Anti-Hate Forum Slated For Tuesday In Huntington

Hate crimes remain a problem in our communities, but a forum in Huntington next week will help attendees understand how to identify it. 

Hate crimes remain a problem in our communities, but a forum in Huntington next week will help attendees understand how to identify it. 

The United Against Hate (UAH) Community Outreach Program is a nationwide initiative launched by the U.S. Department of Justice to combat unlawful acts of hate. The initiative aims to improve hate crime reporting by teaching community members how to identify, report and help prevent hate crimes, and by building trust between law enforcement and communities.

UAH shares resources to combat hate and encourages discussion between representatives from law enforcement, community organizations and members of the public. The program emphasizes that while some hate-fueled incidents — standing alone — may not be a crime, people should still report those incidents to local law enforcement and the FBI.

U.S. Attorney Will Thompson and Huntington Mayor Steve Williams along with other community leaders are hosting the event. 

“This forum is an excellent opportunity to hear from the community, raise awareness and further education about hate crimes and bias incidents,” Thompson said. 

“Huntington is a welcoming community that embraces diversity, equity and inclusion, but there are still individuals who want to tear down the progress we have made,” Williams said. “That’s why I am eager to partner with the U.S. Attorney Will Thompson and engage our community on this important topic.”

The forum will include presentations about United Against Hate and federal and West Virginia hate crime laws as well as a panel session featuring community leaders.  

The panel is scheduled to include:

  • Charles Meyers: past president, Cabell-Huntington NAACP
  • Hoyt Glazer, J.D.: president, Temple B’nai Sholom
  • Sue Barazi: vice president, Islamic Association of West Virginia
  • Ally Layman: president, Huntington Pride
  • Angela Adams: president and CEO, Mountain State Centers for Independent Living

The event will be held from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., Tuesday, March 19 at the Marshall Health Network Arena Convention Center. It is free and open to the public. RSVP is not required. 

Former DHHR Official Pleads Guilty In COVID Test Fraud Case

A West Virginia man pleaded guilty to making false statements to federal investigators while he was an official with the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources.

Timothy Priddy, 49, of Buffalo, pleaded guilty Monday in federal court to making a false statement. Priddy admitted that he lied to federal investigators about the verification of invoices for COVID-19 testing that he certified while an official with the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR).

According to court documents and statements made in court, Priddy was interviewed by federal agents on Aug. 2, 2022 while he was the director of the DHHR’s Center for Threat Preparedness.

In his previous position as Deputy Director, his duties included reviewing and verifying the accuracy of certain invoices submitted to the DHHR by vendors supplying COVID-19 testing and mitigation services before certifying the invoices for payment.

The agents asked Priddy about invoices submitted by a particular vendor that had billed the state of West Virginia tens of millions of dollars for COVID-19 testing and related services.

One series of invoices of interest to the federal investigation related to a COVID-19 testing program for K-12 students, faculty and staff returning to school after the winter holiday break. 

Priddy certified the K-12 testing program invoices without making any effort to verify their accuracy. Priddy falsely told the agents that he certified the invoices only after two individuals working with the K-12 testing program verified the invoices involved. 

Priddy admitted that he knew that statement was false.

William Thompson, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of West Virginia, said this case is unique in COVID-19 fraud cases he is trying in that Priddy stood nothing to gain financially in committing his crimes.

“He just basically cost the state quite a bit of money by not doing his job and not following through on it,” Thompson said.

Priddy is scheduled to be sentenced on May 9, 2024, and faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $250,000 fine.

Chief United States District Judge Thomas E. Johnston presided over the hearing. Assistant United States Attorneys Joshua Hanks and Holly Wilson are prosecuting the case.

Human Trafficking Survivor Discusses Moving Forward

When federal prosecutors released arrest information on the people involved in trafficking Jane Doe, it made national headlines because one of the perpetrators was the police chief in the small town where they lived. 

Editor’s Note: A warning, there is no explicit language in this reporting, but some of the topics may be difficult for some listeners. The first story in this three-part series gave an overview of human trafficking in West Virginia. The second story covered law enforcement and prosecution. Now, in our final story, we hear from Jane Doe, a human trafficking survivor. We have agreed to change her name to protect her identity.

When federal prosecutors released arrest information on the people involved in trafficking Jane Doe, it made national headlines, because one of the perpetrators was the police chief in the small town where they lived

Doe was just 17 years old when this all started. 

“They’ve taken three years of my life telling a story that wasn’t even true,” she said. “There was missing parts of it, and I just want to be able to fill the missing pieces with what actually happened.”

In Doe’s case, her stepmother sold her to a man for sex. That man should have been someone she reported the crime to, not the other way around. 

Both people have been convicted of their crimes. The stepmother has been sentenced, but the man has not received his punishment yet. 

Doe’s birth father struggled with addiction and was out of the picture. Then she lost her mother to cancer and her stepfather eventually remarried. Her stepmother used that as leverage.

“I was told that if I did not do it, that she had my stepdad wrapped around her finger and my mom was gone,” Doe said. “I would never have anybody to love or care about me ever again. If I didn’t do it, I’d be out on the streets.”

Doe’s stepfather wasn’t arrested in connection with this human trafficking case, but Doe said she felt like she was on her own. 

No one would believe me. I was just a girl who lost her mom,” she said. “I was always accused of making up stories, that it was always my fault, that I asked for it, that I wanted it. And I never did. It made me hate myself that people looked at me that way.”

At one point, Doe even attempted suicide. But, despite everything she went through, she has come through the situation stronger. 

It made me who I am today,” Doe said. “And without that, I don’t know if I could face what life throws at me. So I just cope with it day by day. I don’t want to think about it. But the only way to move on from it is to think about it, and put the pieces back together of what was broken.”

Doe has a message for others who may be in a similar situation. 

Don’t give up just because something bad happens to you,” she said. “There’s always a light at the end of the tunnel. I didn’t even see it until the support system that I had backed me up and showed me that I could get through anything.”

As it turned out, once she came forward, Doe developed a new support system. One of those people was Tracy Chapman, the victim advocate for the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of West Virginia. 

“My role is to work with the folks in the system such as investigative agents, assistant U.S. attorneys, probation officers, the courts,” she said. “Making sure that those rights are afforded to victims and making sure that victims know what those rights are and what those services are, that they deserve to help them to heal and overcome the trauma and abuse that they’ve endured.”

One way victim’s advocates help is by making sure victims are prepared to exercise the very important right of letting their voice be heard at sentencing. 

“Jane is certainly a survivor,” Chapman said. “She is not a victim. And she exercised that right in a very, very powerful statement at sentencing. Exercising her right, making sure that the court was aware of the impact of the crime on her throughout her life.”

The following is Jane Doe’s victim statement she wrote for her stepmother and originally read it in court:

You were supposed to be a mother figure in my life when my mom passed away. You have four beautiful babies of your own, yet you still hurt me, a kid. I know that you would never want this to happen to one of your kids. So what made you think it was okay to do it to somebody else’s? I was supposed to look up to you in life as a parent, a role model, a mother figure. I was supposed to trust you and put my faith in you that you would never do something so wrong, that it caused me so much pain. 

My life fell apart when everything happened. And you didn’t seem to notice nor care how it affected me. You knew what you were doing is wrong, but you did it anyway. I don’t sleep at night. I don’t trust anyone. I don’t even know who to look up to for guidance anymore, because I no longer have any parents. When my mom passed, all I wanted was a mother figure, someone to talk to about boys and female things that girls don’t want to talk to their dads about. Instead, I couldn’t trust you or come to you with anything. Because in your eyes, I was nothing more than a pawn, a piece of material that can be sold for money. 

I was 17, a kid, a human being with feelings, and none of that mattered to you. I really wanted a family, somewhere that I felt like I belonged and living there I never felt more like an outcast, a burden, a waste of space. I felt like no matter what I did, I would never be more than just a materialistic pawn for you to use and abuse how you pleased with no consequences or rules set in place for your behavior. You ruined who I was, and you took everything from me. Everything except my voice to speak up. 

Had I not spoke up, who knows how many more people would have gotten hurt because of you. But because of me, you can’t hurt anyone or use anyone as a pawn for money ever again. You broke me, but I’m rebuilding what you broke. And I will become the best version of myself, despite what you put me through. I’m no longer a victim. I’m a survivor.” 

Jane Doe

Human Trafficking Survivor

“And after reading that I told her I forgave her,” Doe said. 

Looking ahead, Doe said she didn’t want to see anyone else go through what she did. Her advice is to speak up. 

“It can be hard because I didn’t reach out until a couple months after it had happened to me because I didn’t have anybody to reach out to,” she said. “But the pain that it causes you, I know that you wouldn’t want to see anyone else go through it. And I’ve told people that I would go through this 1001 times more, just to make sure another kid never went through it. Because I survived. And I don’t want anyone else to lose your life because of it.”

Doe said even she didn’t fully understand or believe everything that happened to her until she testified in court. 

And that is the day that I completely broke down and realized that this is real,” Doe said. “It happened to me and I cannot change the fact that it happened to me but I can change how I move forward in life and what I make of myself.”

This is the final story in a three-part series on human trafficking in West Virginia. 

Human Trafficking Resources:

If you or a loved one is the victim of human trafficking, call the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888, text 233733 or dial 911.

Federal Prosecutors Often Pursue Human Traffickers In W.Va.

There is a chance that human trafficking is going on right in front of us, but most of us don’t know what to look for. In the second of our three-part series on human trafficking in West Virginia, we learn more about the law enforcement and prosecution side of the issue.

Editor’s Note: There is no explicit language in this reporting, but some of the topics may be difficult for some. The first story in this three-part series gave an overview of human trafficking in West Virginia. This second story covers law enforcement and prosecution. In the final story, we’ll hear more from a survivor about her experiences. 

There is a chance that human trafficking is going on right in front of us, but most of us don’t know what to look for.   

William Thompson, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of West Virginia, said it isn’t only an international crime, but also a local one. 

“We’re not seeing young girls being kidnapped off the streets of West Virginia and being shipped overseas,” he said. “Unfortunately, crime is happening right here in our backyard.”

He said teachers and faith and group leaders can be on the lookout for young people caught up in human trafficking.  

Watch for absences, like on Fridays, and Mondays for long weekends,” he said. “Also watch for all of a sudden a person comes in with a new expensive phone or toy or something that doesn’t quite fit.”

He explained that sometimes people being trafficked may have new tattoos that the trafficker uses to keep track of them. 

“Look for them to have a person, a significantly older boyfriend or female companion,” Thompson said.

The weekend absences may mean young people may be taken elsewhere for sex work. 

“Because of our location, six, eight hours in a car and you can be within probably 50 percent of the United States population,” Thompson said. “We’re not that far from a lot of major metropolitan areas. They’re being trafficked to Columbus, Detroit, New York, some of the same places where we get illegal, other bad things coming to us.”

William Ihlenfeld, U.S. attorney for the Northern District of West Virginia, explained that whether it is labor trafficking or sex trafficking, victims are isolated from anyone who can help. 

“Basically, they’re cut off from communication with anyone that might be able to help them,” Ihlenfeld said. “They’re not necessarily being moved from place to place when it comes to labor trafficking, although that’s possible. With sex trafficking, police officers might think it was just a prostitution ring, but in many instances, the females who are involved are victims, and they are being forced to engage in this type of activity by the person who is in control of the situation.”

According to Ihlenfeld, these are often vulnerable people. They might be a runaway. They may have suffered some sort of trauma, or they might have a substance abuse problem, and it is often a family member committing the crime. 

“We just recently had someone sentenced to 40 years in prison for the sex trafficking of her daughter,” Ihlenfeld said. “It’s not something that is always obvious. I’ve heard it referred to as an invisible crime, because it’s very difficult to see, but that’s where training comes in. I think all new officers should be trained in how to identify human trafficking.” 

One way law enforcement becomes aware of the problem is when traffickers begin exchanging images or electronic messages.

The reason that we came on to the case that I mentioned was because of images that were being exchanged between the mother of our victim, and another person involved in the conspiracy,” Ihlenfeld said. 

Because of the nature of these crimes, the West Virginia Fusion Center, a data clearinghouse for law enforcement, has set up a human trafficking program. Samantha Dial is the human trafficking intelligence analyst there.

I use different software and resources available to me at the fusion center, to look through different platforms and look through different areas that traffickers may be utilizing to exploit their victims,” she said. “I will look for red flags and different things that may lead me to believe that they are a potential victim or a potential trafficker.”

Dial said she compiles the information and presents what she finds to the West Virginia Department of Homeland Security. 

“When I do find a potential victim, or a potential trafficker, we are very closely partnered with Homeland Security Investigations in West Virginia,” she said. “I will put together, a lead is what we call it, and it’s a report. I will take that information that I can gather and send that to Homeland Security Investigations here in Charleston. And we kind of put our heads together, and they will open a case on whatever information I found if they found that viable.”

Human trafficking is both a state and federal crime. Often, though, it falls to the U.S. attorneys to prosecute it. For Thompson, that’s a good thing. 

“We have the resources at the federal level,” he said. “I come from the state level. I was a state court judge for 15 years, I’ve seen a lot of it. And some of it is prosecuted at the state level, but we have the resources. And our sentences are harsher on the federal level. This is one time where I’m very glad they’re harsher on the federal level. It’s good for us to get involved if we can.” 

Like most crimes, prosecution of human trafficking can take a long time. It may be hard to find evidence and witnesses and victims may be reluctant to come forward and testify. It takes a team effort of investigators, prosecutors and victim support staff to bring it all together. 

This story is the second in a three-part series on human trafficking in West Virginia. In the final story, we’ll hear from a survivor. 

Human Trafficking Resources:

If you or a loved one is the victim of human trafficking, call the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888, text 233733 or dial 911.

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