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Susan French, Esq.

By June 2, 2020

Susan French is a former federal human trafficking prosecutor with the Civil Rights Division, United States Department of Justice, who has successfully brought high impact and cutting edge labor trafficking cases. Among her cases are: United States v. Calimlim, a non-violent domestic servitude case involving a Filipina woman held in servitude for 19 years; United States v. Kil Soo Lee, a sweatshop involuntary servitude case involving over 200 victims from Vietnam and China who were subjected to food deprivation, non-payment of wages, and severe beatings – the largest victim class case ever prosecuted in the United States; United States v. Evans,  a violent labor case in which the defendant family, for more than 15 years, recruited homeless U.S. citizens to work in agricultural fields then paid them with crack cocaine and alcohol; and United States v. Nnaji, a domestic servitude case involving a Nigerian woman who was threatened, sexually abused, and paid a total of $300 USD for over eight years of exploitation and servitude.

In 2012, Ms. French left the DOJ to direct the Anti-Trafficking Project at the International Human Rights Clinic, George Washington University Law School. While there, she and a student team successfully brought a federal civil agricultural labor trafficking case on behalf of farmworkers. Since 2015, she has been a human trafficking attorney consultant and works both in the U.S. and internationally. She has presented and facilitated training and workshops in the United States and internationally on various human trafficking topics. She is a Freedom Network recipient of the Wellstone Award, an award that annually honors one person for her or his outstanding contribution to anti-trafficking in the United States.