titled “Operation Reclaim and Rebuild.”
💬KEY QUOTE: “How embarrassing that I could actually say that we have corridors of human sex trafficking throughout Los Angeles County.” – Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman
🎯IMPACT: The takedown exposed a vast trafficking network, rescued victims from multiple states, and highlighted Los Angeles County’s role as a trafficking hub.
The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), in conjunction with a number of other law enforcement agencies operating on a single tip, have busted a major human trafficking operation, resulting in more than 600 arrests and the rescue of around 20 children across California. In Los Angeles County alone, the law enforcement action—dubbed “Operation Reclaim and Rebuild”—saw the recovery of 12 adults and five children.
According to Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna, the investigation originated with a citizen tip regarding a home in the Los Angeles suburb of Walnut. A subsequent surveillance operation connected the home to several other nearby residences being used in a human trafficking ring.
“We have traffickers that are putting barely teenage girls on the streets of Los Angeles to be victimized, repeatedly, over and over again,” LAPD Deputy Chief Alan Hamilton said following the bust, adding, “These children did not come from one place. They came from Chicago, from Oklahoma, from Missouri, tribal lands… and from communities right here in the state of California.”
The operation resulted in a total of 611 arrests, including both suspected human traffickers and clients—often called “Johns.” Authorities, however, have not yet disclosed how many of those arrested will face felony human trafficking charges as opposed to lesser solicitation offenses.
“How embarrassing that I could actually say that we have corridors of human sex trafficking throughout Los Angeles County,” Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman said, describing the criminal operation as having engaged in “modern slavery,” and lamenting Los Angeles’s continued prevalence as a hotspot for human traffickers.
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