Trafficking Victim Cyntoia Brown To Get Clemency Hearing

She's serving a life sentence for the murder of a man who allegedly picked her up for sex at age 16.
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Cyntoia Brown, now 30, has served 13 years in prison for a 2004 murder. Here she's seen riding to the courthouse during her criminal trial in 2006, in a scene from the documentary "Me Facing Life: Cyntoia’s Story."
Daniel H. Birman via PBS

A Tennessee woman serving a life sentence for murdering a man who picked her up at 16 while she was being sex-trafficked is receiving a clemency hearing.

Cyntoia Brown, now 30, has served 13 years in prison for the 2004 murder of real estate agent Johnny Allen, 43. After running away from her adopted family, Brown was living in a motel with a pimp called “Kut Throat.” Brown’s lawyer, Charles Bone, told The New York Times last year that Kut Throat raped and abused Brown as well as forced her to become a prostitute.

Allen picked her up and brought her home to his bed, court documents state. At one point, she believed he was reaching for his gun, so she took a handgun from her purse and shot him, she said.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit in Cincinnati agreed Tuesday to hear oral arguments in Brown’s case on June 14, according to a report by The Tennessean. On Thursday, a state parole board agreed to a clemency hearing on May 23 inside the Tennessee Prison for Women in Nashville where Brown is held.

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Brown awaits a transfer hearing in 2004 to determine whether she should be tried as an adult, in a scene from the documentary "Me Facing Life: Cyntoia’s Story." After spending 13 years in jail, she has a clemency hearing scheduled for May 23.
Daniel H Birman via PBS

The Tennessean notes that Brown’s fate is not up to the parole board, as it will merely make a recommendation for or against clemency. Gov. Bill Haslam (R) will ultimately decide.

Haslam is in his last year as governor and has not granted any clemency petitions. But the publication noted that “it is not unusual for governors to grant such petitions in their last year in office.”

The Times reports that many supporters of Brown have “described her as a model inmate.” While in prison, Brown received her GED certificate and earned an associate degree from Lipscomb University, a private Christian college in Nashville.

Brown’s case has been in the spotlight for years, particularly after a 2011 PBS documentary called “Me Facing Life: Cyntoia’s Story” came out. The documentary followed Brown’s case from the week of her arrest until her conviction almost six years later. The story picked up steam again six years after the documentary’s release, when a Facebook post about Brown went viral. That post picked up traction when celebrities such as Kim Kardashian, Rihanna and LeBron James learned about the case.

In November 2017, Kardashian tweeted: “The system has failed. It’s heart breaking to see a young girl sex trafficked then when she has the courage to fight back is jailed for life! We have to do better & do what’s right. I’ve called my attorneys yesterday to see what can be done to fix this.”

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Before You Go

10 States Effectively Fighting Child Sex Trafficking
No. 10 Florida, 86.5(01 of10)
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In an effort to better protect exploited minors, Google, the Human Rights Project for Girls (Rights4Girls) and the McCain Institute launched the “No Such Thing” campaign last January to urge authorities to stop criminalizing children who are victims of sex trafficking. Since by federal law anyone under 18 who performs a commercial sex act in exchange for compensation is a victim of trafficking, they shouldn’t, by definition, be able to be charged as prostitutes.

In Florida, sexually exploited minors are deemed victims of sex trafficking. and the law notes that “a minor is unable to consent to such behavior.”
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No. 9 Oklahoma, 87(02 of10)
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Oklahoma climbed from a “C” to a “B” grade and is working to go after all parties involved in child sex trafficking.

Assisting, enabling or benefiting financially from the crime are included as criminal offenses in the state sex trafficking statute.
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No. 8 Illinois, 87(03 of10)
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Illinois has also ramped up its efforts in protecting exploited children by deeming them “immune” from being prosecuted for prostitution. After an officer identifies a child victim, he’s then expected to connect with the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services State Central Register, which is responsible for launching an initial investigation into child abuse or child neglect within 24 hours. (credit:J.Castro via Getty Images)
No. 7 Iowa, 87.5(04 of10)
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A major flaw in the justice system is that the buyers who demand sex from minors often remain nameless and faceless and aren’t arrested at all.

Iowa is working to combat that issue by classifying anyone who solicits sexual services from a minor as guilty of a class “C” felony. A first conviction is punishable by imprisonment up to 10 years and a fine of up to $10,000.
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No. 6 Minnesota, 90(05 of10)
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Often, the law allows traffickers and buyers to claim consent as a defense, shifting the blame to the child trafficking victim. Minnesota has gone so far as to declare that when it comes to prostitution or sex trafficking, “consent or age of the victim is not a defense.”
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No. 5 Texas, 90.5(06 of10)
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Texas is now coming down particularly hard on people who knowingly or unknowingly solicit sex from children.

Engaging in prostitution is treated as a felony of the second degree if the person solicited is younger than 18 years of age, regardless of whether the offender knew the victim’s age at the time the crime was committed.

The charge carries a sentence of five to 99 years and a fine of up to $100,000.
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No. 4 Montana, 90.5(07 of10)
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The stringency of Montana’s child sex trafficking laws enabled the state to jump from a “D” to “A" this year.

Montana doesn’t allow offenders to claim they believed the child was an adult as a defense. The punishment carries imprisonment for a term of 100 years, a fine of up to $50,000 and requires offenders to complete a sexual offender treatment program.
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No. 3 Washington, 92(08 of10)
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Traffickers see the Internet as an optimal resource for identifying and luring in victims, since it’s challenging for authorities to monitor it.

But in Washington, if a person so much as communicates with a minor, or someone he believes to be a minor, for “immoral purposes,” which includes the purchase or sale of commercial sex acts through electronic communications, that qualifies as a class C felony. Such communication includes email and text messaging.
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No. 2 Tennessee, 93.5(09 of10)
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In Tennessee, soliciting sex from a minor is punishable as “trafficking for commercial sex acts” and comes with either a Class A or B felony charge. A Class A felony carries imprisonment from 15 to 60 years and a fine of up to $50,000. A Class B felony is punishable by imprisonment for eight to 30 years and a possible fine of up to $25,000.

Offenders who attempt to solicit minors over the Internet would constitute violating a number of offenses, including rape of a child, trafficking for commercial sex acts and aggravated sexual battery.
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No. 1 Louisiana, 99.5(10 of10)
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Commercial sexual exploitation of children laws make specific types of exploitation of a minor a criminal act.

A number of states, including Louisiana, employ CSEC laws when it comes to child sex trafficking cases, which is a "better" method of identifying victims and addressing these offenses, according to Shared Hope.

An offender in Louisiana who exploits a minor under 18 faces imprisonment at “hard labor” of 15 to 50 years and a fine of up to $50,000. If the victim is younger than 14, the sentence is between 25 and 50 years and carries up to a $75,000 fine.
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