Dear Friend,

Firstly, THANK YOU for helping us nearly reach our fiscal year end June 30th fundraising goal! With your generosity, we're able to continue moving forward in lawsuits on behalf of survivors and changing the world's biggest corporations.

Secondly, this weekend, the United States will be observing its independence. At NCOSE, we are not only celebrating that independence, we are also celebrating those who have been freed from the tangled web of sexual abuse and exploitation.

I cannot help but think of the thousands of survivors who no longer have unsolicited videos of their abuse posted on Pornhub, the potentially thousands of children who now have stronger safeguards to keep them from those who seek to do them harm, and the survivors who know that NCOSE is taking on the perpetrators of sexual exploitation so they can enjoy healing and restoration.

All of these things have been made possible because of you and your partnership with NCOSE to create a world free of sexual abuse and exploitation

Have a great Independence Day!

Major Changes to Google Chromebooks Roll Out September 1st!

Together, we've fought for this victory and now MILLIONS of students will be protected on school-issued devices! Celebrate!

Thanks to your help, Google Education products will defaulted to safety, with age-based access settings.

This has been a years-long battle, impossible without your voice, action, and support!

Register for the Online Global Summit for FREE!

The CESE Summit is this month!

Join thousands of Abolitionists—mothers and fathers, medical professionals, law enforcement, government officials, business leaders, and so many more—and join the movement to build a world free from sexual abuse and exploitation.

Spotlight from the NCOSE Research Institute

New Florida Law Confronts Human Trafficking

At a time when some jurisdictions around the US are systematically letting offenders off the hook, Florida is taking the crime seriously enough to focus new attention on them.

Among many critical changes, the bill also expands the definition of human trafficking to include, “purchasing patronizing, or procuring” another person for exploitation; and to include the trafficking of “an adult believed by the person to be a child."

SB 1826 will have a real impact in the lives of survivors of trafficking.

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