判例法数据库

贩运人口

United States v. Okhotina

事实梗概

In January 2003, Alana Okhotina 35, a Russian national of West Hollywood, a city in the county of Los Angeles, smuggled her eighteen year old niece from a small town near St. Petersburg into the United States from Russia and forced her to work as a prostitute to repay her smuggling debt. Investigators said Okhotina paid $6,000 to obtain a fraudulent visa for her niece and then forced her to have sex with men in February 2003 in Las Vegas and Los Angeles. Okhotina took the money that her niece received for prostituting herself.

Her niece, told investigators that Okhotina hid her passport, destroyed her plane ticket home, and subjected her to regular beatings, threats and rape by strangers. The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said. The defendant threatened to kill the victim and her family if she did not comply, and told her that she would be arrested if she went to the police because she was here in the United States illegally.

The younger woman, who has since returned to Russia, was freed after she called police.

作者:
UNODC

关键词

《人口贩运议定书》:
《人口贩运议定书》第三条
《人口贩运议定书》第五条
法令:
运输
途径:
恐吓、暴力及其他形式的胁迫
绑架、诱拐
欺骗
滥用职权或脆弱境况
剥削目的:
对他人卖淫行为的剥削或其他形式的性剥削
贩运形式:
国内
剥削发生的部门:
商业化性剥削

交叉问题

性别平等方面的考虑因素

详情

• 女性主犯

程序步骤

法律制度:
民法
最新的法院:
初审法院
诉讼类型:
刑事的
 

受害人/初审原告

受害人:
Anonymous 1
性别:
国籍:
年龄:
18

被告/ 初审被申请人

被告:
Alana Okhotina
性别:
国籍:
年龄:
35
法律推理:

A grand jury charged Okhotina with federal crimes including sex trafficking and transporting a person for prostitution. Her trial was set for July 5. On December 6, 2005, Okhotina entered a guilty plea to one count of trafficking in persons for servitude, in exchange for the dropping of other federal charges. She had just finished serving a 26-month sentence for a state pandering conviction related to her niece when she was taken into custody in May by U.S. marshals on human trafficking and other federal charges.

The government dropped most of the federal charges, however, in exchange for her guilty for trafficking in persons for servitude. The offense carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, but Okhotina's plea bargain called for her to receive 18-21 months in light of the state prison time she had already served.

In Okhotina's plea agreement, she admitted that in January 2003, she paid for a ticket for her niece to fly from Russia to Los Angeles, where she lived with Okhotina at her apartment.

Soon after, Okhotina took possession of her niece's passport and told her she would have to work as a prostitute, the court document states.

Okhotina coerced her niece by telling her she would be arrested if she went to the police because she was in the United States illegally, according to the plea agreement. Okhotina also admitted in her plea agreement that she obstructed justice by sending letters and making telephone calls from jail in which she attempted to influence how witnesses would testify at her trial in this case.

Okhotina was sentenced April 12 2006, to 21 months in federal prison, by U.S. District Judge A. Howard Matz.

This case is the result of an investigation by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Office of Inspector General for the United States Department of Labor, and the Los Angeles Police Department. The case was jointly prosecuted by the United States Attorney's Office and the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice.

指控/索赔/裁决

被告:
Alana Okhotina
立法/法规/法典:
18 U.S.C. § 371
指控详情:
Sex trafficking
陪审团裁决:
Guilty
监禁期:
1 岁 9 月份

法院

United States District Court for the Central District of California

来源/引文

Attorney General’s Annual Report to Congress on U.S. Government Activities to Combat Trafficking in persons. June 2006, p. 20.

http://www.usdoj.gov/ag/annualreports/tr2005/agreporthumantrafficing2005.pdf

Lexis Nexis

The Associated Press State & Local Wire, December 7, 2005, Wednesday, BC cycle

The Daily News of Los Angeles, April 13, 2006 Thursday Valley edition

City News Service, December 7, 2005, April 12, 2006

States News Service, December 6, 2005

US Fed News, December 6, 2005

Associated Press Worldstream, May 17, 2005