S-1312-115
Became Public Law No: 115-393.
Sponsored by Chuck Grassley (R-IA)
What it does
This law expands federal efforts to combat human trafficking through five main mechanisms: it allows school resource officer grants to fund anti-trafficking training; reauthorizes several grant programs for victim services and law enforcement through FY2021–2022; gives the Department of Justice authority to file civil lawsuits to stop trafficking-related crimes; requires federal agencies to improve employee training on identifying and responding to trafficking; and establishes a Public-Private Partnership Advisory Council to advise the President's interagency task force on trafficking policy.
Who benefits
Human trafficking victims, particularly minors and unaccompanied children, who would gain access to more victim services, independent child advocates, and law enforcement trained to identify rather than arrest them. State and local law enforcement agencies receive additional grant funding and technical assistance. School resource officers gain training resources. Tribal law enforcement agencies receive specialized technical training. Researchers and policymakers benefit from improved national data collection on trafficking prevalence.
Who is hurt
Individuals convicted of trafficking-related offenses face expanded DOJ civil enforcement authority in addition to existing criminal penalties. Federal agencies and departments face new mandatory reporting and compliance requirements, which may redirect existing staff time and resources. Grant applicants who do not prioritize victim-centered or long-term law enforcement approaches may be deprioritized for funding. Taxpayers fund the reauthorized grant programs and the new advisory council, though specific appropriation amounts are not specified in the bill text.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that human trafficking is a severe and underreported crime that requires a coordinated, well-resourced federal response. They contend that training school resource officers to recognize trafficking signs addresses a critical gap, since schools are often the first point of contact for at-risk youth. Reauthorizing victim services grants ensures that survivors receive housing, counseling, and legal assistance rather than being treated as criminals. The bill's victim screening protocol requirement directly addresses the documented problem of trafficking victims being arrested for crimes they were forced to commit, which re-traumatizes survivors and deters them from cooperating with law enforcement. Supporters also argue that improved data collection through FBI reporting and NIJ methodology development is essential to understanding the true scope of trafficking and allocating resources effectively.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill reauthorizes and expands multiple overlapping grant programs without requiring rigorous evaluation of whether existing programs have actually reduced trafficking or improved outcomes for victims. They contend that expanding DOJ civil enforcement authority alongside existing criminal statutes risks duplicative legal actions and may strain judicial resources without clear evidence of added effectiveness. Critics also raise concerns that the new Public-Private Partnership Advisory Council adds a layer of federal bureaucracy with a short three-year lifespan, limiting its ability to produce meaningful, lasting policy change. Some argue that mandatory federal training standards and reporting requirements impose unfunded burdens on state, local, and tribal agencies, and that funding decisions should be left to states that better understand their local trafficking dynamics and victim needs.