This was part of reply I put together on the following post and felt it deserved its own thread once my dig turned up further information-
https://greatawakening.win/p/15JAh0Pcum/anne-heche-emerges-from-body-bag/c/
Anne Heche's new sex trafficking film 'Girl in Room 13' is still happening despite her car crash
https://www.marca.com/en/lifestyle/movies/2022/08/12/62f6810c46163f6f0f8b45bc.html
Archived link- https://archive.ph/9FDfU
The production company for the movie is Motel Productions Inc., which is a Canadian company based out of Langley, British Columbia.
https://opengovca.com/langley-township-business/motel-productions-inc
Archived link - https://archive.ph/DN15R
According to imdb.com, the production company has made only 2 movies ever, and the last one was in 1998.
https://www.imdb.com/search/title/?companies=co0026574
Archived link - https://archive.ph/Spifz
The movie's director is Elisabeth Rohm, who is also an actress and an author. Did a dig into her and she is involved heavily with the American Red Cross.
In 2013, Rohm organized a fundraiser with Therafit, who sold "Red Deborah Sneakers" to those who donated $20 to the Red Cross for $55. The shoes retailed at $95 in 2013, so this was an additional $20 they knocked off the price.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eiboNtfmgMo
Red shoes, eh?
Edit- Digging further and I found this Public Service Announcement tied to the Girl in Room 13 movie-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=_1iR9-tuAac
Polaris is leading a data-driven social justice movement to fight sex and labor trafficking at the massive scale of the problem – 25 million people worldwide deprived of the freedom to choose how they live and work. For more than a decade, Polaris has assisted thousands of victims and survivors through the U.S. National Human Trafficking Hotline, helped ensure countless traffickers were held accountable and built the largest known U.S. data set on actual trafficking experiences. With the guidance of survivors, we use that data to improve the way trafficking is identified, how victims and survivors are assisted, and how communities, businesses and governments can prevent human trafficking by transforming the underlying inequities and oppressions that make it possible.
Wow...
Polaris Project Recognized During 2009 Clinton Global Initiative Annual Meeting
Archived link - https://archive.ph/hdoji
The CEO of Polaris Project is Catherine Chen.
From her bio on the Polaris Project website-
Catherine Chen has spent more than two decades building innovative social justice programs and pushing for policy change to address the root causes of sex and labor trafficking.
Before joining Polaris as Chief Program Officer in 2018, Catherine spearheaded a global campaign for Humanity United that raised the plight of migrant workers in Qatar ahead of the 2022 FIFA World Cup and resulted in Qatar becoming the first nation in the Persian Gulf to enact a national minimum wage. She also created the Partnership for Freedom, a series of national competitions to spur new technology, new data, and new city strategies in anti-trafficking efforts, launched by President Barack Obama.
Earlier in her career, she served as the inaugural global Anti-Trafficking and Child Protection Advisor for Save the Children and led a nationwide training and technical assistance program for U.S. Department of Justice anti-trafficking task forces.
In 2022, Catherine was appointed to the Homeland Security Advisory Council by Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. She is a Board member of the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum (NAPAWF) and a founding member of Chief, a national network of 15,000 women executives. She holds a B.A. from Stanford University and a Masters in Public Health from Columbia University.
https://polarisproject.org/leadership/catherine-chen/
Archived link - https://archive.ph/JnfB1
Edit 2-
Found more information on Partnership for Freedom.
Project Closed
In September 2012, Humanity United joined the Obama administration to announce the Partnership for Freedom, a $6 million public-private partnership aimed at confronting some of the deepest challenges facing victims of modern-day slavery in the United States.
Pathways to Freedom, the Partnership’s third challenge, was led by Humanity United and the NoVo Foundation. Launched in February 2018, Pathways to Freedom called on cities to challenge assumptions about who human trafficking survivors are, spur innovative citywide responses, and share local solutions.
The three U.S. cities selected were Atlanta, Minneapolis, and Chicago.
Each city received a grant to establish a two-year senior fellow position. The senior fellow served directly in municipal government and worked across multiple city government agencies and with a range of community stakeholders to create and implement a citywide response to human trafficking. Selected cities received technical assistance funds to support and build stronger connections with local organizations working on anti-trafficking issues.
Pathways to Freedom also provided grant funding to grassroots and survivor-led organizations to engage low-wage worker communities who have traditionally been vulnerable to exploitation – including immigrants, communities of color, and women.
To learn more about Humanity United’s work supporting peace and freedom, we encourage you to visit our website here: https://humanityunited.org/.
https://pathwaystofreedom.org/
Archived link - https://archive.ph/rJ3oS
Partnership to Freedom helped spearhead programs such as this-
OEMC Private Sector Camera Initiative
Homeowners and businesses can link their private exterior cameras with the Office of Emergency Management and Communications (OEMC). The Private Sector Camera Initiative links Chicago based organizations, companies and sister agencies’ cameras systems into the Office of Emergency Management and Communications (OEMC) state-of-the-art unified video surveillance network.
https://rnrachicago.org/oemc-private-sector-camera-initiative/
While the above article is from 2022, you can see the embedded graphic of the brochure describing the camera initiative was revised on 9/14 (September 2014).
In other words, let's bring Chinese surveillance technology to the US in the name of "stopping human trafficking" and use feel-good "sustainable development" language when forcing private businesses to volunteer access to their cameras for the "greater good."
Standard Operating Procedure