Jared Hudson
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And when you see that and pull them out of it, that would be the best way to describe it is just, Unbelievable relief.
And when you see that and pull them out of it, that would be the best way to describe it is just, Unbelievable relief.
So the easiest way to look at it, we've done, I probably sat in front of an interview, maybe not 2,500, maybe not that many, but in the thousands of women, like 1,500 to maybe 2,000, maybe not even that much. Quite a few women.
So the easiest way to look at it, we've done, I probably sat in front of an interview, maybe not 2,500, maybe not that many, but in the thousands of women, like 1,500 to maybe 2,000, maybe not even that much. Quite a few women.
So the easiest way to look at it, we've done, I probably sat in front of an interview, maybe not 2,500, maybe not that many, but in the thousands of women, like 1,500 to maybe 2,000, maybe not even that much. Quite a few women.
So I mean, I'm basing this off of just strictly my interviews, and I'm not a forensic interviewer like some of these other people are that would be more educated on this than I would. But sitting in front of them, from Haiti to Zambia to South Sudan to the United States of America, pick a state. I've sat in front of them and interviewed these women, and I get the same common thing across the board.
So I mean, I'm basing this off of just strictly my interviews, and I'm not a forensic interviewer like some of these other people are that would be more educated on this than I would. But sitting in front of them, from Haiti to Zambia to South Sudan to the United States of America, pick a state. I've sat in front of them and interviewed these women, and I get the same common thing across the board.
So I mean, I'm basing this off of just strictly my interviews, and I'm not a forensic interviewer like some of these other people are that would be more educated on this than I would. But sitting in front of them, from Haiti to Zambia to South Sudan to the United States of America, pick a state. I've sat in front of them and interviewed these women, and I get the same common thing across the board.
For my interviews, every single time I talk to them, they're almost offended that you would... imply that they need help out of what they're doing. Now, I've been told by ladies here in the Southeast, they're like, I had one lady tell me, honey, where do you think I'm gonna go and make $1,500 a day? She makes $1,500 in an evening doing what she's doing. So there is that aspect of it.
For my interviews, every single time I talk to them, they're almost offended that you would... imply that they need help out of what they're doing. Now, I've been told by ladies here in the Southeast, they're like, I had one lady tell me, honey, where do you think I'm gonna go and make $1,500 a day? She makes $1,500 in an evening doing what she's doing. So there is that aspect of it.
For my interviews, every single time I talk to them, they're almost offended that you would... imply that they need help out of what they're doing. Now, I've been told by ladies here in the Southeast, they're like, I had one lady tell me, honey, where do you think I'm gonna go and make $1,500 a day? She makes $1,500 in an evening doing what she's doing. So there is that aspect of it.
Now, once you interview a girl, once you get a girl that wants to get out or a guy that wants to get out and they go through the process and you take a forensic interviewer to go down through it, one thing that I'll also say we've seen every single time is that that woman who might be 25 or 30 or 35 doing this right now, she was... victimized when she was four, five, six, 15, 16.
Now, once you interview a girl, once you get a girl that wants to get out or a guy that wants to get out and they go through the process and you take a forensic interviewer to go down through it, one thing that I'll also say we've seen every single time is that that woman who might be 25 or 30 or 35 doing this right now, she was... victimized when she was four, five, six, 15, 16.
Now, once you interview a girl, once you get a girl that wants to get out or a guy that wants to get out and they go through the process and you take a forensic interviewer to go down through it, one thing that I'll also say we've seen every single time is that that woman who might be 25 or 30 or 35 doing this right now, she was... victimized when she was four, five, six, 15, 16.
I had one lady tell me recently, her kids are in the room with her. She goes, I mean, ever since I was a little girl, I remember sitting in the room and watching my mom do this. Her mom was a prostitute. And so she grew up in it, and so she started doing this when she was 15 or 16, so she could sell herself.
I had one lady tell me recently, her kids are in the room with her. She goes, I mean, ever since I was a little girl, I remember sitting in the room and watching my mom do this. Her mom was a prostitute. And so she grew up in it, and so she started doing this when she was 15 or 16, so she could sell herself.
I had one lady tell me recently, her kids are in the room with her. She goes, I mean, ever since I was a little girl, I remember sitting in the room and watching my mom do this. Her mom was a prostitute. And so she grew up in it, and so she started doing this when she was 15 or 16, so she could sell herself.
And something we don't realize in our culture, like a lot of people love Reba McEntire, right? I'm not talking trash about Reba McEntire, but you heard the song Fancy, Don't Let Me Down, you know? That's exactly what she's singing about. That is what human trafficking is.
And something we don't realize in our culture, like a lot of people love Reba McEntire, right? I'm not talking trash about Reba McEntire, but you heard the song Fancy, Don't Let Me Down, you know? That's exactly what she's singing about. That is what human trafficking is.
And something we don't realize in our culture, like a lot of people love Reba McEntire, right? I'm not talking trash about Reba McEntire, but you heard the song Fancy, Don't Let Me Down, you know? That's exactly what she's singing about. That is what human trafficking is.