R.A. 9208 As Amended by R.A. 10364, Otherwise Known As The "Expanded Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of 2012"

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R.A. 9208 as amended by R.A.

10364, otherwise known as the


“EXPANDED ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS ACT OF 2012”
Trafficking in Persons – refers to the recruitment, obtaining, hiring, providing, offering, transportation,
transfer, maintaining, harboring, or receipt of persons with or without the victim’s consent or knowledge,
within or across national borders by means of threat, or use of force, or other forms of coercion,
abduction, fraud, deception, abuse of power or of position, taking advantage of the vulnerability of the
person, or, the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having
control over another person for the purpose of exploitation which includes at a minimum, the
exploitation or the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labor or services,
slavery, servitude or the removal or sale of organs.
A. ELEMENTS OF TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS:

1. The offender committed the act of the recruitment, obtaining, hiring, providing, offering,
transportation, transfer, maintaining, harboring, or receipt of persons with or without the victim’s consent or
knowledge, within or across national borders;
2. Normative Element - by means of threat, or use of force, or other forms of coercion, abduction, fraud,
deception, abuse of power or of position, taking advantage of the vulnerability of the person, or, the giving or
receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person
3. Subjective Element - for the purpose of exploitation which includes at a minimum, the exploitation or the
prostitution of others or other forms of sexual exploitation, forced labor or services, slavery, servitude or the
removal or sale of organs.

First Element

 What is Recruitment?
Any act of canvassing, enlisting, contracting transporting, utilizing, hiring, or procuring workers and
includes referring, contract services, promising or advertising for employment abroad, whether for profit
or not.
 When is it Human Trafficking and when is it Illegal Recruitment?
◦ if the violator commits any prohibited acts under RA 8042 (Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act),
he is guilty of illegal recruitment. The purpose and means of recruitment are not relevant in the crime of
Illegal Recruitment
◦ But if the recruitment is undertaken for any of the exploitive purposes, and with the employment of the
means mentioned in RA 9208, the recruiter is ALSO guilty for Trafficking in Persons.
 Transportation - the movement of persons from one place to another by a carrier
 Transfer - to convey a person from one place to another.
 Harboring - reception of persons improperly
 Receipt - to take into possession and control.
 Consent of the victim to exploitation is NOT a defense in the crime of trafficking in person.
 “within or across national borders”
◦ Trafficking in persons may be committed within or partly within and partly across the national borders.
Thus, recruitment may be done in the Philippines, but the exploitation may occur in a foreign country.
◦ IMPORTANT: The Territoriality Principle (define) still applies. If none of the elements of trafficking in
persons occurred in the Philippines, Philippine courts may not have jurisdiction over the offense.
◦ Movement of the victim is NOT necessarily an element. It is not necessary that there is transportation of
the victim to constitute trafficking in persons. The recruitment through deception for the purpose of
sexual exploitation may take place WITHOUT any transit of the victim.

Second Element
• Coercion - unauthorized compelling of another person against his will to do something.
• Physical abuse – such as beating, raping, sexually abusing the victim, forcing them to use drugs or denying
them drugs once they are addicted, or held in locked rooms or bound, etc.
• Psychological abuse – such as threats, verbal abuse, shaming, blackmailing, deprivation and isolation,
threatening to harm their families, or subjecting them to patterns of abuse intended to cause fear and
disorientation.
• Fraud - false representation of a matter of fact, whether by words or by conduct, by false or misleading
allegations, or by concealment o that which should have disclosed, which deceives and is intended to deceive
another.
• Deception - knowingly and wilfully making a false statement or representation, express or implied, pertaining
to a present or past existing fact.
• Taking advantage of victim’s vulnerability - any situation in which the person has no real or acceptable
alternative but to submit to abuse (being poor, unemployed, having debt, having emotional attachment, etc.)
• “to achieve the consent of a person having control over another person”
◦ the consent referred to here is the consent of a person who has control over the victim (parents or guardian.)
Third Element
• Just having any of the purposes of trafficking in persons is sufficient. It is NOT NECESSARY that the offender
actually exploits the victim.
• The criminal intent is an inherent element that should be proven by the prosecution.
• The enumeration is NOT EXCLUSIVE. Any exploitive purpose which is similar to the enumeration is within the
meaning ofSection 3(a)

 Prostitution – refers to any act, transaction, scheme or design involving the use of a person by another, for
sexual intercourse or lascivious conduct in exchange for money, profit or any other consideration.
 Forced Labor – refers to the extraction of work or services from any person by means of enticement, violence,
intimidation or threat, use of, force or coercion, including deprivation of freedom, abuse of authority or moral
ascendancy, debt-bondage or deception including any work extracted from any person under the menace of
penalty.
 Slavery – refers to the status or condition of a person over whom any or all of the powers attaching to the right
of ownership are exercised.
 Involuntary Servitude – refers to a condition of enforced and compulsory service induced by means of any
scheme, plan or pattern, intended to cause a person to believe that if he or she did not enter into or continue in
such condition, he or she or another person would suffer serious harm or other forms of abuse or physical
restraint, or threat of abuse or harm, or coercion including depriving access to travel documents and withholding
salaries, or the abuse or threatened abuse of the legal process.
 Sex Tourism – refers to a program organized by travel and tourism-related establishments and individuals which
consists of tourism packages or activities, utilizing and offering escort and sexual services as enticement for
tourists. This includes sexual services and practices offered during rest and recreation periods for members of
the military.
 Sexual Exploitation – refers to participation by a person in prostitution, pornography or the production of
pornography, in exchange for money, profit or any other consideration or where the participation is caused or
facilitated by any means of intimidation or threat, use of force, or other forms of coercion, abduction, fraud,
deception, debt bondage, abuse of power or of position or of legal process, taking advantage of the vulnerability
of the person, or giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control
over another person; or in sexual intercourse or lascivious conduct caused or facilitated by any means as
provided in this Act.
 Debt Bondage – refers to the pledging by the debtor of his/her personal services or labor or those of a person
under his/her control as security or payment for a debt, when the length and nature of services is not clearly
defined or when the value of the services as reasonably assessed is not applied toward the liquidation of the
debt.
 Pornography – refers to any representation, through publication, exhibition, cinematography, indecent shows,
information technology, or by whatever means, of a person engaged in real or simulated explicit sexual activities
or any representation of the sexual parts of a person for primarily sexual purposes
 Removal or sale of organ - RA 9208 does not provide for the definition of “organs,” thus it should be understood
in its ordinary meaning

B. IF THE VICTIM IS A CHILD

The recruitment, transportation, transfer, harboring, adoption or receipt of a child for the purpose of exploitation
or when the adoption is induced by any form of consideration for exploitative purposes shall also be considered as
‘trafficking in persons’ even if it does not involve any of the means set forth in the preceding paragraph.

Child – refers to a person below eighteen (18) years of age or one who is over eighteen (18) but is unable to fully
take care of or protect himself/herself from abuse, neglect, cruelty, exploitation, or discrimination because of a
physical or mental disability or condition.

C. ACTS OF TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS

(a) To recruit, obtain, hire, provide, offer, transport, transfer, maintain, harbor, or receive a person by any
means, including those done under the pretext of domestic or overseas employment or training or
apprenticeship, for the purpose of prostitution, pornography, or sexual exploitation;
(b) To introduce or match for money, profit, or material, economic or other consideration, any person or, as
provided for under Republic Act No. 6955, any Filipino woman to a foreign national, for marriage for the
purpose of acquiring, buying, offering, selling or trading him/her to engage in prostitution, pornography,
sexual exploitation, forced labor, slavery, involuntary servitude or debt bondage;
(c) To offer or contract marriage, real or simulated, for the purpose of acquiring, buying, offering, selling, or
trading them to engage in prostitution, pornography, sexual exploitation, forced labor or slavery,
involuntary servitude or debt bondage;
(d) To undertake or organize tours and travel plans consisting of tourism packages or activities for the
purpose of utilizing and offering persons for prostitution, pornography or sexual exploitation;
(e) To maintain or hire a person to engage in prostitution or pornography;
(f) To adopt persons by any form of consideration for exploitative purposes or to facilitate the same for
purposes of prostitution, pornography, sexual exploitation, forced labor, slavery, involuntary servitude or
debt bondage;
(g) To adopt or facilitate the adoption of persons for the purpose of prostitution, pornography, sexual
exploitation, forced labor, slavery, involuntary servitude or debt bondage;
(h) To recruit, hire, adopt, transport, transfer, obtain, harbor, maintain, provide, offer, receive or abduct a
person, by means of threat or use of force, fraud, deceit, violence, coercion, or intimidation for the
purpose of removal or sale of organs of said person;
(i) To recruit, transport, obtain, transfer, harbor, maintain, offer, hire, provide, receive or adopt a child to
engage in armed activities in the Philippines or abroad;
(j) To recruit, transport, transfer, harbor, obtain, maintain, offer, hire, provide or receive a person by means
defined in Section 3 of this Act for purposes of forced labor, slavery, debt bondage and involuntary
servitude, including a scheme, plan, or pattern intended to cause the person either:
(1) To believe that if the person did not perform such labor or services, he or she or another person
would suffer serious harm or physical restraint; or
(2) To abuse or threaten the use of law or the legal processes; and
(k) To recruit, transport, harbor, obtain, transfer, maintain, hire, offer, provide, adopt or receive a child for
purposes of exploitation or trading them, including but not limited to, the act of baring and/or selling a
child for any consideration or for barter for purposes of exploitation. Trafficking for purposes of
exploitation of children shall include:
(1) All forms of slavery or practices similar to slavery, involuntary servitude, debt bondage and
forced labor, including recruitment of children for use in armed conflict;
(2) The use, procuring or offering of a child for prostitution, for the production of pornography, or
for pornographic performances;
(3) The use, procuring or offering of a child for the production and trafficking of drugs; and
(4) The use, procuring or offering of a child for illegal activities or work which, by its nature or the
circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to harm their health, safety or morals; and
(l) To organize or direct other persons to commit the offenses defined as acts of trafficking under this Act.

D. ATTEMPED TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS

Where there are acts to initiate the commission of a trafficking offense but the offender failed to or did not
execute all the elements of the crime, by accident or by reason of some cause other than voluntary desistance,
such overt acts shall be deemed as an attempt to commit an act of trafficking in persons. As such, an attempt to
commit any of the offenses enumerated in Section 4 of this Act shall constitute attempted trafficking in persons.

In cases where the victim is a child, any of the following acts shall also be deemed as Attempted Trafficking in
Persons:

(a) Facilitating the travel of a child who travels alone to a foreign country or territory without valid reason therefor
and without the required clearance or permit from the Department of Social Welfare and Development, or a
written permit or justification from the child’s parent or legal guardian;
(b) Executing, for a consideration, an affidavit of consent or a written consent for adoption;
(c) Recruiting a woman to bear a child for the purpose of selling the child;
(d) Simulating a birth for the purpose of selling the child; and
(e) Soliciting a child and acquiring the custody thereof through any means from among hospitals, clinics, nurseries,
daycare centers, refugee or evacuation centers, and low-income families, for the purpose of selling the child.

E. ACTS THAT PROMOTE TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS

(a) To knowingly lease or sublease, use or allow to be used any house, building or establishment for the purpose of
promoting trafficking in persons;
(b) To produce, print and issue or distribute unissued, tampered or fake counseling certificates, registration
stickers, overseas employment certificates or other certificates of any government agency which issues these
certificates, decals and such other markers as proof of compliance with government regulatory and pre-departure
requirements for the purpose of promoting trafficking in persons;
(c) To advertise, publish, print, broadcast or distribute, or cause the advertisement, publication, printing,
broadcasting or distribution by any means, including the use of information technology and the internet, of any
brochure, flyer, or any propaganda material that promotes trafficking in persons;
(d) To assist in the conduct of misrepresentation or fraud for purposes of facilitating the acquisition of clearances
and necessary exit documents from government agencies that are mandated to provide pre-departure registration
and services for departing persons for the purpose of promoting trafficking in persons;
(e) To facilitate, assist or help in the exit and entry of persons from/to the country at international and local
airports, territorial boundaries and seaports who are in possession of unissued, tampered or fraudulent travel
documents for the purpose of promoting trafficking in persons;
(f) To confiscate, conceal, or destroy the passport, travel documents, or personal documents or belongings of
trafficked persons in furtherance of trafficking or to prevent them from leaving the country or seeking redress
from the government or appropriate agencies; and
(g) To knowingly benefit from, financial or otherwise, or make use of, the labor or services of a person held to a
condition of involuntary servitude, forced labor, or slavery.
(h) To tamper with, destroy, or cause the destruction of evidence, or to influence or attempt to influence
witnesses, in an investigation or prosecution of a case under this Act;
(i) To destroy, conceal, remove, confiscate or possess, or attempt to destroy, conceal, remove, confiscate or
possess, any actual or purported passport or other travel, immigration or working permit or document, or any
other actual or purported government identification, of any person in order to prevent or restrict, or attempt to
prevent or restrict, without lawful authority, the person’s liberty to move or travel in order to maintain the labor or
services of that person; or
(j) To utilize his or her office to impede the investigation, prosecution or execution of lawful orders in a case under
this Act.

F. QUALIFIED TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS

(a) When the trafficked person is a child;


(b) When the adoption is effected through Republic Act No. 8043 (Inter-Country Adoption Act of 1995) and said
adoption is for the purpose of prostitution, pornography, sexual exploitation, forced labor, slavery, involuntary
servitude or debt bondage;
(c) When the crime is committed by a syndicate, or in large scale. Trafficking is deemed committed by a syndicate
if carried out by a group of 3 or more persons conspiring or confederating with one another. It is deemed
committed in large scale if committed against 3 or more persons, individually or as a group;
(d) When the offender is a spouse, an ascendant, parent, sibling, guardian or a person who exercises authority
over the trafficked person or when the offense is committed by a public officer or employee;
(e) When the trafficked person is recruited to engage in prostitution with any member of the military or law
enforcement agencies;
(f) When the offender is a member of the military or law enforcement agencies;
(g) When by reason or on occasion of the act of trafficking in persons, the offended party dies, becomes insane,
suffers mutilation or is afflicted with HIV or AIDS;
(h) When the offender commits one or more violations of Section 4 over a period of sixty (60) or more days,
whether those days are continuous or not; and
(i) When the offender directs or through another manages the trafficking victim in carrying out the exploitative
purpose of trafficking.

G. USE OF TRAFFICKED PERSONS

Any person who buys or engages the services of a trafficked person for prostitution.

H. WHO MAY INITIATE INVESTIGATION?

Law enforcement agencies are mandated to immediately initiate investigation and counter-trafficking-intelligence
gathering upon receipt of statements or affidavit from victims of trafficking, migrant workers, or their families who
are in possession of knowledge or information about trafficking in persons cases.

I. WHO MAY FILE A COMPLAINT?

Any person who has personal knowledge of the commission of any offense under this Act, such as the trafficked
person, the parents, spouse, siblings, children or legal guardian may file a complaint for trafficking.

Affidavit of Desistance. – Cases involving trafficking in persons should not be dismissed based on the affidavit of
desistance executed by the victims or their parents or legal guardians. Public and private prosecutors are directed
to oppose and manifest objections to motions for dismissal.

Any act involving the means provided in this Act or any attempt thereof for the purpose of securing an Affidavit of
Desistance from the complainant shall be punishable under this Act.

J. PRESCRIPTIVE PERIOD

Trafficking cases under this Act shall prescribe in ten (10) years: Provided, however, That trafficking cases
committed by a syndicate or in a large scale as defined under Section 6, or against a child, shall prescribe in 20
years.

"The prescriptive period shall commence to run from the day on which the trafficked person is delivered or
released from the conditions of bondage, or in the case of a child victim, from the day the child reaches the age of
majority, and shall be interrupted by the filing of the complaint or information and shall commence to run again
when the proceedings terminate without the accused being convicted or acquitted or are unjustifiably stopped for
any reason not imputable to the accused.

K. EXTRADITION

Extradition. - The DOJ, in consultation with DFA, shall endeavor to include offenses of trafficking in persons among
extraditable offenses.
Extra-Territorial Jurisdiction. – The State shall exercise jurisdiction over any act defined and penalized under this
Act, even if committed outside the Philippines and whether or not such act or acts constitute an offense at the
place of commission, the crime being a continuing offense, having been commenced in the Philippines and other
elements having been committed in another country, if the suspect or accused:

(a) Is a Filipino citizen; or


(b) Is a permanent resident of the Philippines; or
(c) Has committed the act against a citizen of the Philippines.

No prosecution may be commenced against a person under this section if a foreign government, in accordance
with jurisdiction recognized by the Philippines, has prosecuted or is prosecuting such person for the conduct
constituting such offense, except upon the approval of the Secretary of Justice.

The government may surrender or extradite persons accused of trafficking in the Philippines to the appropriate
international court if any, or to another State pursuant to the applicable extradition laws and treaties.

L. LEGAL PROTECTION

Legal Protection to Trafficked Persons. – Trafficked persons shall be recognized as victims of the act or acts of
trafficking and as such, shall not be penalized for unlawful acts committed as a direct result of, or as an incident or
in relation to, being trafficked based on the acts of trafficking enumerated in this Act or in obedience to the order
made by the trafficker in relation thereto. In this regard, the consent of a trafficked person to the intended
exploitation set forth in this Act shall be irrelevant.

Victims of trafficking for purposes of prostitution as defined under Section 4 of this Act are not covered by Art. 202
of the Revised Penal Code and as such, shall not be prosecuted, fined, or otherwise penalized under the said law.

M. TEMPORARY CUSTODY

The rescue of victims should be done as much as possible with the assistance of the DSWD or an accredited NGO
that services trafficked victims. A law enforcement officer, on a reasonable suspicion that a person is a victim of
any offense defined under this Act including attempted trafficking, shall immediately place that person in the
temporary custody of the local social welfare and development office, or any accredited or licensed shelter
institution devoted to protecting trafficked persons after the rescue.

N. CONFIDENTIALITY

At any stage of the investigation, rescue, prosecution and trial of an offense under this Act, law enforcement
officers, prosecutors, judges, court personnel, social workers and medical practitioners, as well as parties to the
case, shall protect the right to privacy of the trafficked person. Towards this end, law enforcement officers,
prosecutors and judges to whom the complaint has been referred may, whenever necessary to ensure a fair and
impartial proceeding, and after considering all circumstances for the best interest of the parties, order a closed-
door investigation, prosecution or trial. The name and personal circumstances of the trafficked person or any other
information tending to establish the identity of the trafficked person and his or her family shall not be disclosed to
the public.

It shall be unlawful for any editor, publisher, and reporter or columnist in case of printed materials, announcer or
producer in case of television and radio, producer and director of a film in case of the movie industry, or any
person utilizing tri-media facilities or electronic information technology to cause publicity of the name, personal
circumstances, or any information tending to establish the identity of the trafficked person except when the
trafficked person in a written statement duly notarized knowingly, voluntarily and willingly waives said
confidentiality.

O. MANDATORY SERVICES TO TRAFFICKED PERSONS

Concerned government agencies shall make available the following services to trafficked persons:

(a) Emergency shelter or appropriate housing;


(b) Counseling;
(c) Free legal services which shall include information about the victims' rights and the procedure for filing
complaints, claiming compensation and such other legal remedies available to them, in a language understood by
the trafficked person;
(d) Medical or psychological services;
(e) Livelihood and skills training; and
(f) Educational assistance to a trafficked child.

Sustained supervision and follow through mechanism that will track the progress of recovery, rehabilitation and
reintegration of the trafficked persons shall be adopted and carried out.
Other Services for Trafficked Persons. -

(a) Legal Assistance. - Trafficked persons shall be considered under the category "Overseas Filipino in Distress" and
may avail of the legal assistance created by Republic Act No. 8042, subject to the guidelines as provided by law.
(b) Overseas Filipino Resource Centers. - The services available to overseas Filipinos as provided for by Republic Act
No. 8042 shall also be extended to trafficked persons regardless of their immigration status in the host country.
(c) The Country Team Approach. - The country team approach under Executive Order No. 74 of 1993, shall be the
operational scheme under which Philippine embassies abroad shall provide protection to trafficked persons insofar
as the promotion of their welfare, dignity and fundamental rights are concerned.

P. IRRELEVANCE OF PAST BEHAVIOR

The past sexual behavior or the sexual predisposition of a trafficked person shall be considered inadmissible in
evidence for the purpose of proving consent of the victim to engage in sexual behavior, or to prove the
predisposition, sexual or otherwise, of a trafficked person. Furthermore, the consent of a victim of trafficking to
the intended exploitation shall be irrelevant where any of the means set forth in Section 3(a) of this Act has been
used

Q. IMMUNITY FROM SUIT

No action or suit shall be brought, instituted or maintained in any court or tribunal or before any other authority
against any: (a) law enforcement officer; (b) social worker; or (c) person acting in compliance with a lawful order
from any of the above, for lawful acts done or statements made during an authorized rescue operation, recovery
or rehabilitation/intervention, or an investigation or prosecution of an anti-trafficking case: Provided, That such
acts shall have been made in good faith.

The prosecution of retaliatory suits against victims of trafficking shall be held in abeyance pending final resolution
and decision of criminal complaint for trafficking.

It shall be prohibited for the DFA, the DOLE, and the POEA officials, law enforcement officers, prosecutors and
judges to urge complainants to abandon their criminal, civil and administrative complaints for trafficking.

The remedies of injunction and attachment of properties of the traffickers, illegal recruiters and persons involved
in trafficking may be issued motu proprio by judges.

R. REPATRIATION OF TRAFFICKED PERSONS

The DFA, in coordination with DOLE and other appropriate agencies, shall have the primary responsibility for the
repatriation of trafficked persons, regardless of whether they are documented or undocumented.

If, however, the repatriation of the trafficked persons shall expose the victims to greater risks, the DFA shall make
representation with the host government for the extension of appropriate residency permits and protection, as
may be legally permissible in the host country.

S. TRAFFICKED PERSONS WHO ARE FOREIGN NATIONALS

Trafficked Persons Who are Foreign Nationals. - Subject to the guidelines issued by the Council, trafficked persons
in the Philippines who are nationals of a foreign country shall also be entitled to appropriate protection, assistance
and services available to trafficked persons under this Act: Provided, That they shall be permitted continued
presence in the Philippines for a length of time prescribed by the Council as necessary to effect the prosecution of
offenders.

T. INTER-AGENCY COUNCIL AGAINST TRAFFICKING

Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking. – There is hereby established an Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking,
to be composed of the Secretary of the Department of Justice as Chairperson and the Secretary of the Department
of Social Welfare and Development as Co-Chairperson and shall have the following as members

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