Donald Trump’s administration is continuing to take a sledgehammer to federal efforts to fight sex trafficking, an eyebrow-raising development in his second term.
Last week, I wrote about the administration’s apparent defunding of the National CASA/GAL Association for Children — the acronyms stand for Court Appointed Special Advocates and Guardians Ad Litem — an organization that assigns volunteer advocates to children believed to have suffered abuse, including sex trafficking victims. CASA/GAL leaders said they plan to fight back after receiving notice that federal grants were being terminated, which could leave young victims without advocates who can steer them into safe environments.
Now it appears the administration also is effectively eliminating a Justice Department unit that specializes in investigating international crime, including drug and human trafficking rings.
The Trump administration is “decommissioning” a Department of Justice unit that has long been at the center of dismantling transnational organized crime networks, drug cartels and human trafficking rings.
Leaders of the unit, called the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces, or OCDETF, were told they had until Sept. 30 to shut down operations, people familiar with the matter said. The people asked not to be identified, citing concerns over potential retribution.








