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2022 HUMAN TRAFFICKING ACADEMY
Instructors

Founding Director of the Human Trafficking Academy

Prof. Dr. Roza Pati
Founder & Director
The John J. Brunetti Human Trafficking Academy
Professor of Law & Executive Director
LL.M./ J.S.D. Program in Intercultural Human Rights
St. Thomas University College of Law, Miami, FL
Member, Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, The Vatican
Prof. Dr. Roza Pati

Founder & Director
The John J. Brunetti Human Trafficking Academy
Professor of Law & Executive Director
LL.M./ J.S.D. Program in Intercultural Human Rights
St. Thomas University College of Law, Miami, FL
Member, Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, The Vatican

Prof. Dr. Roza Pati is a tenured Professor of Law at St. Thomas University College of Law, where she also co-directs the programs of Master of Laws and the Doctorate of the Science of Law in Intercultural Human Rights. Inspired by her work against human trafficking since the early 1990s, Dr. Pati founded in 2010 the John J. Brunetti Human Trafficking Academy, an institute she continues to direct.

Dr. Pati is a prolific scholar, who has written extensively in the field of international law, human rights, human trafficking and international criminal law. She is a globally published author of books, book chapters and law review articles in multiple languages and she lectures at academic, governmental and inter-governmental institutions around the world. She earned her Doctorate of the Science of Law degree, summa cum laude, at the University of Potsdam, Germany, her LL.M., summa cum laude, at St. Thomas University College of Law, and her B.A., highest honors, and LL.B., honors, at the University of Tirana, Albania.

Her areas of expertise include international law, human rights law, comparative law, human trafficking law, terrorism law, and she is a proponent of the New Haven School of Jurisprudence. Dr. Pati is Faculty Adviser of the Intercultural Human Rights Law Review and member of the Editorial Board of the international series: Studies in Intercultural Human Rights, published by BRILL/ Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.

Formerly a Member of Parliament and a Cabinet Member serving as the Secretary of State for Youth and Women of Albania, Dr. Pati has a wealth of experience in public service and academia. In 2012, Dr. Pati was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI to serve as Member of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace at the Vatican, and in 2020 she was appointed by the Holy Father Pope Francis to serve as Member of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, The Vatican.

Keynote Address

The Honorable Jeanette Nuñez

Lieutenant Governor of Florida
The Honorable Jeanette Nuñez

Lieutenant Governor of Florida

Jeanette M. Nuñez was born and raised in Miami, Florida. She was elected as Florida’s First Hispanic Female Lieutenant Governor of Florida in 2018. She previously served as a State Representative of the Florida House of Representatives from 2010 to 2018 and was named Speaker Pro Tempore from 2016 to 2018.

In November 2016, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez was named Speaker Pro Tempore of the Florida House of Representatives. She served as the Vice Chair of the Appropriations Committee and served on the Rules and Policy Committee. She was appointed Chair of the Select Committee on Hurricane Response and Preparedness. In the past, she chaired the Health Quality Subcommittee, Government Operations and Technology Appropriations Subcommittee, and Higher Education and Workforce Subcommittee.

She began her healthcare career working at Jackson Health System in 2004 as the State Director for Government Relations and handled all aspects of the organization’s state affairs. In 2006, she was promoted to Vice President of Government Relations and was responsible for overseeing the advocacy efforts at the local, state and federal level. In addition to her duties, she served on numerous boards and healthcare organizations, including the National Association of Public Hospitals Fellowship Program. In 2010, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez joined Hospital Corporation of America (HCA) as their Vice President of Community Affairs for both Kendall Regional Medical Center and Aventura Hospital and Medical Center. She oversaw their community outreach for 3 and half years and was responsible for a number of marketing and business development initiatives.

In late 2013, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez began her own consulting firm, OnPoint Strategies. She has been working with Jackson Health System, providing them with strategic advice on service line and business development. She has also been tasked to work with the Managed Care Department and Population Health.

Over the years, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez has demonstrated her ongoing commitment to the South Florida community through her active involvement in various local organizations and professional groups. She has been involved with the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, Leadership Miami, WHEN, and Women in Government. In 2007, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez was named Hispanic Woman of Distinction. From 2007 – 2015, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez served on the Board of Kristi House, an organization dedicated to children who are victims of sexual abuse. Additionally, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez served as a member of the Statewide Council of Human Trafficking. The 15-member Council, chaired by State Attorney General Pam Bondi, was created to support victims of human trafficking by enhancing the available care options. Recently, Lieutenant Governor Nuñez was appointed to the National Assessment Governing Board which sets policy for the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), also known as The Nation’s Report Card. She was also appointed to the Constitution Revision Commission which examined the Florida Constitution, identified issues, performed research and possible recommendations to amend the Florida Constitution.

Lieutenant Governor Nuñez is a proud graduate of Florida International University (FIU) and a lifetime member of the FIU Alumni Association. She earned her Bachelor of Arts in International Relations and Political Science, her Master of Public Administration from FIU, and a Six Sigma Certificate from the University of Miami. Lieutenant Governor Nuñez has served in the past as an adjunct professor at Florida International University.  She is also a graduate from Leadership Miami. Lieutenant Governor Nuñez attends Christ Fellowship West Kendall Campus. Lieutenant Governor Nuñez is married to her husband of 23 years, Adrian Nuñez, and together they are the proud parents of three children – Megan age 20; Justin, age 17; and Jason, age 12.

 

Team of Instructors

The Honorable Bella Hounakey
Member, U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Program Specialist, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Washington, D.C.
The Honorable Bella Hounakey

Member, U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Program Specialist, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Washington, D.C.

Bella Hounakey is a Human Trafficking Survivor Advocate dedicated to supporting victims as they navigate life after victimization. As a member of the President’s U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking, Ms. Hounakey contributed to the landmark Executive Order on Combating Human Trafficking and Online Child Exploitation and leads trafficking education and victim advocacy initiatives.

Ms. Hounakey is currently employed at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) serving children at risk of exploitation. She provides consulting services and technical assistance to NGO; domestic and foreign governments to achieve the goals of the TVPA. Ms. Hounakey received her Bachelor’s and Masters degree from Western Michigan University.

Prof. Dr. Mohamed Y. Mattar
United Nations Senior Expert in Criminal Justice &
Clinical Professor of Law
Qatar University College of Law
Doha, Qatar
Prof. Dr. Mohamed Y. Mattar

United Nations Senior Expert in Criminal Justice &
Clinical Professor of Law
Qatar University College of Law
Doha, Qatar

Dr. Mattar is a Clinical Professor of Law and the Director of the Law Clinic at Qatar University College of Law. Dr. Mattar’s professional expertise is in comparative and international law.  Recognized as an international expert on anti-trafficking legislation, Dr. Mattar has worked over 15 years in more than 75 countries, including countries in the Middle East, to promote state compliance with international human rights standards and to advise governments on drafting, and enforcing human rights laws. Dr. Mattar has testified in the United States on the status of human trafficking around the world at various Congressional Hearings. He also testified before the Russian Duma, the Mexican Senate, the Inter-American Human Rights Commission and the Egyptian Parliament.

He was the Executive Director of The Protection Project of the Foreign Policy Institute at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, D.C., from 2005 to 2014. In this role, he directed and supervised seven areas: Trafficking in Persons; Clinical Legal Education; Corporate Social Responsibility; Legal Reform; Promotion of Religious Dialogue; Enhancing Capacity of Civil Society; and Human Rights Education. He monitored, analyzed and reported on violations of human rights, conducted training and capacity building programs for NGOs, government officials and service providers, while working towards universal implementation of human rights.

He has taught at Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, D.C., and Indiana University School of Law in Indianapolis. Dr. Mattar teaches courses on International Trafficking in Persons; Labor Law; Corporate Social Responsibility; International Contract Law; Investment and Trade Laws of the Middle East; Islamic Law; Introduction to the American Legal System; International Business and Human Rights; and Legal Ethics. His latest publications include Medical Liability for Trafficking in Persons for the Purpose of Human Experimentation: International Standards and Comparative Models from Arab Jurisdictions, International Annals of Criminology 2017.

Dr. Mattar is a consultant at The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), where he advises on International and National Laws on Combating Trafficking in Persons, Legislative Drafting, Drafting of Strategies and Action Plans, Legal Aid, and Middle East Legal Systems.

Dr. Mattar received his Doctorate of Juridical Sciences (S.J.D.) and Master of Laws (LL.M) from Tulane University, his Master of Comparative Law (M.C.L.) from the University of Miami, and his License en Droit (LL.B.) from Alexandria University where he still serves as a non-resident distinguished professor of law.

Anna Y. Park, Esq.
Regional Attorney, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission – Los Angeles District Office
Los Angeles, CA
Anna Y. Park, Esq.

Regional Attorney, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission – Los Angeles District Office
Los Angeles, CA

Anna Y. Park is the Regional Attorney for the Los Angeles District Office of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”). Ms. Park is one of fifteen Regional Attorneys tasked nationally to oversee and direct all employment discrimination litigation on behalf of the EEOC within the Office of General Counsel. Ms. Park’s vast region covers Central & Southern California, Nevada, Hawaii, and the U.S. territories which includes Guam, American Samoa, Wake Island, and the Northern Mariana Islands. She is the first AANHPI woman to hold this position.

Since joining the EEOC, Ms. Park has brought influential and innovative cases to advance the civil rights work of the EEOC. Ms. Park has been recognized for her work on groundbreaking cases like EEOC v. Trans Bay Steel and EEOC v. Global Horizons, et al., challenging labor trafficking as a civil rights violation under federal anti-discrimination laws. Notably, Global Horizons was the largest national origin/race discrimination case brought by the EEOC, garnering judgments and settlements exceeding $23 million on behalf of Thai farmworkers.

She has also brought significant cases on behalf of vulnerable populations spanning a myriad of industries, including agriculture, construction, trucking, gaming, entertainment, garment, hospitality, food and beverage, travel, and janitorial services. Recently, Ms. Park resolved the sexual harassment, pregnancy discrimination, and related retaliation case against the video game giant Activision, et. al. for $18 million, the largest sexual harassment resolution the district has ever recovered.  The case of EEOC v. ABM Industries, Inc. et al., was featured on PBS’s Frontline: “Rape on the Night Shift,” which resolved for $5.8 million and was one of the first cases brought on behalf of women working in janitorial services by the EEOC. In 2020, she was the architect of the $10 million resolution with JPL for age discrimination.

Ms. Park is consulted as a subject matter expert within and outside of the EEOC on discrimination issues including human trafficking, intersection of employment and immigration laws, sexual harassment, and other complex employment discrimination issues. She also serves on numerous regional taskforces for human trafficking and is an active member of the White House Initiative on Asian American Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders Regional Network.

The Honorable Robert R. Lung
District Court Judge, 18th Judicial Circuit of Colorado
Chair (2020) & Member (2018-2020), U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Castle Rock, CO
The Honorable Robert R. Lung

District Court Judge, 18th Judicial Circuit of Colorado
Chair (2020) & Member (2018-2020), U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Castle Rock, CO

Judge Robert Lung currently serves as a District Court Judge in Colorado.  He also provides presentations nationally and internationally on issues such as human trafficking, childhood trauma and resiliency to an exceptionally diverse audience base including the military, the medical field, the educational field (including the U.S. Department of Education), various judiciaries, faith-based organizations, first-responders, mental health professionals and law enforcement.  In 2016 Judge Lung was appointed by then Colorado Chief Justice Nancy Rice to serve as the Judicial Representative of the Colorado Human Trafficking Council and he was elected the Vice-Chair from 2018 to 2020.  In 2017 Judge Lung was Presidentially appointed to the National Advisory Council on the Sex Trafficking of Children and Youth in the United States on which he served from 2017 to 2022.  Judge Lung was also Presidentially appointed to the U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking from 2018 to 2020 and was elected the Chair in 2020.

In 2021 Judge Lung served as an Adjunct Professor at St. Thomas University College of Law and taught Human Rights Lawyering. Judge Lung is also a consultant with Office for Victims of Crime under the U.S. Department of Justice, the Office on Trafficking in Persons under the U.S. Administration for Children and Families, the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons under the U.S. State Department and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). In his “free time” Judge Lung works on writing his first book, a biography about hope and resiliency, and he endeavors to keep up with his two adopted sons in hiking and downhill mountain biking.

Dr. Hilary Chester
Associate Director of Anti-Trafficking Programs
Migration and Refugee Services
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
Washington, D.C.
Dr. Hilary Chester

Associate Director of Anti-Trafficking Programs
Migration and Refugee Services
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
Washington, D.C.

Dr. Hilary Chester directs the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Anti-Trafficking Program.  The Anti-Trafficking Program has several initiatives, including a national education and awareness raising campaign directed to immigrant communities; a program of specialized employment and job readiness services to U.S. citizen and foreign-national trafficking survivors; a global coalition to address human trafficking in the fishing and maritime industries and the ongoing development and delivery of training curricula, evaluations and quality improvement planning for service delivery and outreach programs; research and advocacy.

Dr. Chester has over 12 years of experience working with vulnerable migrants, including unaccompanied children, victims of human trafficking and refugees; program management, social science research and evaluation. She provides expert consultations on child trafficking cases to the U.S. government and is frequently invited to participate in multi-disciplinary working groups on human trafficking, especially at the intersections of trafficking and migration and the application of new technologies and use of data. She received her doctorate in Anthropology from Southern Methodist University.

The Honorable Suleman Masood
Council Chair
U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Fairfax, VA
The Honorable Suleman Masood

Council Chair
U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Fairfax, VA

Suleman Masood is a subject matter expert on domestic labor trafficking and male victimization. Since 2013, his advocacy experience allowed him to work exclusively with state and federal government agencies and non-profit organizations. Mr. Masood’s expertise includes collaborating with victim service providers and task forces on advocating for ways to improve the quality of services for trafficking survivors. This work emphasizes the need to build partnerships with survivors and ensure that strategies and implementation influence a survivor-informed approach. Mr. Masood currently serves as Council Chair for the United States Advisory Council on Human Trafficking. Through Mr. Masood’s leadership, the Advisory Council provides recommendations on federal anti-trafficking policies to the President’s Interagency Task Force to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons (PITF).

Mr. Masood’s partnerships with service providers and first responders include serving as a program specialist on behalf of the Office on Trafficking in Persons and working as a consultant for various prosecutors’ offices across the United States. In 2017, Mr. Masood participated in the Human Trafficking Leadership Academy, a pilot leadership development fellowship under the Office on Trafficking in Persons and the National Human Trafficking Training and Technical Assistance Center. Mr. Masood’s cohort was tasked with creating a recommendations report and was credited with coining the phrase “survivor-informed,” which was adopted and published by the Administration for Children and Families. Mr. Masood graduated magna cum laude with a degree in Criminology/Victimology from Fresno State University and currently attends the University of the District of Columbia – David A. Clarke School of Law, where he aspires to create meaningful change within the criminal justice system.

Daniel Werner, Esq.
Attorney, Radford & Keebaugh, LLC
Co-Founder, Workers’ Rights Law Center of New York
Founding Board Member, Freedom Network USA
Atlanta, GA
Daniel Werner, Esq.

Attorney, Radford & Keebaugh, LLC
Co-Founder, Workers’ Rights Law Center of New York
Founding Board Member, Freedom Network USA
Atlanta, GA

Daniel Werner is a bilingual (Spanish/English) lawyer with 25 years’ experience advocating for workers and victims of egregious civil rights abuses. He achieves positive results for his clients through careful listening, strategic thinking, and tenacious advocacy.

Mr. Werner began his career as an attorney representing farmworkers who toiled in orange groves, onion fields and apple orchards. He filed litigation, including several large class actions, against the agricultural employers who routinely underpaid and exploited his clients. Mr. Werner developed his cases through community legal education, outreach visits to rural labor camps, in-depth research, and considering all potential legal claims, including novel legal theories. His zealous representation resulted in dozens of damages awards and settlements benefitting thousands of migrant workers in Florida and New York. He also represented immigrant clients in civil rights litigation, including a precedent-setting case the Third Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals called “a paradigmatic case of racial profiling.”

Mr. Werner went on to receive a prestigious Echoing Green Fellowship and co-founded the non-profit Workers’ Rights Law Center of New York. There, he continued to defend the labor and civil rights of exploited immigrant workers and day-laborers. Among his many ground-breaking cases, he successfully led the first-ever lawsuit for labor trafficking survivors under newly-enacted federal anti-trafficking protections. Through that case and others that followed, Mr. Werner developed important legal precedent and became a sought-after expert on civil litigation for trafficking survivors, publishing on the subject and lecturing in the United States and internationally. He also was a founding Board member of the non-profit Freedom Network USA, the preeminent human trafficking survivor advocacy organization.

In 2008, Mr. Werner joined the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) where he litigated complex workers’ rights and civil rights cases, built and led diverse teams, thought creatively about how to effectively serve immigrants in the South, and designed programming to win justice for the most isolated and deserving. For example, he spearheaded a seven-year labor trafficking lawsuit against a Mississippi-based shipyard operator on behalf of hundreds of pipefitters and welders recruited from India to help repair Gulf Coast oil rigs damaged during hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The workers paid up to $25,000 for positions based on false promises of green cards. After a six-week jury trial, the first group of five plaintiffs was awarded $14 million in damages. To recognize this groundbreaking win, Mr. Werner and his team were named Public Justice Foundation’s 2015 Trial Lawyers of the Year. Most recently, Mr. Werner pioneered and directed SPLC’s Southeast Immigrant Freedom Initiative, an ambitious project aimed at providing high-quality representation to immigrants detained in the Deep South.

In addition to his work for clients, Mr. Werner has extensive experience with international consulting and policy advocacy. For example, as a volunteer with the American Bar Association’s Rule of Law Initiative, Mr. Werner advised and trained local governments and community leaders in Mongolia, China, and the Solomon Islands to develop a legal framework for combatting human trafficking and achieving justice for survivors of forced labor. He has testified about migrant labor exploitation in front of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and he traveled to the Russian Federation with representatives of the Obama Administration as part of a Bilateral Presidential Commission addressing forced labor and migration issues.

Mr. Werner also is a visiting instructor at Georgia State University, where he teaches Introduction to American Law.

Mr. Werner received his law degree from the State University of New York at Buffalo School of Law in 1996. He graduated from Grinnell College with a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology and Spanish in 1991 and was

Ana I. Vallejo, Esq.
Co-Director & Attorney, VIDA Legal Assistance, Inc.
Former Coordinator, Human Trafficking Academy
Miami, FL
Ana I. Vallejo, Esq.

Co-Director & Attorney, VIDA Legal Assistance, Inc.
Former Coordinator, Human Trafficking Academy
Miami, FL

Ms. Ana Isabel Vallejo is a co-director of VIDA Legal Assistance, Inc., a non-profit organization dedicated to advancing the rights of immigrant survivors of domestic violence, sexual violence, trafficking in persons and other violent crimes.  From 2011 to 2013, she was the Project Coordinator for the Human Trafficking Academy of the Graduate Program in Intercultural Human Rights at St. Thomas University School of Law.  Prior to her joining St. Thomas University and VIDA, she supervised a team of four attorneys and three paralegals, while representing low-income immigrant women and children victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, rape, incest, and other gender related violent crimes.

For more than 10 years, Ms. Vallejo has dedicated her practice to representing survivors of human trafficking (modern day slavery).  She has worked tirelessly in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Section Civil Rights Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office, The Federal Bureau of Investigations and the Department of Homeland Security to insure that victims of trafficking have access to justice.  Recently, Ms. Vallejo appeared as a witness before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission where she testified on issues related to trafficking in persons in the context of the agricultural industry in Florida.  Ms. Vallejo has also participated as faculty at international trainings and conferences geared towards law enforcement and government officials sponsored by the Department of Justice, Criminal Division Office of Prosecutorial Development, Assistance and Training (OPDAT) in Panama, El Salvador and Mexico. Additionally, she has presented at international conferences on the topic of access to justice for survivors of trafficking in persons in Thailand, Spain and Puerto Rico.

Prior to working with survivors of trafficking in persons, Ms. Vallejo represented hundreds of victims of human rights violations seeking protection in the United States.  In the course of her duties, she appeared before the Department of Homeland Security’s Bureaus of Citizenship and Immigration Services and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (formerly the Immigration and Naturalization Service), the Executive Office for Immigration Review and the Board of Immigration Appeals.  Additionally, Ms. Vallejo’s experience includes the research and writing of three amicus curiae briefs — two for the European Court of Human Rights and one for the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.  She has researched and written in the area of Women’s Human Rights, specifically on the issues of female genital mutilation, forced prostitution and trafficking of women for commercial sexual exploitation.  She received a B.A. in Political Science and a B.A. in International Affairs from Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; a law degree from St. Thomas University School of Law, Miami, Florida; and a Master of Laws degree in Intercultural Human Rights Law from St. Thomas University School of Law, Miami, Florida, where she graduated cum laude.

The Honorable Harold D’Souza
President & Co-Founder, Eyes Open International
Co-Chair (2016-2017) & Member (2015-2020), U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Cincinnati, OH
The Honorable Harold D’Souza

President & Co-Founder, Eyes Open International
Co-Chair (2016-2017) & Member (2015-2020), U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking
Cincinnati, OH

Harold D’Souza is a survivor of labor trafficking and debt bondage in the United States of America. Originally from India, Harold D’Souza is well educated and experienced in sales management. He has a Bachelor’s degree in Business and a Master’s of Commerce from The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda. Mr. D’Souza stepped down from a senior management position to pursue the American Dream, which he believed was within his reach.

Mr. D’Souza came to the U. S. following the advice and encouragement of a man who would become his trafficker. For over 18 months, Harold was exploited at the hands of the human trafficker, losing his freedom and struggling to keep his family safe.

Today, Mr. D’Souza is a Survivor-Advocate and Public Speaker. His experience has given him a new purpose and meaning in life. Mr. D’Souza is the co-founder of Eyes Open International, a non-profit focused on developing prevention efforts through survivor-informed research. Today, Eyes Open International is an inspiration worldwide. Mr. D’Souza also sits on the Board of Directors for Justice at Last and remains active in local anti-trafficking organizations and efforts.

United States President Barack Obama appointed Harold to the United States Advisory Council on Human Trafficking in 2015, and he has continued his service under President Donald Trump through July 2020. He is also an expert consultant to the Department of State’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons.

Mr. D’Souza strives to be the voice of courage, hope, and freedom for trafficking victims. He has been invited to speak throughout the United States and India, Africa, Europe, and the Middle East. In addition, he has spoken at Harvard University and addressed the United Nations on the importance of recognizing and protecting vulnerable populations susceptible to trafficking.

In 2017 he was awarded both the Liberator Award and the iCan award for his activism and work with other survivors. In addition, he has recently published a book titled Human Trafficking: A Frog in a Well.

Mr. D’Souza has been recognized with the “Rashtra Perna Award 2021” for his social activist mission. In addition, the World Book of Star Record jury members chose Harold D’Souza, based in the United States of America, for his services in India and Worldwide. films are in creation telling Harold’s story.

As of spring 2022, two different films are in production telling Harold’s story. To Be Free (in development) is the debut feature documentary film produced and directed by Benjamin Ryan Nathan and executive produced by Martin Sheen. The film shines a light on the pervasiveness of labor trafficking in the United States, how we can spot it in our neighborhoods, and the steps we can take to eradicate this form of modern-day slavery on a systematic level. In addition, Silver Screen has a Biopic Film in progress by International Film Producers & Directors.  Details about both films will be posted on the Eyes Open International Website.

Mr. D’Souza believes in fixing the problem rather than blaming and thinks nothing is impossible if he stays focused on his mission. His favorite quotes include “I am a poor starter, but a strong finisher,” and “Don’t worry, be happy.”

R. Andrew Free, Esq.
Immigration Attorney
Law Office of Andrew Free
Nashville, TN
R. Andrew Free, Esq.

Immigration Attorney
Law Office of Andrew Free
Nashville, TN

Andrew Free is an Atlanta-based lawyer, researcher, writer, teacher, advocate, and strategy consultant. He founded #DetentionKills, a transnational abolitionist project formed to support families and communities affected by deaths in DHS custody by organizing people in motion to demand transparency, accountability, and decarceration. He served as class counsel for more than a hundred thousand current and formerly detained immigrant workers challenging involuntary work for unjust pay in ICE detention facilities. He is a 2010 graduate of Vanderbilt University Law School and a 2004 graduate of Kennesaw State University.

Cristobal Perez, MEPsy
Deputy Director of Programs & Data
Coalition for Independent Living Options
West Palm Beach, FL
Cristobal Perez, MEPsy

Deputy Director of Programs & Data
Coalition for Independent Living Options
West Palm Beach, FL

Cristobal Perez is an Educational Psychologist who obtained his Bachelor's degree in Denver, Colorado, and his Master's degree in Santiago, Chile. He has worked supervising social workers in non-profit settings, as well as conducting trainings to health providers, social service agencies, federal and local law enforcement agencies and community associations for over 14 years. He currently works as the Deputy Director of Programs and Data for the Coalition for Independent Living Options, Inc. (CILO), a non-profit agency in West Palm Beach, FL, that works with children and adults with disabilities. As Deputy Director he analyzes agency-wide programmatic data and provides oversight and management of the Information & Referral, Food Pantry, Social Security Advocacy, and Treasure Coast Services staff.

In addition to his role in CILO, Cristobal is a consultant working on subjects related to vulnerable populations like unaccompanied refugee minors and victims of sex and labor trafficking. A published author and academic guest lecturer, Cristobal has received local and nationwide recognitions for his work on human trafficking.

Dr. Angela Reed rsm
Head of Mercy Global Action &
Representative to United Nations
Mercy International Association
New York, NY
Dr. Angela Reed rsm

Head of Mercy Global Action &
Representative to United Nations
Mercy International Association
New York, NY

Dr. Angela Reed rsm PhD is the current Head of Mercy Global Action (MGA), the justice arm of Mercy International Association. Dr. Reed rsm is the Mercy representative to the United Nations where the Sisters of Mercy hold Special Consultative Status. Dr. Reed rsm is a graduate of RMIT University’s School of Global, Urban and Social Studies, in Melbourne, Australia where she completed her PhD on Human Trafficking. While living in the Philippines, her research focused on giving voice to Filipino women who had been trafficked for the purpose of sexual exploitation.

Through her intimate knowledge of women’s lived experience of trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation, Dr. Angela Reed rsm co-edited the book I Have a Voice: Trafficked women – in their own words and proposed a new paradigm encompassing the "Life Course" approach. In an effort to strengthen government and community policy responses to those vulnerable to being trafficked, she recommends a preventative approach to human trafficking which prioritize 17 "Optimal Life Course Conditions" (OLCCs) for the protection, promotion, and development of those at risk of trafficking. Dr. Reed rsm has presented her research and developments at United Nations conferences, educational workshops, public lectures, country embassies and many other forums. At a one-day workshop to begin formulating a comprehensive action-framework to prevent human trafficking organized by Catholic Relief Services and The Centre for Civil and Human Rights, University of Notre her keynote address was titled: “What is the OLCC Approach, and how does it relate to efforts to prevent human trafficking”.

Prior to her research, Dr. Angela Reed rsm was a part time lecturer for the Master of Social Work courses at RMIT University and coordinator at a women’s safe house in Melbourne, Australia. She managed ’Mercy Care,” a women’s safe house for 7 years where she encountered many women and children who were experiencing violence and abuse. Additionally, Dr. Angela Reed rsm was awarded the Vincent Fairfax Ethics in Leadership Fellowship in 2008 where she was one of fifteen Australian leaders chosen from business, government, and community.

Over the years, she has integrated her professional background in education, social work and theology to adopt an interdisciplinary approach to research, service provision and public advocacy. Her primary research interest is on gendered violence and in particular human trafficking.

Dr. Regina Bernadin
Senior Technical Advisor, Protection and Anti-trafficking
International Rescue Committee
Miami, FL
Dr. Regina Bernadin

Senior Technical Advisor, Protection and Anti-trafficking
International Rescue Committee
Miami, FL

Dr. Regina Bernadin is the Senior Technical Advisor for Protection and Anti-trafficking Program at the International Rescue Committee (IRC) where she supports the organizations protection efforts in the United States and Europe.  She is also part of Framework—a national training and technical assistance provider building capacity to address labor trafficking. She has held various roles at the IRC, including serving as the Deputy Director of the Miami office. Previously, she served as the Statewide Human Trafficking Coordinator with the Florida Department of Children and Families.  She is a consultant for the Department of Justice Office for Victims of Crime Training and Technical Assistance Center and the National Human Trafficking Training and Technical Assistance Center on human rights issues. Additionally, she is a member of Freedom Network USA’s Speaker’s Bureau.

Dr. Bernadin also conducts presentations and trainings nationally, in English and Spanish, on victim identification, service provision and collaboration. She has also overseen targeted outreach campaigns aimed at increasing the number of trafficking survivors identified in the community. Internationally, she has trained on the topic of conflict analysis and resolution and the implementation of anti-trafficking initiatives.  Her interest in the development of human rights abroad has taken her to several countries, including Haiti, Colombia, Ecuador, Suriname and Tanzania.

She holds a B.A. in International Studies and Criminology from the University of Miami and an M.A in International Administration and Certificate in Non-profit Management from that same institution.  She received her Ph.D. in Conflict Analysis and Resolution at Nova Southeastern University. Her dissertation focused on refugee self-sufficiency. Dr. Bernadin is a published author and blogger, and active member of various advisory boards and committees, including of the Board of Directors of the Florida Council Against Sexual Violence. Dr. Bernadin is the recipient of the Sarlo Distinguished Humanitarian Award and the Janita Lee Award for Victim Advocate Professional of the Year.

Jill Marie Bussey, Esq.
Director for Public Policy
Lutheran Immigration & Refugee Service
Columbia, MD
Jill Marie Bussey, Esq.

Director for Public Policy
Lutheran Immigration & Refugee Service
Columbia, MD

Jill Marie Bussey serves as the Director for Public Policy of the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service (LIRS) where she leads in developing and promoting immigration and refugee policy recommendations on behalf of LIRS, its network, and clients. Jill Marie also serves as a key leader in the Evacuate Our Allies coalition, a coalition of human rights, religious, and refugee resettlement organizations working alongside veterans and frontline civilians to evacuate at-risk Afghan allies to safety. Prior to joining LIRS, she was the Director for Advocacy at the Catholic Legal Immigration Network. Jill Marie has over 20 years of experience in the field of immigration law and policy and earned her Juris Doctor degree with a concentration in business law, cum laude, from the University of Baltimore School of Law. She also has a bachelor’s degree in law and society from the American University. Jill Marie is an active member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association and her state bar association, serving on the AILA Afghan Response Task Force and the Maryland State Bar Association’s Immigration Law Section Council.

Agatha Schmaedick, Esq.
Staff Attorney
The Human Trafficking Legal Center
Washington, D.C.
Agatha Schmaedick, Esq.

Staff Attorney
The Human Trafficking Legal Center
Washington, D.C.

Agatha Schmaedick is the staff attorney at the Human Trafficking Legal Center. She is a labor and human rights advocate with over fifteen years of experience both in the United States and internationally.

Prior to joining the Human Trafficking Legal Center Mr. Schmaedick was a founding staff member of the Worker Rights Consortium (WRC). She played a crucial role in developing a model code of conduct for the labor standards of collegiate apparel manufacturing and established an independent monitoring system to enforce this code. For over seven years, Ms. Schmaedick served as a Field Director and ultimately as the Director of Field Operations for the WRC, investigating and implementing code compliance at dozens of factories across Asia and other parts of the globe. As a staff attorney of the Asian Pacific American Legal Resource Center, Polaris, and most recently at the University of Maryland SAFE Center for Trafficking Survivors, Ms. Schmaedick has served numerous survivors of labor trafficking in seeking immigration relief, as well as, pursuing their civil remedies under the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Trafficking Victim Protection Act. For near four years, Ms. Schmaedick served as the Associate General Counsel of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, a human rights, farmworker-based organization in Immokalee, Florida globally renowned for having pioneered the “worker-driven social responsibility” approach to combating modern day slavery in corporate supply chains.

Ms. Schmaedick earned her JD from Georgetown, where she attended as a Public Interest Law Scholar and was awarded the ABA Award for Excellence in Labor and Employment Law.

Jennifer Podkul, Esq.
Vice President for Policy & Advocacy
Kids in Need of Defense (KIND)
Washington, D.C.
Jennifer Podkul, Esq.

Vice President for Policy & Advocacy
Kids in Need of Defense (KIND)
Washington, D.C.

Jennifer Podkul is an international human rights lawyer and expert on child migration in the United States. She has authored articles, handbooks and reports and presents regularly as an expert at various conferences, briefings, and professional trainings. Ms. Podkul provides technical assistance and education to policy makers and testifies before Congress on issues related to migrant children. She co-authored “Forced From Home: The Lost Boys and Girls from Central America” and was a contributing author to “Childhood, Migration, and Human Rights in Central and North America: Causes, Policies, Practices, and Challenges.” Ms. Podkul has taught child migration at Georgetown Law Center’s Human Rights Institute. Ms. Podkul began her legal career as an attorney at Ayuda in Washington, D.C. first as an Equal Justice Works Fellow and later as a KIND Fellow. Prior to joining KIND, Ms. Podkul was a senior program officer at the Women’s Refugee Commission where she researched issues facing vulnerable migrants seeking protection in the United States and advocated for improved treatment. She served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Honduras, holds a B.A. from Franklin and Marshall College and a J.D. with honors from the Washington College of Law, American University, where she was a Public Interest/Public Service Scholar.

Gerardo Reyes Chavez
Staff Member & Farmworker
Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW)
Immokalee, FL
Gerardo Reyes Chavez

Staff Member & Farmworker
Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW)
Immokalee, FL

Gerardo Reyes Chavez is a key leader of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW). Gerardo is a farmworker himself and has worked in the fields since age 11, first as a peasant farmer in Zacatecas, Mexico and then in the fields of Florida picking oranges, tomatoes, blueberries, and watermelon. He has worked closely with consumer allies to organize national actions— renowned for their creativity and effectiveness — designed to bring pressure on the large retail purchasers of Florida produce to join the Fair Food Program. He speaks publicly about the Fair Food Program at events across the country, such as the Harvard Law School Labor and Worklife Program Convening on Farm Labor Challenges and the Interfaith Council on Corporate Responsibility’s Multi-Stakeholder Roundtable on Ethical Recruitment. As part of the implementation of the Fair Food Program, Gerardo and his colleagues conduct workers’ rights education in the fields on all farms participating in the program. He also receives complaints of abuses in the fields, manages wage theft claims, and assists in the investigation of cases of modern-day slavery when they arise.

Ariadna Rico
Senior Human Rights Investigator & Auditor
Fair Food Standards Council
Sarasota, FL
Ariadna Rico

Senior Human Rights Investigator & Auditor
Fair Food Standards Council
Sarasota, FL

Ariadna Rico is a senior investigator and Director of H-2A Communications with the Fair Food Standards Council (FFSC), the not-for-profit organization that monitors and enforces the Coalition of Immokalee Workers’ groundbreaking agreements with growers and food retail buyers to ensure fundamental human rights for agricultural workers. The Fair Food Program has been recognized by US State Department, the Department of Labor, the United Nations, Harvard Business Review, CNN International’s Freedom Project and other numerous national and international human rights organizations, as one of the most successful programs in the world today to uncover, eliminate and prevent modern-day slavery, sexual violence, wage theft and other systemic abuses.

 At the Fair Food Standards Council Ariadna has worked on all aspects of Fair Food Program monitoring including conducting in-person audits at participating farms and receiving, investigating and resolving complaints received on the FFSC hotline. Currently, she oversees communication between Participating Growers and the Mexican National Employment Service (SNE), which is the federal agency designated to provide a clean-recruitment channel for all H-2A workers at participating farms.  Before coming to the Fair Food Standards Council, Ariadna worked across the United States and internationally in France and South Korea as a teacher and advocate. She has a bachelor's degree in theatre arts from the University of Texas at El Paso, and graduate coursework in sustainable food systems from the University of South Florida. She also holds an English as a Second Language teaching certificate and speaks English, Spanish and French.

Dr. Vanessa Ramirez, Psy.D.
Chief Program Officer & Clinical Psychologist
Kristi House Children’s Advocacy Center
Miami, FL
Dr. Vanessa Ramirez, Psy.D.

Chief Program Officer & Clinical Psychologist
Kristi House Children’s Advocacy Center
Miami, FL

Vanessa Ramirez, Psy.D., is a clinical psychologist and the Chief Program Officer at Kristi House with 18 years of research and clinical experience working with high-risk children and families with complex psychiatric and social needs. Dr. Ramirez oversees a staff of 25 therapists and family advocates working in four locations, including program planning and implementation of multiple evidence-based therapies.  In 2019, Kristi House began providing therapy for youth arriving to the U.S. unaccompanied or separated who are detained in shelters, or who are post-release and living with sponsors, using Culturally Modified Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Family Advocacy services were added to the services provided to UC in 2020 given complex needs of youth and sponsors.

Dr. Ramirez has taken what has been learned through the work with UC and served as a consultant and author on numerous projects related to Unaccompanied Minors. She collaborated in adapting Psychological First Aid for Unaccompanied Children which provides guidance on trauma-informed approaches to providers working in emergency settings for UC. She was a member of the 2020 National Child Traumatic Stress Network Policy Task Force, which focused on issues affecting UC and consulted in developing a policy brief titled Children, Youth, and Families Who Experience Migration-Related Trauma and Family Separation. She is currently part of the Curriculum Development Project on Trauma-Informed Care for the Office of Refugee Resettlement.

Alicia Garcia Priovolos, Esq.
Former Director, Human Trafficking Unit
Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office
Miami, FL
Alicia Garcia Priovolos, Esq.

Former Director, Human Trafficking Unit
Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office
Miami, FL

Alicia Garcia Priovolos is an Assistant State Attorney at the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office.  She has served in that capacity for over sixteen years.  She is currently running for County Court Judge in Miami-Dade County and has taken a leave of absence from the office.  During her tenure, Mrs. Garcia Priovolos prosecuted some of the most serious crimes Miami-Dade County has seen; including homicides, sexual batteries, organized crime, and human trafficking.  She also supervised and trained other Assistant State Attorneys.

In 2018, Katherine Fernandez Rundle appointed Mrs. Garcia Priovolos to be the Director of the Human Trafficking Unit.  She held this position until April of 2022. As the Director, Mrs. Garcia Priovolos supervised all the human trafficking prosecutions in the office and led the State Attorney’s Human Trafficking Task Force. The task force investigated human trafficking crimes throughout the county and conducted recoveries of missing and exploited youth.  Mrs. Garcia Priovolos also collaborated with state and federal law enforcement agencies, advocated for changes in legislation, and trained first responders on human trafficking identification and investigations.

Mrs. Garcia Priovolos has served as a guest speaker at many community outreach events aimed to raise public awareness about human trafficking.  Most notably, in 2020 the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office led a community initiative to combat sex trafficking during Super Bowl LIV.  Through collaborative efforts twenty victims of human traffic king were recovered, and a major community awareness campaign was executed throughout three counties.  Mrs. Garcia Priovolos led much of the collaboration between the Super Bowl Host Committee, The Women’s Fund, and the numerous state and federal law enforcement agencies that accomplished this undertaking.

In light of her many contributions to the community, in 2020 Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody awarded Mrs. Garcia Priovolos Prosecutor of the Year at the Annual Human Trafficking Summit.  Mrs. Garcia Priovolos also received the 2020 and 2021 Prosecutor of the Year award by the League of Prosecutors.

Mrs. Garcia Priovolos obtained her law degree from Florida International University.  She was part of the Inaugural Class and received multiple accolades, including five CALI book awards.

 

 

Shalyn Fluharty, Esq.
Incoming Executive Director
Americans for Immigrant Justice
Attorney Consultant, Feerick Center
Miami, FL
Shalyn Fluharty, Esq.

Incoming Executive Director
Americans for Immigrant Justice
Attorney Consultant, Feerick Center
Miami, FL

Shalyn Fluharty is an attorney consultant to the Feerick Center, where she is providing inaugural leadership in the Feerick Center’s dedicated effort to expand access to counsel for families who seek asylum. In August, Ms. Fluharty will join Americans for Immigrant Justice, in Miami, as its new Executive Director.

Ms. Fluharty has over fifteen years of experience representing unaccompanied children and families who seek protection in the United States. Most recently Ms. Fluharty directed the Asylum Defense Project, an initiative of Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, where she represented immigrant families detained at the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas and individuals forced to remain in Mexico under the Migration Protection Protocols (MPP). Previously Ms. Fluharty served as Supervising Attorney for the Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights in Harlingen, Texas and as a Staff Attorney with Catholic Charities Community Services in New York City.

Ms. Fluharty obtained a Juris Doctor at the University of California, Davis King Hall School of Law, a Masters of Teaching at Dominican University, and a Bachelor of Arts from Southern Methodist University. Before law school Shay taught Spanish at Harper High School in Chicago. She is a proud alumna of Teach for America, Education Pioneers, and the Equal Justice Works fellowship program.