Government and Politics
January 2, 2025
From: Montana Governor Greg GianforteHELENA, MT - Together with Attorney General Austin Knudsen, Governor Greg Gianforte today recognized Human Trafficking Prevention Month by reminding Montanans to learn the signs of human trafficking and report it if they see it to help stop the heinous crime.
Human trafficking is a form of modern-day slavery in which traffickers – often organized criminal enterprises – profit at the expense of adults or children compelled to perform labor or engage in commercial sex.
“Human trafficking is a despicable, heartbreaking crime,” Gov. Gianforte said. “Working together with the attorney general and community partners, we’ll continue to do our part to put an end to human trafficking and hold traffickers accountable for their heinous crimes.”
“Over the last four years, we have made great strides toward stopping human trafficking in Montana. We have more agents dedicated to investigations, implemented stiffer penalties for perpetrators, and more Montanans know what human trafficking is and how to report it,” Attorney General Knudsen said. “I will continue to do my part as Attorney General and work with Governor Gianforte to stop this evil crime. Please, do your part – stay vigilant and learn the signs of human trafficking.”
In 2024, Department of Justice agents worked 129 human trafficking-related cases in Montana and opened 21 investigations that have been or will be submitted for prosecution. Agents also conducted four proactive operations in Missoula, Miles City, Helena, and Bozeman targeting patrons of sex trafficking and attempting to rescue survivors of human trafficking. As a result of those operations, eight individuals were arrested and charged with patronizing a prostitute, two individuals were charged with sex trafficking and money laundering, and a number of survivors were recovered.
To crack down on criminals, working together with the attorney general, the governor last year increased penalties for human trafficking and provided prosecutors more tools to bring traffickers to justice. Signing into law House Bill 112, the governor increased the penalties for sex traffickers and patrons of sex trafficking, provided prosecutors with more tools to prosecute sex traffickers, expanded the definition of human trafficking, and helped intensify the crackdown on the sexual abuse of children and all victims.
Last year, Attorney General Knudsen launched a curriculum aimed to educate Montana students on the dangers of human trafficking. The course features human trafficking survivors and DCI agents who are on the front lines combatting human trafficking.
This year, Attorney General Knudsen will co-host the GRIT conference in Bozeman with anti-human trafficking organizations to bring professionals from across the Rocky Mountain region together to tackle rural challenges and discuss solutions to fight against human trafficking and exploitation.
Attorney General Knudsen has also increased human trafficking training for county attorneys, Montana Highway Patrol Troopers, and law enforcement cadets at the Montana Law Enforcement Academy.
Today, Gov. Gianforte proclaimed January 2025 as Human Trafficking Awareness Month and January 11, 2025, as Human Trafficking Awareness Day in Montana. View the proclamation here.
Make sure you the signs as potential indicators of sex trafficking may include:
If you believe you witness human trafficking: