
Human trafficking is on the rise.
In recent years, news over arrests of individuals accused of trafficking people for sex or labor has become pervasive.
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics’ most recent data from 2020, nearly 2,200 people that year were referred to U.S. Attorneys for human trafficking offenses—a 62% increase from the last time the data was tracked in 2011.
And it’s happening in Bay Area backyards. In February of this year, members of a South Bay family were sentenced to between five and nine years in prison for running a human trafficking ring out of childcare and senior-care centers in Daly City. Still, in too many cases, such crimes go unnoticed and unpunished.
This isn’t just a national crisis, but a global crisis.
In the International Labour Organization’s report on “Global Estimates of Modern Slavery,” the ILO estimates there are about 24.9 million victims of human trafficking globally.
The Blue Campaign—the Department of Homeland Security’s effort to raise awareness about human trafficking—defines the crime as the use of force, fraud or coercion to obtain some type of labor or commercial sex act. It can involve methods of violence, manipulation, false promises of well-paying jobs and romantic relationships. Human trafficking can come in various forms, including sex trafficking, forced labor and domestic servitude.
Traffickers tend to profile people who they may see as vulnerable, regardless of age, race, gender or nationality. The majority of reported human trafficking victims are female.
Whether a victim is forced into servitude by a trafficker who has confiscated their travel documents or an at-risk youth manipulated into sex work, for those who have been victimized for lengthy periods, it can be extremely difficult to break from the shackles of trafficking.
Sonoma County residents Lisa Diaz-McQuaid and Elizabeth Quiroz are well-versed on the subjects of breaking those shackles—both are human trafficking survivors. Together they founded the nonprofit Redemption House of the Bay Area, which strives to inform and educate others about trafficking, as well as advocate for survivors and victims who desire to escape and make a better life for themselves.
Diaz-McQuaid and Quiroz first met in 2018 while attending a class focused on drugs and alcohol at Santa Rosa Junior College. Quiroz had given a presentation on human trafficking—a discussion that resonated deeply with Diaz-McQuaid. “I sat there in the front row watching the presentation and learning all the information that she was sharing,” recalls Diaz-McQuaid.
But when Quiroz shared her personal story of what she went through of being trafficked and the circumstances in her life at that time—it was as if Diaz-McQuaid was hearing her own story.
“I remember holding back my tears listening to her because, ‘Oh my god! This girl is telling my life story,” says Diaz-McQuaid. “I can relate to what she’s saying, [because] I was already beginning my healing journey and here Liz is talking so freely and openly about being trafficked—it helped me open the door to my own healing and that experience, because I [had] never talked about it.”
A couple of days after the presentation, Quiroz and Diaz-McQuaid met up and the two began to form a bond over their shared experiences. According to Diaz-McQuaid, Quiroz had already come up with an idea to launch a trafficking-survivors-support nonprofit, which would eventually include a safe house.
Quiroz asked her if she would be willing to help. Without hesitation, the answer was “yes.”
They chose the name Redemption House of the Bay Area in order to think “big” in their outreach and to reflect their mission of helping other trafficking survivors return to lives that are functional, productive and healthy.
The shared experience of abuse
Diaz-McQuaid and Quiroz have shared experiences beyond both being survivors—they also endured physical and sexual abuse at the hands of their traffickers.
Diaz-McQuaid says her trajectory began at an early age. Her stepfather had sexually abused her as she was growing up, instilling her with deep resentment. “Growing up, I was angry. I had developed an addiction to drugs and alcohol as a way to cope. I was a habitual runaway growing up—constantly running away,” she says, adding that it led to a period in the local juvenile hall. “I remember at 17 when my stepfather had [admitted to the sexual abuse], I remember having like a sense of… Ahh, it’s finally over!’ But then all the guilt and the shame just basically took over.” She covered up her feelings with more drugs and alcohol, avoided family and refused to talk about her problem. She left home, moved in with a friend and got involved in a gang.
When it came to being in a healthy, loving relationship, Diaz-McQuaid says the years of abuse at the hands of her stepfather gave her a distorted image of what love looked like. All she desired was someone who was going to protect her, keep her safe and love her.
She thought she found love when she met her children’s father, but was wrong.
“I just wanted somebody to pay attention to me, somebody to love me, somebody to make me feel safe.” But he was “very” physically abusive. And by the time Diaz-McQuaid left him, she “was completely broken in all aspects.”
Eventually, Diaz-McQuaid met another man, who promised to take care of her and not to hurt her. “When I met him, I still had a black eye from the beating I had from my kids’ dad. So all the things I wanted to hear, he told me.”
At first he made her feel safe. But then came threats. And three months after they’d met, she was “put out on Santa Rosa Avenue.”
“It was like a grooming stage and a honeymoon stage” all at once, says Diaz-McQuaid.
Quiroz’s story is similar to Diaz-McQuaid’s. She says from a very young age until about 15, she endured a series of traumas—including physical and sexual abuse from numerous abusers. She was in the foster childcare system and came from a family of alcoholics, addicts, criminal gang members and a single-parent household. She says many factors played into her situation, which led to high-risk trafficking.
Quiroz says she was trying to find a father figure, since she didn’t have one growing up. “I met my first trafficker and that’s how I was lured in…because of my vulnerability and trauma [that] I endured through my past experiences, and what I thought love looked like.”
She says not having a father growing up left a void within her. “It’s like [when] a little girl is looking for their dad and that’s kind of what I found in this man,” she says. He was 27, she was 15. Soon she was being trafficked in San Francisco.
Trafficking is not a ‘choice’
While human trafficking is global crime—with more than 25 million victims worldwide, as estimated by the U.S. Department of State—the means for its proliferation are often the same everywhere: Many victims are afraid to come forward and speak up, allowing traffickers to exploit people of all ages and backgrounds, mainly for their own profit.
Diaz-McQuaid says she wants people to know that human trafficking could possibly be happening within your family or within your neighborhood, adding that there are so many different layers to trafficking and different ways that people are trafficked.
Many individuals may not know what to look for if they suspect someone is being trafficked. That’s why it’s important to learn what red flags to look for, says Diaz-McQuaid—and to know what to do if you come in contact with someone being trafficked.
Quiroz hopes law enforcement comes to “think more outside the box” and have more compassion, as many trafficking victims are arrested and charged as criminals. She says it’s not always easy for victims to get out of the situation they’re placed in. “We want to address these situations with more of a compassionate approach and the equality model approach when we deal with these individuals rather than criminalizing them and not offering them any exit resources,” Quiroz says.
Continues Quiroz: “Sometimes we hear, ‘Oh, why didn’t you ladies just leave?’ It’s not that simple. It’s [a] mindset. It’s a lifestyle or way of living. It’s fear, survival and manipulation.
“Stop thinking that victims have a choice and they can just leave. It’s not that simple.”
According to statistics, victims of human trafficking are mostly female and fall between the ages of 14 and 16. According to the California State Office of the Attorney General’s website, young girls and women make up 99.4% of sex trafficking victims and 57.6% of forced-labor victims.
Males are trafficked as well, though the precise data is murky since male cases are heavily underreported. According to OrphansHand.com, the United Nations estimates that boys account for 15% of global trafficking victims, while adult men account for 20%. The underreporting of male cases is partly due to the perception of a greater stigma surrounding abuse of men, Quiroz explains.
Hypothetically, she adds, if a male reports himself as a victim, they may be perceived as looking weak to their trafficker, which could result in further harm.
Taking it to the streets
Redemption House offers numerous services for survivors and victims. They provide education and bring awareness to the community by visiting schools, universities, churches, juvenile probation centers and businesses throughout the Bay Area, in addition to tribal lands in Lake and Mendocino counties. They also provide mentoring (which includes one-on-one interventions with adult and young trafficking survivors) and support by sharing their own stories or listening to victims’ stories. The organization also offers a support group, which meets twice a month at a confidential location. At the support group, survivors are educated on what they can do to thrive in their lives, with fewer setbacks.
“We implement tools on what women can do in order to move through life because there are triggers and life happens,” says Diaz-McQuaid. “Sometimes it can get overwhelming.” She describes it as a “family relationship” because of their “shared sisterhood” as survivors. “We feed them a nice, warm meal and just love them,” she says.
“We’re there for them, letting them know—they’re not alone.”
In addition to the support group, Redemption House also provides a street outreach, where its founders travel to different communities where survivors are located and let them know that support is available to them. They give the women purses with hygiene products and resources about their organization as a way to connect.

The purses also serve as a valuable keepsake that comes in handy when they’re out on the streets.
“When you’re being trafficked, everything you get that’s worth any money or has any value, you have to give it to your trafficker,” says Diaz-McQuaid. “[But] your trafficker is not going to want your purse, so that’s something you get to keep—something the survivor can actually have for herself.” They place love notes inside the purse, too, along with a flyer that has information about their services and support group—basically letting them know that, when they’re ready, they can join. (Victims don’t need to join in-person, but can also join through Zoom, says Quiroz.)
Raising awareness
As board president for Redemption House, Elizabeth Baker knows the dedication that Diaz-McQuaid and Quiroz put into their advocacy for trafficking survivors. Baker, a senior finance manager with Kaiser Permanente, says she has known Diaz-McQuaid and Quiroz for a few years now and has watched them grow the organization from the beginning—and sees how passionate they are when it comes to the work they’re doing.
“They’re teaching people what to look for to find the people who are being trafficked at a different level that most of us wouldn’t recognize,” says Baker. “They’ve got trainings they’ve developed that they take to police departments, schools and to different venues that can bring a community awareness to this situation.” She says the work of advocates like Redemption House has brought a high-level of visibility to trafficking over the last few years. “It seems like everywhere you go, people are talking about human trafficking,” says Baker, and the efforts of Diaz-McQuaid and Quiroz have heightened that awareness.
By sharing their stories, Diaz-McQuaid and Quiroz are making an impact on trafficking survivors and victims, says Baker. And by educating the community they’re putting a spotlight to the growing problem.
At the moment, Redemption House is a “house” in name only—Diaz-McQuaid and Quiroz are actively on the hunt for a permanent headquarters for the nonprofit. In the meantime, they’re working out of their homes and vehicles or sometimes they have to go out and find meeting locations. They also plan to expand their outreach program to other locations around the bay, as their initial focus has concentrated on Sonoma County. We plan to conduct outreach in San Francisco and our hope is to grow our street outreach throughout the Bay Area where trafficking is happening,” says Diaz-McQuaid.
She adds that they’re also looking for a volunteer who is experienced with grant writing since the only funding they currently receive is through private donations and a Human Trafficking Grant with Verity, the Santa Rosa-based nonprofit focused on sexual-assault prevention.
Diaz-McQuaid says they’ve also become aware that there is a high degree of labor trafficking occurring within “wine country”—especially within the undocumented and indigenous communities—and plan to focus efforts on those concerns soon.
Their ultimate goal, says Diaz-McQuaid, is to open a safe house for survivors where they can receive wrap-around services, resources, therapy, attend support groups and classes in a safe setting that will assist them with integrating back into society and living healthy and productive lives.
“One of the things that [Quiroz] and I like to share in our stories is not just where we come from, but what we’re doing today,” says Diaz-McQuaid. “Because it doesn’t matter where you come from; you can turn your life around and change it for the better.”
She firmly believes that in almost any situation, healing is possible.
“Everybody deserves healing, everybody deserves freedom,” she says. “Everybody deserves to be happy and to feel what healthy love is.”
For more information, contact Redemption House of the Bay Area at 707-697-2099. Or visit redemptionhouseofthebayarea.org.


898 thoughts on “Redemption Song: Sonoma County Nonprofit Raises Awareness of Human Trafficking”
I couldn’t resist commenting
Very interesting topic, regards for posting.
There are certainly quite a lot of particulars like that to take into consideration. That is a great point to convey up. I supply the ideas above as normal inspiration however clearly there are questions just like the one you convey up where the most important thing shall be working in honest good faith. I don?t know if finest practices have emerged around issues like that, however I’m positive that your job is clearly recognized as a fair game. Both girls and boys really feel the influence of just a moment’s pleasure, for the rest of their lives.
I like this post, enjoyed this one regards for putting up. "I would sooner fail than not be among the greatest." by John Keats.
Very well written information. It will be beneficial to anybody who usess it, including yours truly :). Keep doing what you are doing – can’r wait to read more posts.
Hello my friend! I want to say that this post is awesome, nice written and include approximately all vital infos. I would like to look extra posts like this .
You actually make it appear really easy together with your presentation however I to find this topic to be really something that I feel I might by no means understand. It sort of feels too complex and very huge for me. I am looking forward on your subsequent post, I will attempt to get the hang of it!
so much wonderful information on here, : D.
I loved as much as you will receive carried out right here. The sketch is tasteful, your authored material stylish. nonetheless, you command get got an impatience over that you wish be delivering the following. unwell unquestionably come further formerly again since exactly the same nearly a lot often inside case you shield this hike.
I do believe all the ideas you’ve introduced on your post. They are very convincing and can definitely work. Still, the posts are too short for novices. May you please prolong them a little from next time? Thanks for the post.
Your place is valueble for me. Thanks!…
I do agree with all of the ideas you have presented in your post. They are very convincing and will certainly work. Still, the posts are very short for novices. Could you please extend them a bit from next time? Thanks for the post.
Very nice info and straight to the point. I am not sure if this is actually the best place to ask but do you guys have any thoughts on where to hire some professional writers? Thanks in advance 🙂
Excellent read, I just passed this onto a colleague who was doing a little research on that. And he just bought me lunch as I found it for him smile Thus let me rephrase that: Thanks for lunch! "Not only is the universe stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine." by Sir Arthur Eddington.
I appreciate, result in I found just what I was taking a look for. You’ve ended my 4 day long hunt! God Bless you man. Have a great day. Bye
Hello, you used to write fantastic, but the last several posts have been kinda boring?K I miss your great writings. Past few posts are just a little out of track! come on!
so much excellent information on here, : D.
I?¦m now not positive where you are getting your info, but good topic. I needs to spend a while studying much more or understanding more. Thank you for excellent info I used to be searching for this information for my mission.
Can I simply say what a reduction to search out somebody who actually knows what theyre talking about on the internet. You definitely know the way to bring a difficulty to mild and make it important. Extra individuals need to learn this and understand this aspect of the story. I cant imagine youre no more well-liked because you positively have the gift.
F*ckin¦ tremendous issues here. I am very glad to peer your post. Thanks a lot and i am having a look forward to contact you. Will you kindly drop me a e-mail?
It’s really a great and helpful piece of info. I’m glad that you shared this helpful information with us. Please keep us up to date like this. Thanks for sharing.
There is obviously a bundle to identify about this. I suppose you made certain good points in features also.
Your place is valueble for me. Thanks!…
Thank you for helping out, wonderful info. "Hope is the denial of reality." by Margaret Weis.
Thank you for the sensible critique. Me & my neighbor were just preparing to do some research on this. We got a grab a book from our local library but I think I learned more from this post. I’m very glad to see such excellent information being shared freely out there.
Utterly indited written content, appreciate it for information. "The bravest thing you can do when you are not brave is to profess courage and act accordingly." by Corra Harris.
What i do not understood is in fact how you’re now not really much more well-favored than you may be now. You are very intelligent. You know therefore considerably in relation to this topic, made me in my opinion imagine it from numerous varied angles. Its like women and men don’t seem to be involved unless it is one thing to do with Woman gaga! Your personal stuffs great. At all times care for it up!
Woh I enjoy your posts, saved to my bookmarks! .
This really answered my problem, thank you!
I’ll right away take hold of your rss feed as I can’t in finding your email subscription hyperlink or e-newsletter service. Do you have any? Kindly allow me understand in order that I may subscribe. Thanks.
It is really a nice and helpful piece of information. I am satisfied that you simply shared this helpful information with us. Please stay us up to date like this. Thanks for sharing.
Along with every little thing that seems to be developing inside this particular subject matter, many of your points of view are generally quite stimulating. Having said that, I beg your pardon, but I can not give credence to your whole suggestion, all be it refreshing none the less. It would seem to us that your comments are actually not entirely justified and in actuality you are generally yourself not even thoroughly convinced of your assertion. In any case I did take pleasure in examining it.
You really make it seem so easy with your presentation but I to find this topic to be actually something which I feel I’d never understand. It kind of feels too complex and very wide for me. I am looking forward on your next submit, I will attempt to get the hold of it!
You can certainly see your skills in the paintings you write. The world hopes for more passionate writers like you who aren’t afraid to mention how they believe. Always follow your heart.
Would you be focused on exchanging links?
An interesting discussion is worth comment. I think that you should write more on this topic, it might not be a taboo subject but generally people are not enough to speak on such topics. To the next. Cheers
Hello. impressive job. I did not imagine this. This is a excellent story. Thanks!
Keep working ,terrific job!
I do like the way you have framed this challenge plus it really does present me personally some fodder for consideration. Nonetheless, coming from what precisely I have seen, I really wish when other opinions stack on that individuals continue to be on issue and don’t embark on a soap box involving some other news of the day. All the same, thank you for this superb piece and though I do not really concur with it in totality, I respect the point of view.
Someone essentially lend a hand to make significantly posts I would state. This is the first time I frequented your web page and so far? I surprised with the research you made to create this particular publish amazing. Wonderful process!
Simply a smiling visitant here to share the love (:, btw outstanding style.
There is noticeably a bundle to know about this. I assume you made certain good factors in options also.
Your style is so unique compared to many other people. Thank you for publishing when you have the opportunity,Guess I will just make this bookmarked.2
An interesting discussion is worth comment. I think that you should write more on this topic, it might not be a taboo subject but generally people are not enough to speak on such topics. To the next. Cheers
Hello.This post was extremely motivating, particularly because I was looking for thoughts on this matter last week.
Yesterday, while I was at work, my cousin stole my iphone and tested to see if it can survive a forty foot drop, just so she can be a youtube sensation. My iPad is now destroyed and she has 83 views. I know this is entirely off topic but I had to share it with someone!
You really make it seem so easy along with your presentation however I in finding this topic to be actually one thing that I think I would by no means understand. It seems too complex and extremely huge for me. I’m looking forward on your subsequent post, I will try to get the dangle of it!
What’s Happening i am new to this, I stumbled upon this I have found It absolutely helpful and it has helped me out loads. I hope to contribute & assist other users like its helped me. Great job.
Rattling instructive and superb anatomical structure of content material, now that’s user pleasant (:.
It is actually a nice and helpful piece of information. I’m happy that you simply shared this helpful info with us. Please stay us informed like this. Thanks for sharing.