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St. Petersburg Police Debut New Human Trafficking App

Four uniformed police officers, including Chief Anthony Holloway, stand around a podium at police headquarters to announce the app. A poster board to their left shows a photo of a smartphone with the app installed.
St. Petersburg Police Department/Facebook Livestream
Chief Anthony Holloway announced a new human trafficking app at police headquarters on Monday.

A regional task force formed earlier this year with a federal grant has developed a smartphone app that citizens can use to report suspected human trafficking. Victims can also use the app to make contact with detectives.

St. Petersburg Police Chief Anthony Holloway on Monday announced the creation of a new smartphone app that allows people to submit anonymous tips to the Tampa Bay Human Trafficking Task Force.

"We want to tell the victims one thing: we are here for you, your voice is being heard. We're there ready to rescue you if you're ready to come home to your family," Holloway said during a Facebook Live press conference.

A screenshot of the first page inside the app.
Tampa Bay Human Trafficking Task Force/ios app screenshot
A screenshot of the Tampa Bay Human Trafficking Task Force app.

The app, which bears the same name as the task force, is free to download. Users can submit a subject line, location, description, and photo or video clip.

The app is one result of the task force, which was created in January with a Department of Justice grant totaling $741,556 for three years. Task force plans began taking shape in May 2019, but the federal grant made it official.

"We want to make sure that our victims had a way to contact us. And also that our people that were witnessing some type of human trafficking, whether it's labor, or sex labor, that now they can get this app and put it on their phone," Holloway said.

Holloway said since January, the task force has opened 107 new sex trafficking cases. Of those cases, 34 arrests have been made with a potential 79 victims rescued including 10 under the age of 17.

Seven new labor trafficking cases have also been opened, with a potential of 15 victims rescued.

Florida consistently ranks in the top three states for the number of calls made to the National Human Trafficking Hotline. This doesn’t necessarily there are more cases of human trafficking in the state, however.

The task force includes the following agencies:

Federal: U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Homeland Security Investigations

State: Florida Office of the Attorney General, Office of Statewide Prosecution, Florida Department of Law Enforcement, State Attorneys’ Offices (Florida Judicial Circuits 5th, 6th, 12th, and 13th)

Local: Hernando County Sheriff’s Office, Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, Manatee County Sheriff’s Office, Pasco County Sheriff’s Office, Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, Polk County Sheriff’s Office, Bradenton Police, Clearwater Police, Haines City Police, Palmetto Police, Sarasota Police, St. Petersburg Police, Tampa Police, Wauchula Police, and Zephyrhills Police

I took my first photography class when I was 11. My stepmom begged a local group to let me into the adults-only class, and armed with a 35 mm disposable camera, I started my journey toward multimedia journalism.
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