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Case Western Reserve’s Human Trafficking Project assisting survivors as part of ā€˜Operation Autumn Hope’

Business, Law + Politics | December 21, 2020 | Story by: Editorial Staff

During a massive statewide crackdown on human trafficking last month, Anjali Kanwar and several of her classmates at ĆŪĢŅAPP played critical roles that didn’t make .

While law-enforcement agencies rounded up alleged human traffickers as part of the sweep, called ā€œOperation Autumn Hope,ā€ members of the university’s Human Trafficking Project offered social services and legal representation to trafficking survivors and sex workers identified during the sting operation.

ā€œWhen you’re right there, it feels like you’re really making a difference,ā€ said Kanwar, a third-year law student certified by the Ohio Supreme Court to represent clients under the supervision of a faculty member. Kanwar had the opportunity to participate in the operation as part of her semester-long experience as a legal intern in the Milton A. Kramer Law Clinic.  

Housed within the School of Law, the clinic collaborates with the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences. A team of law students and masters-level social work students, led by licensed attorneys and social workers, work directly with trafficking survivors and populations that face a high-risk of trafficking victimization.

Many of the survivors have criminal records of their own, mostly related to prostitution and substance use.

ā€œPeople deserve second chances and a fresh start,ā€ Kanwar said. ā€œCriminal records make a person more vulnerable to trafficking victimization. When someone has a record, being able to clear these charges allows them to get it off their shoulders and move forward with their lives.ā€

Kanwar has spent the past several months filing the requisite paperwork to get her clients’ criminal records expunged. She also sees her role also as a supporter of those who have been trafficked.

ā€œThere’s more to representing someone in human trafficking than just reading cases,ā€ Kanwar said. ā€œThere’s more to this than you might see on TV.ā€

Operation Autumn Hope identified more than 100 individuals who have been trafficked or are at high-risk of victimization during the multi-pronged covert sting operation and subsequent investigation.

Those are the people who need access to legal and social services, said Maya Simek, a clinical law professor and co-director of the university’s Health and Human Trafficking Clinic.

ā€œWe’re right at the intersection of the police and social services,ā€ she said. ā€œWe’re helping to fill in the gaps to those services. Trying to remove the legal barriers—that’s our niche.ā€

Simek said the experience gives students the opportunity to witness first-hand a prime example of the interprofessional collaboration critical to anti-trafficking efforts. The Human Trafficking Clinic partnered with several agencies as part of the operation, including the Cleveland Rape Crisis Center and more than 50 law-enforcement agencies statewide.

Making a difference

ā€œWe have this unique focus on the provision of interdisciplinary collaboration and connection to try to combat human trafficking,ā€ Simek said. ā€œHaving these relationships is a valuable part of our students’ experiences.ā€

Kanwar agreed.

ā€œWe don’t just deal with human trafficking,ā€ she said, noting the university’s Human Trafficking Project is why she selected Case Western Reserve. ā€œWe’re also working with the law school’s Health Law Clinic and the . It’s being involved in all of this that makes this experience so special.ā€


For more information, contact Colin McEwen at Colin.McEwen@case.edu.