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NO MORE #METOO

“Pardon Our Dust” – while our website is undergoing Renovation, and our Blog is under Construction!!!   Thank you!

OUR THANK YOU …SPECIAL OFFER ~  $10 FOR A LIFETIME SUBSCRIPTION until 12/31/24!

RAINN National Sexual Assault

HOTLINE ~ Free. Confidential. 24/7

1-800-656-HOPE (4673)

National Domestic Violence HOTLINE

1-800-799-7233

Strong Hearts Native HELPLINE

1-844-7NATIVE (762-8483)

National Suicide Prevention HOTLINE 

1-800-273-talk (8255)

National Human Trafficking HOTLINE 

1-888-373-7888 

TEXT 233-733

Crime Victims Support

“With more than 1,400 allied organizations and over 40 state, local, and international chapters, NO MORE sparks grassroots activism, encouraging everyone—women and men, youth and adults, from all walks of life—to be part of the solution.”   Click Here to learn  more about NO MORE, and here  How to Help Survivors

 

The NO MORE Silence, Speak Your Truth platform provides a safe and supportive space for people impacted by domestic violence to share their experiences, learn from other survivors, and connect to resources.

“Your story is personal and unique, but sharing it can be a healing experience for you and others.

Remember, healing is not linear and is different for everyone. It is important to stay patient with ourselves when setbacks occur in our process and forgive yourself for everything that may go wrong along the way.”

“NO MORE is a groundbreaking, global initiative comprised of the largest coalition of nonprofits, corporations, government agencies, media, schools, and individuals addressing domestic and sexual violence. We are committed to engaging, reaching, and working with people from diverse communities.”   Click Here to GET HELP – Directory of domestic & sexual violence helplines  & services ~ 200+ LOCATIONS AROUND THE WORLD!

A Voice for the Innocent

A Voice For The Innocent is a safe, anonymous online community of support for victims of rape and sex abuse.

Join A Voice For The Innocent to share your support, or to share your story.
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Get Help – Counseling

Click Image for https://www.cordiscosaile.com/navigating-child-sex-abuse/

Understanding Child Sexual Abuse

What is Child Sexual Abuse?

How Common is Child Sexual Abuse?

Where Can Child Sexual Abuse Happen?

Signs of Child Sexual Abuse

Preventing Child Sexual Abuse

Long Term Consequences of Child Sexual Abuse

What To Do if You or Someone You Know Has Experienced Child Sexual Abuse

Statute of Limitations for Child Sexual Abuse Survivors

Crime Victims Support

CAST-Coalition to Abolish Slavery & Trafficking | 3751 West 6th Street #70308 | 

Los Angeles, California 90070

Phone: (213) 365-1906 | Fax: (213) 365-5257 | 
 
CAST is a coalition of organizations who share a commitment to human rights and social justice by ending the modern-day slave trade. CAST partners with Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and government agencies, locally and internationally, to build a powerful movement to end modern-day slavery.
 

Reaching out to communities where potential victims of trafficking may reside, CAST offers client services such as:

  • providing survivors with legal representation,
  • social services, and shelter at no charge to the client,
  • training on identifying potential trafficking victims, and
  • practitioners’ guides on human rights and health to inform a variety of audiences.

Cyber Civil Rights Initiative

HOTLINE: 1-844-878-CCRI (2274)

Posting Nude/Sexual Images Without Consent/”Revenge Porn” is a FEDERAL CRIME.  
The Cyber Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI) provides emotional support, technical advice, and information to current victims of online abuse. Victims can reach out to CCRI through the Helpline and receive support from a Helpline Counselor or a member of the CCRI team. CCRI’s Helpline provides access and communication to victims of nonconsensual pornography in the United States 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”

LEGAL NOTICE:

Revenge porn is becoming (OR has already become) a federal crime as the SHIELD Act has been passed.  The SHIELD Act is an amendment to the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2021. 

The Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2021 criminalizes the nonconsensual distribution of nude or sexually explicit images.  Offenders could be imprisoned for up to two years.

“For victims of nonconsensual pornography, technology today makes it possible to destroy a person’s life with a single click,” Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., said in a statement.   Speier continued, “The damage caused by these attacks can crush careers, tear apart families, and, in the worst cases, has led to suicide.”

THORN Digital Defenders

(Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore, Co-Founders)  THORN

Text “NOFILTR” to 741741 for immediate assistance for “Grooming”
If you’re being sextorted, GET HELP NOW – TEXT “THORN” TO 741741

Thorn, aka Digital Defenders of Children; Ashton Kutcher’s organization driving tech innovation to fight child trafficking and the sexual exploitation of children.

About Our Fight Against Sexual Exploitation of Children

Our Work to Stop Child Sexual Exploitation

 

We build technology to defend children from sexual abuse.

We refuse to live in a world where the technology exists to help kids but simply isn’t being used. We build powerful products, lead new programs, maintain essential resources, and develop awareness campaigns to attack the issue from all sides. Technology must be part of the solution.

THORN’s Vision

Eliminate child sexual abuse material from the internet.

Working to deter the problem ~ Child Sexual Abuse Material

The internet has made it too easy for abusers to share child sexual abuse material (legally known as child pornography). They create images and videos with an audience in mind. That content gets shared widely beyond the initial targets – recirculating the image, perpetuating the abuse and retraumatizing the child. 

Help prevent child sexual abuse.

Child Pornography and Abuse Statistics

Do you know what GROOMING is?
Do you know what SEXTORTION is?
THORN FOR PARENTS

Announced on September 9, 2021. . .

Thorn for Parents

For parents concerned about their child’s digital safety as they grow up online, we’ve compiled resources, developed conversation guides, and much more to help parents navigate even the most awkward conversations with care and confidence. Here for your talks, awkward pauses and all.

BE YOUR KID’S SAFETY NET

Kids today face a very different set of challenges. There’s a whole new landscape where a child’s relationship with technology and normal sexual development overlap, with a whole new set of experiences online. And they need your help to navigate it safely.

The Situation 

TOPICS: Sexting & Nudes | Device Access & Monitoring | A Balanced Approach |

Stranger Danger 2.0

DASH

Domestic Abuse Survivor Help offers peer support to individuals in abusive relationships and in relationship abuse recovery.

Information & Support for Survivors 

Dedicated to ending sexual assault and abuse 
 
Click Here for more Information and Resources helpingsurvivors.org

Indigenous / Native American Organizations

What does National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center do?

National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center   Providing national leadership to end violence against American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian women by lifting up the collective voices of grassroots advocates and offering culturally grounded resources, technical assistance and training, and policy development to strengthen tribal sovereignty.
 
The National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center offers culturally specific technical assistance and training, policy development, and culturally grounded resource materials to support tribes, tribal programs, and advocates in their responses to violence against Native women, including domestic violence, sexual violence, missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, stalking, and trafficking.
 
 
See also,
Association of American Indian Affairs  (Resources & Organizations)
 

Native Womens Wilderness is an organization whose mission is to inspire and raise the voices of Native Women in the outdoor realm and encourage a healthy lifestyle grounded in the wilderness.  Native Womens Wilderness also works on missing and murdered Indigenous women awareness.

Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women USA is a community-led initiative that focuses on the missing and murdered Indigenous women (MMIW) epidemic on both sides of the Canadian-U.S. border. There are systemic causes of the violence that causes the disproportionate rate of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls, of which a great many cases go unsolved.

Native Hope

Across the United States and Canada Native Women and girls are being taken or murdered at an unrelenting rate.   Native Hope exists to address the injustice done to Native Americans.  We dismantle barriers through storytelling and impactful programs to bring healing and inspire hope.

Native Hope Resource Guide Addressing Native American Issues as a Non-Native for Allies

StrongHearts

StrongHearts Native Helpline (1-844-762-8483, or strongheartshelpline.org) is a 24/7 safe, confidential and anonymous domestic, dating and sexual violence helpline for American Indians and Alaska Natives, offering culturally-appropriate support and advocacy.

Indian Law Resource Center

The Center provides legal assistance to indigenous peoples of the Americas to combat racism and oppression, to protect their lands and environment, to protect their cultures and ways of life, to achieve sustainable economic development and genuine self-government, and to realize their other human rights. The Center’s Safe Women, Strong Nations project partners with Native women’s organizations and Indian and Alaska Native nations to end violence against Native women and girls.  Our project raises awareness to gain strong federal action to end violence against Native women; provides legal advice to national Native women’s organizations and Indian nations on ways to restore tribal criminal authority and to preserve tribal civil authority; and helps Indian nations increase their capacity to prevent violence and punish offenders on their lands.

Alliance of Tribal Coalitions to End Violence

Tribal Coalitions: Increase awareness of domestic violence, sexual assault, and sex trafficking against American Indian and Alaska Native women.

Enhance the response to violence against women at the tribal, federal, and state levels; and identify and provide technical assistance to coalition membership and tribal communities to enhance access to essential services.

National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center’s Safety Guide

Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women USA
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women USA was founded in 2015 by Deborah Maytubee Denton (Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma) after the murder of 2 of her friends, Andrea Begay and Sharon Gorman (Navajo) in Gallup, New Mexico. It started as a simple page on Facebook but year by year the scope of MMIW USA’s work widened and became a non-profit.  (Continue reading in More About Us below.)
 

INHOPE

We are a global network of 46 member hotlines – Reporting suspected child sexual abuse images or videos, including a sexually explicit image of a child, supports the fight against such material.

The mission of INHOPE is to support the network of hotlines in combating online Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM).


In a borderless digital world CSAM has global consequences and as CSAM increases so do our efforts and those of our partners to combat it.

https://www.inhope.org/EN

info@inhope.org

Lauren’s Kids 

Our mission is to prevent child sexual abuse through education and awareness and to help survivors heal with guidance and support.    https://laurenskids.org/

 

Lauren’s Kids is based in South Florida and educates adults and children about sexual abuse prevention through in-school curricula, awareness campaigns, and speaking engagements around the country and the world.

The Issue of Child Sexual Abuse  |   Includes:  Tactics of the perpetrator and Signs a child may be a victim of sexual abuse

Combatting Human Trafficking   |   Family Safety

 

SAFER, SMARTER FAMILIES |  Digital Health & Safety Resources
During this uncertain time of school closures, childcare pressures, and increased reliance on digital devices, it is important for families to be mindful of safetythe FBI has released guidance for parents to stay alert, especially when 1 in 5 children who touch a digital device will be sexually solicited online.
Parents – fear not! We are here to provide you with the knowledge, language, and activities necessary to teach your elementary school aged child(ren) about personal safety in a way that is comfortable, accessible, and fun. (Have a middle or high schooler in your home? Visit SaferSmarterFamilies.org for lessons designed for older children and teens!)

Lauren’s Kids has posted 6 digital lessons and activities from the Blueprint for Building Safer, Smarter Families resource, designed for use with elementary school students

For older children in middle school and high school, see  SAFER SMARTER FAMILIES

 

Safer, Smarter Families Family Safety Toolkit
The Safer, Smarter Families Family Safety Toolkit is designed to help your family address personal safety, abuse prevention, and social-emotional learning in a way that is comfortable and accessible for both you and your children.

National Center for Victims of Crime

Their mission is to forge a national commitment to help victims of crime rebuild their lives.

They are dedicated to serving individuals, families, and communities harmed by crime.

https://www.victimsofcrime.org

Click Here for Resources – Mental Health & Crisis

Click here for Resources – ONLINE THERAPY (Many are FREEE!!)

National Sexual Violence Resource Center   717-728-9740 x144  / 800-692-7445

HELP  *  HOPE  *  HEALING

National Sexual Violence Resource Center | 2101 N Front Street | Governor’s Plaza North, Building #2 | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17110 | Phone: (717) 909-0710 | 

Toll-Free: (877) 739-3895 | Fax: (717) 909-0714 | https://www.nsvrc.org/

 
The Center provides access to resources on reporting and recovery planning, serving child victims of sex trafficking, and addressing issues for specific populations vulnerable to sex trafficking, including children in foster care, missing and exploited children, adolescent boys, and Native women.
 
The National Sexual Violence Resource Center (NSVRC) is funded through a cooperative agreement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Division of Violence Prevention . The organization collects information and resources to assist those working to prevent sexual violence and to improve resources, outreach, and response strategies.
 

National Organization for Victim Assistance

HOTLINE:  1-800-879-6682

Founded in 1975, NOVA is the oldest national victim assistance organization of its type in the United States and is the recognized leader in victim advocacy, education and credentials.

“The National Organization for Victim Assistance (NOVA) is a private, nonprofit organization of victim and witness assistance practitioners, criminal justice professionals, researchers, former victims, and others, committed to recognizing victims’ rights in four areas: national and local legislative advocacy, direct victim assistance, member support, and professional development.

NOVA coordinates the National Crisis Response Team and the National Crime Victim Information and Referral Hotline.”

https://www.trynova.org

ADVOCATES AND SHELTERS (Local Programs) listed by State, organized by County:

https://www.womenslaw.org/find-help/advocates-and-shelters

OFFICE FOR VICTIMS OF CRIME

Office for Victims of Crime | 810 Seventh Street NW, Eighth Floor | Washington,
District of Columbia 20531 | Phone: (202) 307-5983 | Toll-Free: (888) 737-7888
Fax: (202) 514-6383 | Email: humantrafficking@ovcttac.org
 
 
JUSTICE FOR VICTIMS. JUSTICE FOR ALL.
The Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) is a component of the Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice.   The OVC website contains:
 
  • Resources and research from OVC and other Federal Government agencies
  • Local and national direct assistance information
  • Map of services and task forces, and related funding opportunities for victims and survivors of human trafficking
  • Victim service providers
  • Law enforcement, and allied professionals.

The Child Trafficking and Exploitation site offers resources, forum discussions, and FAQs.

Get help and the resources you need 24/7.

Call 800.656.HOPE (4673)

FIND HELP NEAR YOU

 ( centers.rainn.org )

It’s helpful to have support in your own community after a sexual assault. Local service providers make it easy for you to access care, and they are knowledgeable about the laws in your area and local resources that can assist you.

RAINN  (Rape, Abuse, Incest National Network)

To speak with someone who is trained to help, call the

National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656.HOPE (4673) or LIVE CHAT online at online.rainn.org

https://www.rainn.org or Spanish: https://www.rainn.org/es

For a list and description of organizations that provide assistance for survivors and their families, visit: https://www.rainn.org/national-resources-sexual-assault-survivors-and-their-loved-ones

TRAFFICKING

For Parents, Family Members, Teachers, Educators, Young Adults & Teens

For More Information on Human Trafficking Awareness & Prevention
 

https://youth.gov/youth-topics/trafficking-of-youth/the-problem
https://www.safehorizon.org/get-informed/human-trafficking-statistics-facts/#definition/
https://www.dosomething.org/us/facts/11-facts-about-human-trafficking
LGBTQ+ – https://polarisproject.org/
Survivor Care*Prevention Education*Strategic Collaboration with Adultshttps://love146.org/

Short video explaining why children are most of the victims of trafficking – Hotline –

https://youtu.be/uw4pE97fi1Y

TRAFFICKING

 

For Parents, Family Members, Teachers, Educators, Young Adults & Teens

For More Information on Human Trafficking Awareness & Prevention
 
Resources from Enough is enough!

https://enough.org/recovery_resources#trafficking%20resources

https://stoptraffickingdemand.com/
https://www.thorn.org/
 https://endsexualexploitation.org/
 https://www.protectyoungminds.org/ (anti-porn)
 https://www.covenanteyes.com/ (anti-porn)
 https://fightthenewdrug.org/ (anti-porn)
https://ourrescue.org/
https://ourrescue.org/ (Reaching Kids before traffickers do)

TRAFFICKING

 

For Parents, Family Members, Teachers, Educators, Young Adults & Teens

For More Information on Human Trafficking Awareness & Prevention
 

Frederick Douglass Initiative teaching awareness and prevention strategy to children in schools

https://youtu.be/ornPWN_T1Vo

https://www.covenanteyes.com/2016/01/22/porn-and-sex-trafficking-10-facts-from-the-experts/

Video 10 Facts

https://youtu.be/sj0ajJ0HQLs

in 56 Human Trafficking Facts

https://www.factretriever.com/human-trafficking-facts

 

From 56 Human Trafficking Facts:

24.  Sex traffickers often recruit children because not only are children more unsuspecting and vulnerable than adults, but there is also a high market demand for young victims. Traffickers target victims on the telephone, on the Internet, through friends, at the mall, and in after-school programs.[17]

28.  Sex traffickers use a variety of ways to “condition” their victims, including subjecting them to starvation, rape, gang rape, physical abuse, beating, confinement, threats of violence toward the victim and victim’s family, forced drug use, and shame.[14]

49. The FBI estimates that over 100,000 children and young women are trafficked in America today. They range in age from nine to 19, with the average being age 11. Many victims are not just runaways or abandoned, but are from “good” families who are coerced by clever traffickers.[17]

52. Human trafficking victims face physical risks, such as drug and alcohol addiction, contracting STDs, sterility, miscarriages, forced abortions, vaginal and anal trauma, among others. Psychological effects include developing clinical depression, personality and dissociative disorders, suicidal tendencies, Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome, and Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome.[14]

Victim Connect Resource Center

HOTLINE: Phone or text: 1-855-4-VICTIM

(1-855-484-2846)

If this is an emergency, please call 911.

 
“The VictimConnect Resource Center is a place for victims of all crime to learn about their rights and options, confidentially and compassionately. This post is also available in: Español (Spanish)
 

“A program of the National Center for Victims of Crime, it combines:

“With extensive specialized training, our Victim Assistance Specialists stand ready to help crime victims.”

“National hotlines can help connect victims, survivors, and their support networks connect with local resources. The VictimConnect Resource Center is one of several other national hotlines that are dedicated to helping victims understand their rights and options, and make the choices that will best support their recovery.

“We suggest you choose the hotline that is best for you. If you aren’t sure which helpline, the VictimConnect Resource Center can speak with you about which helpline might fit your needs and what your other options are.”

https://victimconnect.org/

About WomensLaw.org

About WomensLaw.org | WomensLaw.org

(En Español)

Despite its name, WomensLaw.org provides information that is relevant to people of all genders, not just women. Our Email Hotline will provide legal information to anyone who reaches out with legal questions or concerns regarding domestic violence, sexual violence, or any other topic covered on WomensLaw.org.

About Abuse

About Abuse | WomensLaw.org

These pages provide an overview of domestic violence and sexual assault as well as more detailed information about specific forms of abuse.

  • Am I Being Abused?  (Danger  Assessment; Signs of Abuse)
  • Forms of Abuse (Abuse Using Technology; Domestic Violence/Teen Violence; Emotional Abuse; Financial Abuse; Reproductive Abuse & Coercion; Sexual Abuse & Exploitation; Stalking & Cyberstalking; Litigation Abuse)
  • Abuse in Specific Communities (Abuse Among People Living with AIDS/HIV; Abuse in Immigrant Communities; Abuse in Tribal Communities; Information for Teens & Young Adults; LBGTQIA Victims; Male Victims; Abuse in Jewish Community; Elder Abuse
  • Safety Tips (Domestic Violence Victims; Stalking Victims; Safety Planning with Children; Safety in a Confidential Address; Safety in Court; Safety in Rural Areas; Safety While Using the Internet; Safety While Using Social Media
  • In the Workplace (Sexual Harassment by a Co-Worker or Boss; Workplace Restraining Orders (filed by Employer)
Find Help (US Map)

Find Help for Yourself and for Others | WomensLaw.org

Click on your state (in the map or in the drop-down menu) to find contact information for:

  1. advocates in local domestic violence programs and shelters;
  2. legal assistance organizations;
  3. courthouse locations where you can file for a protection order; and
  4. sheriff departments. If you need to talk to someone about an abusive relationship, you can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233.
Legal Information (US Map) 

Legal Information | WomensLaw.org

  • Know the laws – By State
  • Preparing for Court – By Yourself
  • Immigration
  • Federal Gun Laws
  • Domestic Violence in the Military
  • Videos
Helping Others 

Helping Others | WomensLaw.org

  • Family, Friends, Co-Workers
  • Advocates
  • Lawyers
  • Doctors, Healthcare Professionals
  • Salon Professionals

Womens Law Email Hotline:  WomensLaw.org Email Hotline

Other Helpful Information:

Advocates and Shelters | WomensLaw.org  (drop-down menu for your State)

National Organizations | WomensLaw.org  (listed by subject matter)

Chat Rooms and Message Boards | WomensLaw.org

There are a variety of support services available to victims of domestic violence and sexual assault on the Internet. We have listed some of these resources.