The operation was conducted in partnership with Lehi, Provo, Orem, Springville, Pleasant Grove, Lindon, and Unified Police Departments, Federal Homeland Security Investigations, and the Utah Attorney General’s Office, the Sheriff’s Office said.
Officials had hoped to identify and rescue people who were “caught in the trap that is human trafficking or sex trafficking.”
They then set up a meeting place in the northern part of Utah County and promptly arrested the suspects as they arrived. Some of these men reportedly arrived believing they would be meeting with a 13-year-old girl.
In total, officers arrested 21 people on a variety of trafficking and drug-related charges, including three men who were traveling to meet children for sex, one of whom possessed ropes, sex toys, and lingerie.
Meanwhile, three sex trafficking victims were identified and rescued, including an 18-year-old male who told officers he had come to the United States from Honduras. He told officers that he believed the suspects were going to help him but they instead “took his passport and cell phone” and “forced this young man into the sex trade.”
“He told investigators he thought he was working for his freedom and he felt trapped, with no way out,” officials said.
A forensic examination of eight cell phones also enabled officers to identify several potential victims, traffickers, and a cooperating witness in a current human trafficking case being investigated by Unified Police Department.
However, Randall told reporters that the arrests don’t even scratch the surface of Utah’s human trafficking problem and that officers will continue to conduct such operations
“This isn’t even the tip of the iceberg. This is like a snowflake on an iceberg. We are barely scratching the surface,” Randall said.“In total, I think we have four proactive operations that we’ll be doing throughout the course of the coming year,” he said.