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Eavesdropping Uber Driver Helps Rescue 16-Year-Old From Her Pimps (washingtonpost.com)

Slashdot reader sabri writes "In California, an Uber driver saved a 16 year old girl from human traffickers after he overheard them talk about delivering the girl to a customer." The Washington Post reports: Uber driver Keith Avila picked up a passenger who looked like a 12-year-old girl in a short skirt Monday night. That was the first sign that something was off, he would say later. Two women got into his car with the girl outside a house in Sacramento. Halfway to their destination -- a Holiday Inn in Elk Grove, California -- they asked Avila to turn up the music, he said. Then the women turned to the girl. Avila listened in.

"They were describing what they were going to do when they get there: 'Check for guns. Get the money before you start touching up on the guy,'" Avila said on Facebook Live minutes after he dropped off the passengers, then called police to report the women whom he suspected of prostituting the child. The girl was 16, not 12, Elk Grove police told local news outlets. But Avila's suspicions were right, they said. The teen was being sold for sex at the Holiday Inn, and her eavesdropping Uber driver had saved her.

The teen girl was returned to her family, while the two women with her were charged with multiple felonies. The driver had only joined Uber a few weeks earlier, but his Facebook Live video from outside his fare's house has now been viewed more than 240,000 times.

11 of 219 comments (clear)

  1. Not news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Taxi drivers do this all the time. How come it's "BIG NEWS" when it involves uber? Who paid for this advertisement?

    1. Re:Not news by Calydor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Careless idiots overheard planning a criminal act. Person overhearing them called the police!"

      If this is what counts as news today I guess we've got everything under control.

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      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    2. Re:Not news by mark-t · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you are seriously trying to justify the motives and actions of people who engage in human trafficking, there is clearly not enough of a common denominator between us in our values and standards to engage in any kind of useful discussion

    3. Re:Not news by sabri · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's bizarre enough that the age of consent in most states is years older than the majority of people become sexually active

      Which is for a good reason. In my former home country, the age of consent used to be 12. Yes, I kid you not. Once a female human being turned 12 years old, she could legally be humped by a 70 year old grandpa. It was raised to 16 in the late 90s, with one exception: any form of paid services required both participants to be at least 18 years (prostitution is legal there).

      And of course, which male would not want to hump that tight 16 year old's body? Who hasn't walked around in the summer, looking at a hot chick only to realize 3 seconds later that she's only 15? That's the problem: young girls are physically grown to completion, with a nice c-cup and bubble-butt, when they're mentally not ready to consent to a sexual relationship with an adult male. That's why you need a legal framework to protect them.

      Also, don't forget that a lot of these laws were introduced at a time where contraception was not generally available, so the actual age of consent was derived from when a female was deemed fit to take care of a baby.

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      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
  2. disruptive technology by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Prostitution is just Uber for sex.

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    You are welcome on my lawn.
  3. The problem with society by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1, Insightful

    He posted it on Facebook Live and *then* called the police. Thats the astounding part...

  4. what? by ByTor-2112 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just because Uber is involved this is "news"? And almost a week late at that? This is not "news for nerds", sorry.

  5. Re:Uber driver by caseih · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm astounded that you'd blame the victim here ("turn around and do the same thing next week.") She was apparently a vulnerable person who was actively exploited by these two women. She had been reported missing by her family. Whether she ran away or was kidnapped doesn't really change the fact she was exploited, which is wrong and illegal.

    Posting to facebook live astounds me, but come on, the guy did the right thing. Most people would just walk away. Kudos to him for acting, regardless of which taxi company he was working for. Sure if it wasn't uber or didn't involve facebook life, it wouldn't be on slashdot. I agree with you that this story doesn't really belong on Slashdot.

  6. Re: It's a fluff piece for Uber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    For now.

  7. Re:It's a fluff piece for Uber by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm glad the girl got rescued

    I am not sure if "rescued" is the right word. This girl chose this life because her home life was even worse. She was not being guarded 24/7, and TFA implies that she had a cellphone. She could have "self-rescued" at anytime by just dialing 911. But she didn't. So now she is being forced back into the situation she was trying to escape. All the authorities are congratulating themselves and saying "mission accomplished", while they forget about her and move on to the next damsel in distress.

  8. Re:It's a fluff piece for Uber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously?

    Turning a 16 year old into a slave is all about control. You teach her that the cops wont help, you get her hooked on some kind of drug, you create a prison without bars by telling her shes done horrific things that the cops will send her to jail for years over.

    In a physical sense your correct, she was free, but in a mental and emotional sense she was in just as much of a jail as someone behind bars.