Atlanta Creeps Use Rideshares To Shuffle Trafficking Victims, Lawyer Says

An attorney tied to a metro Atlanta trafficking case is sounding the alarm that rideshare apps are quietly helping traffickers pick up and move victims across the region. The warning is putting fresh pressure on how companies verify riders, screen drivers and flag suspicious trips that look perfectly ordinary to everyone else.

In an interview with 11Alive, the attorney said traffickers are using rideshare platforms to gain access to victims and to transport them around metro Atlanta. The station’s video report lays out those concerns and features advocates who say common app workflows can be twisted so that deeply troubling pickups blend right into the stream of everyday rides.

Local Lawsuits And Earlier Cases

Attorneys in Atlanta and around Georgia have already pointed to lawsuits and civil claims that name rideshare companies as links in trafficking chains. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported last year on a lawsuit that says an Uber pickup of a 14-year-old led to the teen being transported to a trafficker, a case lawyers frequently cite when they argue for tougher accountability for the platforms.

National Data And Federal Scrutiny

Advocates say transportation of all kinds, from cars to buses to planes, shows up again and again in trafficking reports, and national data highlights how many people are reaching out for help. Polaris reports that the National Human Trafficking Hotline logged more than 32,000 signals in 2024, including thousands of contacts from victims and survivors.

In Washington, Sen. Jon Ossoff has pressed inquiries and backed legislation in recent years that focus on protecting minors and tightening oversight of rideshare platforms, a sign that the concerns raised in Atlanta are very much on the radar at the federal level.

Airport Stings, Fake Drivers And Police Warnings

Some of the risks show up most clearly in busy travel hubs. Quartz detailed an 11Alive hidden-camera investigation at Hartsfield-Jackson that caught people approaching passengers in baggage claim and offering rides. Police later warned that beyond garden-variety scams, off-app solicited rides can create situations that raise trafficking fears…

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