Anti-Human Trafficking Awareness ramps up

Because January was National Human Trafficking Awareness Month and Feb. 7, 2026, was the 12th International Day of Prayer and Awareness Against Human Trafficking, it was appropriate that a member of Catholic Charities Diocese of Venice Inc., offered anti-human trafficking talks to local groups in recent weeks.

Alex Olivares, Catholic Charities Regional Director for Lee County, spoke at Resurrection of Our Lord Parish in Fort Myers on Jan. 29, and then to a Senior Life Ministry luncheon at San Pedro Parish in North Port on Feb. 5. Combined, more than 80 people heard the presentations which focused on helping participants understand the different forms of trafficking (sex and labor), helping them identify potential survivors, and explained how and when to report concerns.

“Human trafficking is the biggest social issue of our time,” Olivares said. “It is the second most profitable commodity for organized crime in the world, generating $1.72 billion each year, only lagging behind drug trafficking. The reality is that there are more slaves now, people who are being trafficked each day, than at any other time in history.”

The Catholic Charities team has provided services to more than 250 victims of human trafficking in the region, and Olivares shared some of the cases. One case that hit home for the parents and grandparents who attended the presentations was of an incident at Venice High School in 2014. An older student, with the help of an adult male, drugged and blackmailed four teen girls into prostitution.

“Unlike slavery of the past, with modern-day human trafficking, the chains aren’t visible,” Olivares said. “It is happening all around us.”

Olivares credited Bishop Frank J. Dewane for his outspoken support of the program and ensuring continued funding while outside resources have fluctuated through the years.

Bishop Dewane said “assisting the victims of human trafficking is an important outreach that impacts far too many.  The Catholic Charities team is on the frontlines helping children, and adults, overcome an exploitation that is nearly impossible to comprehend.”

In November 2025, the Catholic Charities Anti-Human Trafficking Team was part of a larger coalition organized to support operation “Home for the Holidays,” a state-wide rescue mission comprised of local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies. A task force, led by the U.S. Marshals Service, located and received 122 missing and endangered Florida children in a two-week operation. Catholic Charities DOV provided safe shelter once the children were rescued, ensuring that the children, including 29 from the Fort Myers region, were cared for in an appropriate and supportive process once freed.

Catholic Charities Diocese of Venice’s support extended beyond the rescue. The Catholic Charities Anti-Human Trafficking Assistance program has a long-standing commitment to the plight of human trafficking in Southwest Florida by providing intensive case management and mental health counseling to all individuals who are the victims of this crime as they attempt to integrate into society after being rescued.

The group works closely with law enforcement agencies and prosecutors throughout Southwest Florida to provide and coordinate an expansive array of services to survivors from basic human needs to legal representation. Comprehensive case management and direct assistance is offered to all victims of severe human trafficking, which include minors, adults, and both domestic and foreign-born individuals. A victim-centered approach is used to deliver aid to clients while maintaining a mission of compassion, integrity, and empathy.

Victims are offered the following services: food and clothing; coordination to a shelter at a safe distance from the site of the exploitation; transitional housing; medical and dental service coordination; mental health counseling; referrals for further mental health services as needed; state and federal laws and benefits orientation and education; benefit application assistance; educational and language service opportunities; liaison with law enforcement and immigration service providers; and coordination with various community agencies for other required services.

Catholic Charities staff is active in various organizations that coordinate efforts to combat human trafficking and to inform the public about this heinous crime.

To learn more about the Anti-Human Trafficking Assistance program, please call 239-738-8722, or visit https://catholiccharitiesdov.org/anti-human-trafficking. If you would like to support this program, you can visit https://catholiccharitiesdov.org/donate.