Bills/S. 2241

Enhancing Detection of Human Trafficking Act

Enhancing Detection of Human Trafficking Act

In CommitteeJudiciarySenateSenate Bill · 119th Congress
Bill Progress · Senate
Introduced
Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Passed Both
Signed

Plain Language Summary

# Enhancing Detection of Human Trafficking Act Summary **What the Bill Does** This bill aims to improve the federal government's ability to identify and combat human trafficking. It would focus on enhancing how law enforcement and relevant agencies detect trafficking cases, share information, and measure their effectiveness. The legislation addresses congressional oversight of anti-trafficking efforts and likely includes provisions for training, funding, and performance metrics to help agencies work more efficiently in identifying victims and perpetrators. **Who It Affects** The bill primarily affects federal law enforcement agencies responsible for combating human trafficking, as well as employment and training programs that may help identify trafficking situations.

Indirectly, it could benefit trafficking victims by improving detection and response systems, and it may impact organizations working on crime prevention and victim services. **Current Status** The bill was introduced by Senator Jon Husted (R-OH) in the 119th Congress and is currently in committee, meaning it hasn't yet advanced to a full chamber vote. No action has been taken since its introduction, and it may remain in committee, be modified, or eventually move forward for consideration depending on legislative priorities.

Advertisement

Latest Action

July 10, 2025

Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.

Subjects

Congressional oversightCrime preventionEmployment and training programsGovernment information and archivesHuman traffickingLaw enforcement administration and fundingPerformance measurementSmuggling and trafficking

Sponsor

R
Husted, Jon [R-OH]
R-OH · Senate
1 cosponsor

Key Dates

Introduced
July 10, 2025
Last Updated
July 10, 2025
Read Full Text on Congress.gov →
Advertisement