Sex Trafficking Victim Lisa Montgomery’s Execution Would Be The Last Injustice in Her Tragic Life

In 2004, child sex trafficking victim, Lisa Montgomery, was arrested and later sentenced to the death penalty. Tonight, her fate rests in the hands of the President of the United States who has shown a strong push toward executions before President-elect Joe Biden takes office and likely halts federal executions.

Lisa’s life and likely death should not be political, but it is. She has suffered enough in a country where victims like her are often overlooked and left to fend for themselves.

Victims of child sex trafficking like Lisa are abused, tortured and sexually abused often for years. I see Lisa’s execution as society just cleaning up the mess they caused by not helping her as a child. It terrifies me. I know what’s like to be a child victim in prison. I’ve been locked up for 9 years after my trafficker trafficked another teen girl alongside me.”

— Tiffany Simpson, Survivor and Advocacy Lab Associate, Karana Rising

Lisa’s death would show just how far we have to go to understanding sex trafficking and protecting victims before it’s too late. Child sex trafficking victims are not invisible. They are children who went to schools, churches, doctors and played on playgrounds. Lisa was never identified as a child victim despite severe sexual abuse by parents who were so awful that her older foster sister was removed from her care. We can’t help but ask why Lisa was left to such a horrible fate and why were her rapists never held accountable?

In 2015, federal legislation mandated that child sex trafficking is a form of child abuse. If the federal government now understands that what happened to Lisa was child abuse, how can they then allow her execution?

There are so many young victims of human trafficking who are systematically ignored and even mistreated by the very systems — such as the child welfare system — meant to protect them.

There are survivors like Jessica and Jordan Hampton, two teen victims of sex trafficking who are being charged with the murder of the pedophile who was about to buy and rape them.

Then, there is Tiffany Simpson, a teen victim of sex trafficking whose trafficker forced her to traffic another girl or he would burn her grandmother alive. She is serving 20 years of a 30 year sentence.

All of these survivors should have been seen and helped BEFORE they were forced into acts that have landed them in jail. The real injustice is that they were not. Killing Lisa and leaving so many other young survivors to rot in jail is not justice. It’s the legal system’s way of making survivors disappear so that society can simply look away.” — Andrea Powell, Executive Director, Karana Rising

If someone in Lisa’s life had paid attention to her abuse and suffering, which was not hidden, she could have gotten help. Maybe she would have been able to lead a safer and more loving life. Maybe she would not have been mentally broken to the point of committing the crime that she did. Maybe another little girl would still have her mom. Now, the systems that should have protected her are being used to likely kill her.

Killing Lisa would be the last injustice in her tragic life. Pardoning her would be an act of mercy.

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on google
Share on email

Fecha Talaso

Fecha Talaso is the co-founder and director of partnerships at Karana Rising. Fecha  is a certified victim advocate using her eight  years of advocacy and direct service work to cultivate staff growth and development to advance the mission of Karana Rising and the individual goals of the survivors on our team.

Fecha works alongside the executive director to develop and advance policies and programs supporting survivor justice and and healing, including external earned media and owned media consumption. Fecha is responsible for creating and managing Karana Rising’s communications, website, virtual survivor mentoring and workshop portal and social media channels. She is responsible for the development and management of programmatic and development partnerships. 

Prior to joining Karana Rising, Fecha was the prevention education specialist at FAIR Girls, a nonprofit that serves young women survivors of human trafficking, and residential counselor for FAIR Girls’ Vida Home. 
 
Longing for a day when justice is perfect with a deeper international lens from which to view the health and humanitarian challenges facing people around the globe,wealth of experience and practical experience in development and a deep belief in the power of partnership and collaboration and transformation of vulnerable populations and communities at large has continually reenergized the urge to change the world in her own little ways. She dares to dream and passionately to fight criminal and social injustices, as well as retrogressive practices that marginalize vulnerable populations like women and children. She can be reached at fecha@karanarising.org

Andrea Powell

Andrea Powell is the co-founder and executive director at Karana Rising. Ms. Powell is Karana Rising’s chief liaison to the D.C. Human Trafficking Task Force where she co-chairs the training and outreach committee.

 Prior to founding Karana Rising, Andrea was the founding executive director of FAIR Girls, a nonprofit that serves young women survivors of human trafficking. Ms. Powell is also the Director of Survivor and Youth Engagement at Unitas. In 2014, Andrea led the FAIR Girls’ team to create and open the only safe home for young survivors of human trafficking in the nation’s capital area. Andrea has led crisis response teams where she assisted law enforcement and other front-line responders in finding and recovering survivors of human trafficking who were later offered safety and supportive services. She received her Masters of European Union Law at the Center for European Integration Studies from the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Germany and Bachelor of Arts and Science in International Relations from Texas State University. Andrea’s writing has been published in the New York Times, CNN, PBS, Huffington Post, Marie Claire, MSNBC, NBC THINX, Thompson Reuters, FAIR Observer, and the Washington Post. She also sits a private consultant for Freedom Fwd and Project Explorer. She can be reached at andrea@karanarising.com