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Presuming the existence of a sophisticated operation that not only targets American tourists for abduction as sex slaves, but goes after people who operatives might think are lesbian, seems to me to be a really big leap.
Do we have any evidence that this ring exists in Curacao, anything at all?
I had shared a trafficking report earlier from the US State Department.
We know who gets trafficked into the sex trade: Poor women from adjacent countries in the Caribbean basin, usually Hispanic (Colombia, Venezuela, Dominican Republic, etc) and sometimes Haitians.
What, exactly, would be the point of abducting an American tourist?
We know who gets trafficked into the sex trade: Poor women from adjacent countries in the Caribbean basin, usually Hispanic (Colombia, Venezuela, Dominican Republic, etc) and sometimes Haitians.
What, exactly, would be the point of abducting an American tourist?
It would be an operation for no particular reason--Amy was attractive but not the stunning beauty that her parents imagine her to be; she was normal--with potentially huge negative consequences, all for no obvious gain.
(I would also suggest that her parents' statements that she was beautiful, so desirable as to become a target for sex slavery, now reads like a tell. These statements are a continued denial of Amy's sexual orientation, a restatement of their belief that of course she cannot be lesbian, that she is attractive to men.)
I would also add that if, by any chance, there actually was an abduction of Amy, she did not live long past the abduction. Whether she was attacked on the ship or whether she made it somehow onto the mainland early in the morning to buy drugs, she did not live long after. The idea that she was kept captive and shuttled around the Caribbean for years ... Why would they expose themselves to such risk?
I am reminded of the Sodder parents insisting that their abducted children had been kept alive long after the fire. What would be the point of the abductors continuing to expose themselves to such risk? The only scenario that I can come up with, as I mentioned earlier, is that the children were not abducted but rescued, that they did not want to return to their home for whatever reason. (This, I emphasize, is not a scenario that I believe was the case with the Sodder family, which seems to have been a normal large family.) What possible reason would Amy have to stay loyal to the people who were raping her in a foreign country?
these are questions i can't answer since i don't have the mindset of a trafficker, and i understand why you bring them up. i admittedly don't know much about ST and i too have heard that victims tend to be more at risk women than someone on vacation with her family.
that said, just because the statistics we view today tell us that a woman like Amy would be considered low-risk for ST, doesn't make it impossible or even unlikely for her to have been a victim back then. i feel like a lot of people get tripped up viewing this case through the 2025 lens instead of 1998/early aughts. Yes her disappearance made news in the US, but news in the US wasn't necessarily news in the Caribbean. Sure they had newspapers and magazines but news was slower to reach across countries. 1998 didn't have all the happenings of every place in the world literally at its fingertips like we do now. People in 1998 couldn't have predicted that, and couldn't have imagined that some day there would be technology to analyze facial features from pictures found on escort websites. i think it's interesting that the alleged sightings of Amy seem to have stopped after about 2005 i believe was the last one. The internet really started growing exponentially at that time and her captors could've realized that and stopped advertising her on websites and letting her out in public
what would be the point of taking a white American when most of the victims are Caribbean women? variety and rarity, to put it bluntly. if most of the girls are of one race, then a green eyed white American is going to be rare and what's rare is valuable.
i truly hope Amy wasn't a victim of ST, but in my opinion, the evidence leads more to that and i see zero evidence for any other scenario.
MOO