An Agent of Renewal for Human Trafficking Survivors
At the age of 15 years old, Leslie King was coerced into the lifestyle of prostitution. It鈥檚 a lifestyle she got trapped in for more than 20 years. During that time, King racked up a record that included shoplifting, larceny, aggravated assault, and drug-related violations. For each of these charges she paid full restitution, and each one happened during the 20 years she was trafficked. Her motivation for each of the crimes: survival.
In 2000, she finally broke free. But her criminal record remained.
鈥淭o me, freedom is a layered concept,鈥 said Nate Knapper, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe you can define freedom strictly in terms of liberating someone from the immediate circumstances of their exploitation.鈥
Gaining experience and understanding
Knapper, a 2008 graduate of 黄大仙高手论坛, met King in 2013 while serving with her on a human trafficking commission during his time working for the State Attorney General鈥檚 office. King was the first survivor of human trafficking he had met.
Nearly four years later, after training for five months in Quantico, Virginia, Knapper became an FBI Special Agent, ultimately returning to Michigan to work at the Bureau鈥檚 Detroit Field Office. Interestingly, his first field assignment out of the Academy was the human trafficking squad. Knapper saw that as no coincidence.
Knapper, whose knowledge of trafficking was already informed by policy assignments at the Attorney General鈥檚 office, was now getting front-line, street-level exposure to the issue.
鈥淔using those two experiences together is how the idea of came to be,鈥 said Knapper.
Discovering a gap, and filling it
This project, named after history鈥檚 earliest-recorded example of trafficking, Joseph from the Bible (Genesis 37-50), would address the 鈥渏ustice gap鈥 for survivors 鈥 the space that exists between the legal needs of a human trafficking survivor and getting those legal needs met.
鈥淚f you are 鈥榝ree,鈥 but you have a criminal record, no job, no apartment, no custody of your child, or if you are a foreigner who was trafficked into the U.S. with no legal status, and you have no family in the country, what future do you reasonably have? The answer is none,鈥 said Knapper. 鈥淏ut with a little leverage, a little legal leverage, the possibilities are wide open for you.鈥
This was true of King, who while physically free, still had her record hanging over her, limiting her ability to dream. She needed a special agent to change that. For her, it was Knapper.
鈥淎t Calvin, they talk about being an 鈥榓gent of renewal.鈥 I see that as a double entendre in my life,鈥 said Knapper. 鈥淚鈥檓 a Special Agent. For me, to be an agent of renewal means that you are taking God鈥檚 idea of what human flourishing looks like and leveraging the law and translating that into reality for someone else.鈥
Redefining freedom, reigniting dreams
For King, it meant that in December 2022, she became the first survivor in the history of the state of Michigan to receive a gubernatorial pardon. Now, her dreams no longer have a ceiling.
鈥淏ecause of the pardon, she can now pursue a lifelong dream of becoming a Licensed Master of Social Work. Without that clear record, she can鈥檛 move in that professional direction, and thus, to me, is not free,鈥 said Knapper.
For Knapper, allowing others to dream more fully and freely is rooted in his undergraduate education at Calvin, where he was encouraged to dream of what renewal could look like in a broken world, and then to act.
鈥淔or me, to dream is to consider the ways you might become an agent of renewal, to leverage your skills, abilities, and professional training to make someone鈥檚 life better, to usher in a small measure of the Kingdom of God right here, right now,鈥 said Knapper.