The Jordan Harbinger Show - 872: Paul Hutchinson | Beyond the Politics of "Sound of Freedom"

Episode Date: August 3, 2023

Sound of Freedom executive producer Paul Hutchinson joins us for a politics-free conversation about the horrible truth behind modern child trafficking. What We Discuss with Paul Hutchinson: ... How did successful investor Paul Hutchinson get personally involved in undercover work to rescue victims of child trafficking? How does someone working undercover to bust child traffickers gain the trust of the world's worst people without losing themselves along the way? How do sting operations navigate international and local laws to rescue children being trafficked and bring their abductors to justice? How does someone heading a rescue effort even begin to pick up the trail of criminals that will lead them to the traffickers and their victims? How can we, as concerned adults and parents, take a pre-emptive approach to protecting children from traffickers? And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/872 This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This episode is sponsored in part by Conspiruality Podcast. You know how I'm always talking about critical thinking and spotting manipulation? Well, there's a podcast that's all about dismantling new age cults, wellness grifters, and conspiracy med yogis, basically the wild overlap of spirituality and misinformation. It's called the Conspiruality Podcast. The hosts, a journalist, cult researcher, and a philosophical skeptic, dive deep into how this stuff spreads, from Project 2025 and the Heritage Foundation's dystopian vision of the future to how former leftists get pulled into far-right conspiracies.
Starting point is 00:00:31 An interesting episode to check out is called Speaking Truth to Goop, where Jen Gunter breaks down the pseudoscience behind the wellness industry in a way that is super entertaining and eye-opening. It's sharp, funny, and makes you a lot harder to fool, which, if you listen to this show, you know I'm all about that. From exploring cults to analyzing our cultural and political landscape, the Conspiratuality Podcast will help you stay informed against misinformation and resist fear tactics.
Starting point is 00:00:54 Find Conspirality on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts. Coming up next on the Jordan Harbinger Show. Trafficking, human trafficking, is the fastest growing criminal enterprise in the world, and now the second most profitable. It's surpass the illegal arms trade. It's soon going to surpass the drug trade.
Starting point is 00:01:15 And you see this on the movie. We had Jim Caviesel say this line. You can sell a bag of cocaine once. You can sell a child five or ten times a day for the next five or ten years. Welcome to the show. I'm Jordan Harbinger. On the Jordan Harbinger show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills of the world's most fascinating people and turn their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact
Starting point is 00:01:40 your own life and those around you. Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker through long-form conversations with a variety of amazing folks, from spies to CEOs, athletes, authors, thinkers, performers, even the occasional former jihadi, drug trafficker, rocket scientist, or legendary Hollywood filmmaker. And if you're new to the show or you're looking for a handy way to tell your friends about the show, I suggest our episode starter packs. These are collections of our favorite episodes organized by topic to help new listeners get a taste of everything that we do here on this show. Topics like negotiation, abnormal psychology, persuasion, influence, disinformation in cyber warfare,
Starting point is 00:02:18 crime and cults, and more. Just visit jordanharbinger.com slash start or search for us in your Spotify app to get started. Our newsletter where we take a gem or two of an older episode and pop it into your inbox every Wednesday is just rocking and rolling. I love writing these things. You all seem to love reading them and I'm really appreciative of that. You can find the newsletter at jordanharbinger.com slash news. I'd love your feedback on it. And I got some surprises in store for y'all on that thing as well.
Starting point is 00:02:44 Today on the show, we're talking about the movie, The Sound of Freedom. Now, I originally was not going to cover this movie at all, despite a lot of requests to do so because I got the feeling that the lead actor Jim Caviesel was actually a QAnon kook, which turns out is definitely the case. And I also know there's a ton of disinformation out there about child trafficking that does more harm than good, all the dramatized stuff, which does more harm the good. I did not want to be a part of that.
Starting point is 00:03:11 And almost none of the anti-trafficking door kicker types wanted to discuss the reality on the ground. That is, until I met Paul Hutchinson. Paul funds child rescues and has done over 70 undercover missions himself, 7-0. He also raises funds to rescue traffic children and individuals, and perhaps most importantly, is willing to talk openly and not unnecessarily politicize the issue or turn it into some kooky conspiracy theory. Basically, the situation is bad enough.
Starting point is 00:03:41 And the Sound of Freedom, the movie, if you haven't heard of it, or if you haven't seen it, this movie tracks Tim Ballard, who was actually on this show a long time ago. and this is sort of based on a true story, but really is highly dramatized, in finding trafficked children who are being sold usually for sex in other countries and rescuing them. So this is a movie that is controversial,
Starting point is 00:04:04 but not seemingly for a ton of good reasons. A lot of people just having the same reaction that I did, which is that the lead actor and Tim Ballard, now who was on the show, once again, are really out there sort of saying this is very political, and it's that furniture companies are selling them and the children's blood is being drank,
Starting point is 00:04:23 just, you know, stupid Q&N BS nonsense. And I just didn't want to contribute to that. So I am really glad we get to cover it here with somebody who is not going to embarrass themselves or the show and is actually going to deliver what I hope is real vetted on the ground information. Now, there are some spoilers for the movie Sound of Freedom discussed in the episode.
Starting point is 00:04:43 If you've seen it, great. If not, no problem. Don't get mad at me here. I'm not necessarily recommending you go see it. before listening to the episode either. And this, again, is not overly graphic, but it is about child trafficking. So maybe no super young kids in the car for this one
Starting point is 00:04:58 if you are not comfortable with them hearing about this. So here we go with Paul Hutchinson. The Sound of Freedom, it's been in a box office smash to say the least, right? The budget was what? 15 million and it's at 130, something like that? Almost 130 million. Yeah, we made $14 million our first day and our budget was only 14.5.
Starting point is 00:05:19 And we beat out guys that have $300 million budgets with Indiana Jones and others. So phenomenal success per three weeks. So does that mean that Sound of Freedom is really good or that Indiana Jones is really bad? What does that mean? Well, for a long time, Jordan, I thought the Sound of Freedom must have sucked because we had this done five years ago. And nobody would take our distribution. I'm like, you know what? Am I the only guy that thinks this is amazing movie just because I'm the investor in it?
Starting point is 00:05:47 And I thought maybe this will end up being a CD on my table as a coaster for my drinks. I think he was going to go anywhere. But now with the success of the movie, I really believe people are seeing as I did and as our team did. And it's beautifully made. And it has a super awesome message to it that we need to all get behind and say, how can we fix the world? It is a really harrowing story about these young kids who are sold, trafficked, often for sex, which is really gross. And I have questions, of course, as to how true to life, how accurate all this is. But first, of course, I want to back up the truck.
Starting point is 00:06:20 You're selling yourself short a little bit, right? You're not just an investor in the movie. This is something that's been near and dear to your heart for a while before this. Very much. My character in the movie is played by Eduardo Verostigy, by the producer. Halfway through when the Homeland Security agent is frustrated, he wants to leave his job and go help rescue these kids. And he needs somebody who can not only help to fund it, but to fly down and and physically be there in front of the traffickers, that was me.
Starting point is 00:06:47 In the movie, it's Pablo, because when we filmed the show, I was still undercover, thought that I'd be undercover for the next 10, 20 years. And so we didn't have him play Paul Hutchinson. We had him play Pablo Delgado, the billion-dollar fund manager who quits his job to go help rescue children. So that's my personal experience. And that was the first of now 70 undercover rescue missions in 15 countries. It's changed my entire life and transformed everything for me.
Starting point is 00:07:13 70 undercover missions, you thought you would do it for 20 years. I would imagine you get quite tired of being undercover because how long are these operations? When you say 70, it's not just 70 afternoons, right? There's a lot going on here. Yeah. Now, when I say 70, I will say this. Every single sting operation requires multiple times going in as a specific operation to identify more traffickers.
Starting point is 00:07:39 We don't want to take down a trafficking ring and end up having three or four or more in the city that fills in. So I'll usually go in on five or six or seven plus, sometimes eight or ten different times into a region to connect with all of the trafficking rings that are there for a single sting operations. I count those as individual undercover operations to set up for one sting. That, of course, makes sense. How do you explain to one set of traffickers while you're talking to their competition in the same city or same region? I would imagine they find out, right? Because it's organized crime. They have eyes everywhere. Absolutely. multiple times we've had traffickers kill other traffickers on the mission or after we left
Starting point is 00:08:20 or they got in fights. I've got videos of some of them getting fights over turf wars type of thing. And so the answer is this. I go in and for the first year, I went in as the buyer. I was in as Paul Hutchinson. I went in as Paul Stone. And I had a fake Facebook and profile and all of this stuff, web page for Paul Stone Capital, all this crap. And I had pictures of me with Lamborghinis and Ferraris and all this stuff that doesn't. matter, but to the traffickers matter. Like an Instagram influencer, basically. Exactly. Exactly. So these guys would go to in the morning, downtown Port of Prince Haiti or
Starting point is 00:08:51 whatever. They would connect with these traffickers and they would then show them this profile of this Playboy and saying, hey, this is the guy that funds these parties and stuff and he's coming down. And so then when they see me in real life, they're like, oh shit, this guy's real. I saw these pictures online and we had taken everything of the real me down. So there was nothing there. But after a year and a half, I was asked to start going deep cover. This would be dangerous if I was a wealthy playboy. And so instead, I'm working for a guy. And would go in and say, listen, my boss is looking for a big party. He wants to pull in a bunch of his rich buddies and come here to Dominican Republic and have a big party over Super Bowl Sunday, whatever it is. And he wants a
Starting point is 00:09:29 bunch of models that are there. So you have your inventory, you have others. And we'll connect with all of the traffickers who currently have inventory in that area. And that was just the sting like what we did in Columbia, the party. We had different types of operations. as well, depending on what kind of traffickers were there. I had multiple times where they got mad. I was in a border city in Mexico. There was traffickers that were trafficking children across the border in Mexicali, Tijuana, and I was asked by the head of the federal police to come and check out what was going on.
Starting point is 00:09:59 And so I did. I went in with a team, connected with a couple traffickers. One of them got mad that we were working with the other one and called his buddy, who was the pretty high up in the police department there, who ended up arresting us and asking for a bride money and the whole whole. thing all fell apart that was there. So it gets challenging when you have multiple traffickers that both want to control and especially if we're coming in with the desire to bring all of their current inventory to one place, then yeah, they start fighting with each other. That makes sense. And I know you say
Starting point is 00:10:30 inventory, but so people are really clear. We're talking about child sex trafficking, which is just gross to keep saying. So we'll say it a few times and then we'll use euphemisms because it is repulsive. I remember talking about this on the show before episode 369 with Tim Ballard, who the movie is loosely based on. We'll talk more about that in a second, but one of the things that I asked them was, I know you're undercover, right? It's part of the job. But how do you fraternize with these guys, pretend that you like screwing small kids? Talking about it is gross and revolting. So how do you stay in that identity for what, weeks at a time, days at a time, over and over again?
Starting point is 00:11:03 Do you just become desensitized to that somehow? The deep cover, the ones that are finding the kids, it's important. important that the identity that I took when we were in that place was not one of a consumer. Okay? I'm working for a boss. And they're like, once you try out this 12, you know what? My boss will kill me and my whole family if I taste the candy before the party. It's really his.
Starting point is 00:11:25 He pays me really well for it. That way we keep ourselves out of a situation. We have to prove ourselves or whatever. We say, no, this isn't for us. We're setting this up. He pays us well for doing so and whatnot. So that helps a bunch. I was talking to a motorcycle gang guy.
Starting point is 00:11:39 He's in this dark alley and he pulls his shirt up and there's a gun that's just sitting there tucked in his pants. And I pull out a bill and I give it to him. And he says, what's that for? I says, that's for you. You keep it. I said, I have another one for you. You can get me in touch with somebody. I have a boss coming in a couple weeks looking for a party.
Starting point is 00:11:56 He likes 10-year-olds. And he said to me right there, your boss is effed up. I said, I know he is. He'll pay you well if you can get me in touch with somebody who can provide what he is looking for. And so, boom, he got me in touch with a female trafficker who was running a strip club. who is selling children on the side for her primary income. Strip Club is more of a front. So it happens all the time.
Starting point is 00:12:15 These guys are grossed out by it as well. In fact, one of our contacts in one of the undercover missions was a drug lord in the area. And he said, listen, he said, you may not agree with how I do business, but I've got children of my own.
Starting point is 00:12:29 And those guys are evil and I'm going to kill them. And if I do, you got 20, 30 kids and you don't know where they are. Or I tell you everything I know, you go in there, you get those kids back to their families, you make sure he goes to jail and I'll take care of it from there. It's interesting, even the thugs on the street, the guy selling cocaine and stuff, they're not into this either, but they know who is. And if you're able to get into a place where you're with those super dangerous people, you can connect with the ones who're selling kids.
Starting point is 00:12:55 That makes sense, right? So now you're merely posing as a disgusting amoral psychopath as opposed to an actual pedophile. It's like those drug dealers, I've spoken to undercover cops and DEA agents and stuff on the show. and sometimes they have to pose as people who consume drugs, but I think occasionally, depending on the cover, they can get away with, hey, I don't do this, I'm a recovering addict. And some of the dealers are like, hey, respect. The stuff is addictive. That's why we have businesses that are worth millions of dollars
Starting point is 00:13:21 because people can't get off the meth or the cocaine or whatever. This is one where probably everybody would understand if you don't consume the product that you're selling because it's very specific. And 99.9% of people find it completely disgusting. Yeah, 100%. But it allows us to find the, the guys who are supplying them and then either geotag their location, which the majority of the
Starting point is 00:13:44 rescues didn't take place like on the Sound of Freedom movie, right? The reason for that was to get a lot of footage, to have the stories and to somewhat sensationalize it. There was a number of other ones that I did in those early days where the purpose was we went in, we found the kids, and we had to bring them all together for a big party thing. Why? Because there'd be undercover cameras there and they could tell the story. We agreed early on on that very first Columbia mission, we meaning me and Dave and a bunch of the undercover operators, we agreed we will do the work, we will find the kids, we will bring them to a place. You guys bring the cameras. You tell the story and that story can involve us because we don't want the world to know who we are. And so that
Starting point is 00:14:27 happened for a number of years. But after that, we found it was a lot more effective and a lot safer to not have those parties like that. Instead, we did what we were doing. We got in touch with the traffickers, said same kind of a story. We've got a boss coming in town, et cetera. And we say, listen, my boss will kill me if I taste the candy,
Starting point is 00:14:44 but I have to verify you have the candy. So if you're willing to take me to wherever they are, I'll give you $100 for each one just so that I can see them and verify that you have them, so my boss will come down. So they'll either, if they don't trust us enough, they'll bring the kids to a central place,
Starting point is 00:15:00 to a restaurant or something, the undercover agents that are taking, at the time, we'll tag their vehicles and find out where they're taking the kids, or in most cases, we're able to work our way up to what I call a level three trafficker, the ones that are physically holding the children in captivity, geotag that location, and then once we're out of country, then the federal agents of that country do their job, arrest them, and we don't have anything to do with it. There's no cameras and there's no sensationalism around it, but we're taken down pedophiles, we're taking down trafficking rings, and we're saving the kids. We say,
Starting point is 00:15:32 We'll do all the work and we'll pay for everything. All we ask is that the bad guys stay in jail for good. They don't get around your system. Number two, we have full access to the children and getting them rehabilitated and back to their families. So that's the rest of the back story. How do you ensure that governments in places like Honduras, Mexico, are actually going to follow rule of law
Starting point is 00:15:53 and not just the guy who was in this had a million dollars in cryptocurrency, so he's out and all of us got new cars. How do you make sure that happens? Well, sadly, you can't make sure on anything. We will work with only vetted people that are vetted by some of the U.S. intelligence agencies that some of our guys have worked with just to make sure that we're not going to get shot while we're undercover by somebody that the local cops never even know that we're there.
Starting point is 00:16:19 They have no idea that we're in country. The only people that really know is usually the head of the federal police, the president knows that we're there. We have authorization to work under their laws. And we say, listen, we will do the work. We'll work under your laws and you tell us what we can and can't do, and we'll present it to you. You'll look like heroes to your people. I will say, though, that there were a number of operations that unfortunately fell apart either during the operation or afterwards because of that kind of corruption. There's a documentary called Operation Toussaint.
Starting point is 00:16:48 Toussaint is the name of the airport in Port of Prince, Hey. Now, that was while I was still deep cover. The only time that you see me, my face is blurred and I'm laughing with the traffickers and you would hate my guts if you didn't know who I really was. Now, I led the entire undercover operation to find those 34 children that were highlighted in that film. And that film also goes into what happened afterwards. We got to the head of the dragon, some really bad traffickers. And these traffickers ended up paying $80,000 to be let out of prison. Now, to put that in perspective, the average income in Haiti is like $500 a year.
Starting point is 00:17:26 $80,000 is like millions. and these poor corrupt judges got paid off. And so we're like, crap, these kids were now being re-trafficked. It was crazy. And so we flew the first lady, the attorney general, the top of the federal police. We flew them to the U.S. And here's the crazy thing about that. During the operation, there was one thing that kind of went squirly on it.
Starting point is 00:17:47 As I was getting arrested, usually my passport, we send all of our luggage to the airport beforehand. And when we get arrested, I get arrested with the traffickers. I get hauled off and they think I'm going to jail. I end up going straight to the airport, but I keep my passport on me. The agent who was searching me down didn't know I was a good guy. He ends up taking my passport, putting it up on the evidence pile with the other trafficker stuff.
Starting point is 00:18:11 And I'm laying there. I'm like, this is my real passport. I can't say anything. They pick us up. Locals were throwing rocks and everything else. So fast forward, when those corrupt judges let those guys out, they had to say why.
Starting point is 00:18:24 Their reason why is they're like, the real bad guy got away. And the real bad guy, it wasn't Paul Stone, it wasn't Paul Steel, it wasn't Paul Black, it was Paul in Hutchinson. I didn't realize that it was already entered in before we got it back. There's a lot of situations like that where things ended up going bad because of bribery, because of money. But the fortunate thing is they went back in, re-arrested those guys, took out those judges
Starting point is 00:18:46 and made sure the kids were in a safe. This is where Haiti? That was in Haiti. Yep, Port-au-Prince Haiti. I assume that you have to be careful. between men and the re-arrest and squaring this away, you couldn't go back to Haiti because they would be like,
Starting point is 00:18:59 hey, you're on a wanted list for human trafficking. Oh, yeah, I was for a while. It was funny. In fact, after they cleared it all up, the head of the federal police guy, he was one of the he was a head. He was named Jim Potote. He ended up getting killed.
Starting point is 00:19:11 Good man, but he called me up and he said, Paul, he said, we need you back here in Haiti. You were the closest to some of these rings that we need to continue to take down. This is after we rescued the 34 kids. And I said, Jim, that I was on Haiti's most wanted list for a little while. He said, yeah, he said, now you're Haiti's most protected. I said, that doesn't make
Starting point is 00:19:29 me feel good. A flip of a switch. Don't worry, because if you can get protected that quick, you could probably get unprotected that quick. You mentioned that he was killed. Was that in relation to what we're talking about now? I believe so. On record, he died of a heart attack at the same two-week span that three other political leaders died of the same heart attack. We and the family believes he was poisoned. We were getting some pretty high-level stuff. He was just mad. He was mad as that these four corrupt judges were let out. A lot of the burning of the tires in the streets and all that unrest that was happening a number of years ago, that was at that time. He stood up when we were in the U.S. after everything had come down, the first lady was here, he stood up and he said,
Starting point is 00:20:09 I don't care if I lose my life. I don't care if I lose my job. I'm going to fix the corruption in this country. And so, unfortunately, I believe he was in a precarious position because he was identifying really who was at the top of it. And by the way, the movie, Operation Toussaint, we can link in the show notes because it's freely available and watchable on YouTube. So that's T-O-U-S-A-I-N-T, we're saying in the French way. Operation Toussaint. So we'll link it in the show notes. How did you get trained to do this kind of thing? Because you're not a cop. Even in the movie, they're like, oh, here's this hedge fund guy likes to play cop, which is funny that you let them say that about you. Why not? It's true.
Starting point is 00:20:48 I'm good with it. Yeah. Will you just like, hey, real estate portfolio is great and all that, but what I would love to do is something slightly more boots on the ground? For decades and decades, I've had a passion for hand-to-hand combat training, gun training. I'm really good with a firearm and got hundreds of them myself,
Starting point is 00:21:09 but to undercover, you don't take firearms. But the majority of the skill set isn't the fact you know how to fight. And 70 undercover rescue missions, we've seen the traffickers fight. We've been in some very dangerous positions, very dangerous in times where I thought we're going to have to use it. I've trained for a long time in something called Krav Maga.
Starting point is 00:21:28 Yeah, the Israeli self-defense. For the listeners that aren't familiar, so regular martial arts, karate and others, bow to your sense, three points when you kick him in the leg. Krav is brick to their head and go home to your family. It's Israeli special forces hand-to-hand combat. It's the most lethal I know of on earth. Every move, a lot of them are illegal in the ring. And you know where to hit them, where to punch them, that it's lights out. They don't walk, they don't breathe, they don't talk anymore. And I can take away a gun faster than they can pull the trigger every time. I've trained thousands and thousands of iterations of being able to handle other people's weapons when presented. So that kind of thing, a lot of our undercover operators, the guys who are
Starting point is 00:22:06 just trained with night vision goggles and their Navy SEAL stuff, they weren't as good. The guys who knew how to handle themselves in any situation with their bare hands were super valuable. So that, from a security standpoint, that was important. From the other part of the equation, though, I'm going to back you up about a year before the Columbia Rescue Mission. I was, I actually called Sean Reyes. He's the attorney general, and he and I became friends years before. I was serving on the board of directors for the FBI Citizens Academy. I'd gone through a bunch of training with them and crap.
Starting point is 00:22:36 And so I called him up. I said, Ray, I got front row tickets to the Miss America pageant. Do you want to go? In his exact words, he said, hutch, unlike you, I have a reputation to uphold. He said, I can't be seen front row Miss America. It just doesn't work. I said, no, it's not like that. I said, I'm sponsoring a bunch of the children who lost their fathers in military battle.
Starting point is 00:22:58 And we're paying for the dresses and hair and transportation of these little girls and their moms to come. And we're having them crowned a Miss America on stage. And he goes, oh, that's pretty dope. I'll come to that. So we fly out to this Miss America thing. Because it was a fallen soldier charity, the Pentagon had sent a representative down. His name was John. John worked for the CIA for about 25 years.
Starting point is 00:23:20 as a top recruiter. After three days, John says to me, we're sitting at a table, me and Sean and a couple of former Miss Americas. And John says, he said, Mr. Hutchinson, I've been watching you for the last three days. And I think your country can use your talents. And I said, what talents are those? He said, you're about one in every 12 million has what I see in you. He says, we call it a Camillion. He said, your ability to immediately break down the barrier of communication and become best friends with a billionaire, a bum on the street, or a runway model is something we don't see very often at all. He said, imagine this. We fly you to Dubai. We line you up with some dirty money guys. You get the information we need. You'll have the perfect backstop. You run a multi-billion dollar fund.
Starting point is 00:24:04 And I ended up turning them down when they called a few months later because I didn't want to put my life in danger for some white collar crime guys in Dubai. Fast forward a year later, Sean's in a meeting with Tim and some others, and they're like, okay, we need somebody who can help fund this and who can play this role. And that's when Sean said, well, have you ever met Paul Hutchinson? Jramney's son was there. I wasn't there in the meeting, but I heard. And Josh said, oh, Paul would be perfect. And I told them both. I said, you know what? I don't think that's a compliment. You guys both think that I'd be a good undercover pedophile. Who looks like a peto and is really convincing? Paul Hutchinson. It's a funny compliment, indeed.
Starting point is 00:24:41 You're listening to the Jordan Harbinger show with our guest, Paul Hutchinson. We'll be right back. If you're wondering how I managed to book all these great authors, thinkers, and creators every single week, it is because of my network, and I'm teaching you how to build your network for free over at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. This course is all about improving your relationship building skills and inspiring other people to want to develop a relationship with you. And it's easy, it's not cringy, it's very down to earth, it's not awkward, there's no
Starting point is 00:25:11 cheesy tactics that are going to make you blush before you hit send and then cringe and puck her up, if you know what I mean? It takes a few minutes a day and many of the guests on our show subscribe and contribute to the course. Come join us. You'll be in smart company. You can find the course at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. Now, back to Paul Hutchinson. How do you even begin to get in touch with the right people, the traffickers, right? I would imagine you can't just walk down the streets of Cartagena and be like, hey, I'm looking for some underage kids. No. Where does it begin? It begins, number one, coming into country, meeting with the head of the federal police and the guys that you can trust and say, okay, where is the most dangerous area of the city at the most dangerous time?
Starting point is 00:25:56 Those are the guys that you want to connect with. Those are what I call level one guys. They're the guys selling you cocaine at 2 in the morning in the super dangerous areas. You've got to be able to handle yourself in those spaces. And so you're a white guy in a third world country in the most dangerous area at midnight. There's something up, right? Yeah. These guys are like, okay, this guy is effed up.
Starting point is 00:26:18 And you're acting like you're on something. You're not normal to be in that area. So you're acting like you're somewhat drunk or high or whatever else. And you're like, what up? What are you doing? Hey, what do you want some drugs? I said, no, no. We're out of that.
Starting point is 00:26:29 But, hey, I'm looking for something. Maybe you can connect me with who has what I'm looking for. And then you get to a level two. The level two are usually pimps. The level two's own women and have access to children. For example, in a recent one, this pimp, she was a madam and she had about eight girls working for, but she was also selling children to the Chinese. And she had access from some other places from where these children were coming from. What do you mean selling children to the Chinese?
Starting point is 00:26:58 You're going to have to expand that. Yeah, I say selling, renting them out. So the Chinese in the area were flying in, and she was renting out children to the Chinese. she was at what we call level two. In every situation, every single city that we go into, we get to those really dark level twos, usually from the guys in the super dangerous areas. Those level two guys, they have access to the kids,
Starting point is 00:27:20 but we've got to find where they're getting them from. We've got to get to that level three. And so the level three will be the one who is physically holding the children. And so in Haiti, for example, a couple drug dealer guys at a super dangerous area, the guy on the motorcycle with the gun and he makes a phone call, gets us in. He got us to this level two.
Starting point is 00:27:40 Her name was D. She was running the strip club. She was renting out kids, but she had too busy of a life. She wasn't holding the kids. So we had to get from her to wherever she was getting the kids. So a level three physically holds them. We have to get there so we can geotag the location of wherever they're holding the kids or get them to bring them to something so that we can do the same.
Starting point is 00:28:00 Because that's the whole goal. You've got to arrest the pedophiles. you've got to take down the trafficking networks, and you've got to rescue the children. You've got to pull them out of hell. But that was what we did for 10 years. Now my biggest focus is fixing the demand side, because just doing all of that's not going to fix the problem. It's not going to fix it. Right. It's like burning a cocaine field. Okay, fine. There's plenty of other places we can get the same type of product, cocaine or children. You have to fix the demand side, which seems impossible. I was going to say it was probably easier to fix demand side for pedophiles than cocaine because demand is
Starting point is 00:28:33 lower, but I don't even know if that's true. Trafficking, human trafficking is the fastest growing criminal enterprise in the world, and now the second most profitable is surpass the illegal arms trade. It's soon going to surpass the drug trade. And you see this on the movie. We had Jim Caviesel say this line, you can sell a bag of cocaine once. You can sell a child five or ten times a day for the next five or ten years. And the demand is there. That's what's sick. There was more money made last year in human trafficking, then all of the airlines of the planet combined is billions and billions. They figure in human trafficking as a whole is about a hundred billion. $150 billion per year business. 150 billion. But that includes all trafficking. This is where people
Starting point is 00:29:19 who are either misinformed or disingenuous, and by the way, I'm not accusing you of this. I'm just saying it's all over the internet. They'll say, it's a $150 per year business selling kids for sex. No, that's all human trafficking. So adult labor trafficking, people, smuggling others across borders for economic reasons. It's not selling kids for sex. That's actually a relatively small part of it. The problem is, what if it's only a billion dollar per year business? That's still way too big of a business for way too disgusting of a crime.
Starting point is 00:29:48 Absolutely. When people ask me questions about, oh, tell me about Adrenna Cromwell, is that true? I said, listen, I'm not going down any roads of anything that I haven't seen myself, but what I have seen is bad enough. an 11-year-old being sold to me as a virgin by itself is bad enough. That's something that we can fix. So yeah, even if it's a billion dollar a year industry, that's bad enough. But the thing that nobody's talking about, because we're all thinking, oh, this is the thing we need to send Rambos down to Columbia to fix the problem. Guess what? The problem is likely in your own home
Starting point is 00:30:21 or in your neighbor's home or whatever. The problem with child sexual abuse is rampant, is everywhere. And so people ask me, what do we do about this? Hug your kids. Why? Because the highest likelihood of a child that gets traffic traffic is one that's a runaway, a broken family, things like that. So having that healthy relationship and even more than that, having a relationship with your kids where you can communicate with them where they feel comfortable coming in and
Starting point is 00:30:47 saying, hey, you want, Dad, I don't like hugging Uncle Harry. Having that relationship with them where they can be in tune with their feelings and be okay with sharing when they're uncomfortable with them. that's way more important than sending money for some Navy sales to go into Columbia. Yeah, I agree. I'm glad to hear you say that because what I was shocked to learn
Starting point is 00:31:04 when I started researching this more is that a large amount of trafficking of course happened to the United States and a large portion of those kids are what are called throwaway kids who are trading sex for a place to stay, food because they were kicked out of their house because they came out as gay to their parents
Starting point is 00:31:19 or they ran away because they're in an abusive situation. And most kids were actually trafficked by family or somebody that they knew or somebody who was pretending to be someone they could trust, like a boyfriend or other sort of family member. And a lot of the kids who are trafficked in the United States, they actually go to school, which I found really surprising because what you think is it's,
Starting point is 00:31:39 oh, it's a kid from Central America who's been illegally smuggled in. Not really. There was a woman who gave a TED talk on trafficking. She went to my high school, which was in like an affluent area of Michigan. She had good parents, but some boyfriend she had got her drunk,
Starting point is 00:31:55 dirty pictures of her when she was in high school. and was like, I'm going to get your dad fired from his job if you don't do what I say. So she snuck out every night and was turning tricks and giving this guy the money, basically. That's what most trafficking looks like. And this is while she was in high school. So most trafficking looks like that. I guess that's where some of the criticism comes in for Sound of Freedom, which I would love to discuss with you. I know we talked about a pre-show, which is a lot of experts, they're challenging Sound of Freedom.
Starting point is 00:32:21 They're saying, hey, this paints an inaccurate, sensationalized picture of child trafficking. It's not kids stolen from a modeling shoot from Honduras and smuggled to Columbia or some other place. It's the stuff happening at home or near home. What do you think about that? Absolutely. Now, I will say this. The things that we showed on the movie happened. Now, Tim didn't kill that guy.
Starting point is 00:32:42 In fact, that's a whole other stories, a whole other country, a whole other child, and a whole other team that went in there for them. However, those things do happen, but they're not the norm. Everybody that was there were really bad guys. the stories of the children really happened on different rescue missions that we did of how those children were taken and brought in. But the majority of children that are being trafficked today, the majority of them actually sleep in their own bed at night. That's something that people are like, what? They're sleeping. No, yeah, they do. They sleep in their own bed at night. They're being
Starting point is 00:33:13 trafficked by their mom. They're being groomed by their uncle. Their babysitter is telling them, hey, you're going to lose your virginity anyway. If you lose it through these guys, you can make some money. that's what's really going on. And that's what we have to be aware of. And yes, I'm happy that the sound of freedom is doing so well, primarily because I'm part of it and an executive producer and investor, but more importantly, so that it can at least start the conversations so that people can say, okay, now I'm motivated. What do I do?
Starting point is 00:33:40 The worst thing that you can do is go try to be a Rambo in Latin America and go find kids. That's an absolute worst thing you can do. Second worst thing you can do is decide you're going to just randomly fund whatever organization says that they're being rambles and going and rescuing kids, because half of them, that money is going to pay for somebody's ego and somebody's logo and not necessarily directly to where the problem is. But the best thing you can do is take a look at what's going on in your own neighborhood, with your own kids, maybe your kid's friends who suddenly have a change of energy and their super low self-esteem and everything changed about their outgoing nature and you're wondering what's
Starting point is 00:34:17 really going on there, maybe talking to their parents and maybe their parents have the challenger, it's an uncle, whatever. That's the most common thing, and that's what we need to be aware of as parents. I think there's something to that. Also, I looked at some of these organizations. A lot of them are not nonprofits, which is already sketchy. And some of the ones that are nonprofits, you can look on Charity Navigator and find what the executive compensation is. And it's a little gross. A lot of times people say, like, my parents the other day were like, oh, I can't believe the CEO of the Red Cross makes $698,000. And I had to explain that that person could work at a Fortune 500 company and you'd be adding a zero or maybe more than one zero to that figure for their compensation because the
Starting point is 00:35:00 International Red Cross is a massive organization. There's a lot of moving parts. That person is a lot of specialized knowledge. They're probably coming off a 20 or 30 year career running companies and they took a massive pay cut, like 90 plus percent to run something like the International Red Cross. But a lot of these organizations that do this, that rescue kids are really small. And then the compensation is still $600,000. And you go, wait a minute, this is like a large double-digit percentage of the operating budget goes to the salary of one or two people. That, to me, is very grifty.
Starting point is 00:35:31 So you have to be very careful where you put your money if you're donating to these causes. 100%. In fact, for the last five years, my foundation, the Child Liberation Foundation, didn't have overhead. Now, granted, I wasn't bringing in outside money either. It was a 501c3 that I would put my own money and whenever I wanted to donate and then it would go there and it would donate money from it as a fund to fund type of a thing to other foundations that were vetted and specifically to operations. I hate writing checks for just putting it into their foundation because I don't know where it goes. I don't have the C-through. And so instead, I have them present to me, okay, this is what the plan is.
Starting point is 00:36:08 We're going to build this healing retreat or this safe house for the kids or we're going to. to do this operation, this is our intel on it, and it's going to take this many guys to go in and take down this pedophile ring or whatever it is, those things, I'll say, okay, I'll fund that, I'll give you $20,000 for that, I'll give you $50,000 for that, because I know that it's going directly to the cause that's not going to pad somebody's pocket. Yeah, I think that's important, but not everybody has the ability to do that, right? They just Google child rescue or they see somebody on a podcast like this, and they're like, oh, let me donate to this guy. And I also got duped by this kind of thing in the past where I'll have somebody on and they'll say, oh, we're doing
Starting point is 00:36:42 all this stuff. And then you find out they're making $600 grand a year. Their wife and kids are also on the board of the organization getting paid and they travel by private jet. And you're like, wait a minute. I thought you're supposed to be kicking down doors. And then you realize this is part of the criticism of the movie, right, as they say, hey, this is a sensationalized version of this problem. It covers less than 1% of the issue. And I don't necessarily agree with that criticism. Yes, it's probably a small part of it. But it's hard to do a movie where the trafficking is really boring and milk toast and mundane yet really damaging because nobody wants to go and see that. So I understand. I get it. Well, and understand this. The movie was actually toned down from some of the
Starting point is 00:37:20 things that really happened. When you're going in and you're meeting with people who are selling children, these are not nice people. Now, yeah, they did a good job with the jungle scene, but these guys, there's been multiple cases where we have met with some super bad people. There was guys that had eyes on us, that had guns on us, and one wrong move, I had one situation. I'm telling you what, Jordan, this was the closest I came to die in. I was with this trafficker. He was super high-level trafficker. And everybody is referring us to one guy who then worked for him.
Starting point is 00:37:51 He says, this is my boss's boss. This guy was smart. And he says to me, after we told him what we're looking for and he already had a bunch of these kids, he said, give me your business card. And so I handed my business card. And him looking at my business card, he said, tell me your phone number. Now, if I didn't have my undercover phone number memorized like my own, I would have been shot for sure right there.
Starting point is 00:38:12 And it had my phone number, a fake phone number, web page and everything else. And then he said, take out your phone. And I took out my phone. He used to show it to him. And I'm showing him as my phone. And he dials my undercover phone number on my card. Fortunately, I was smart enough to have everything tied in where, boom, his phone number rings on my phone.
Starting point is 00:38:31 And he smiles. He goes, I like you. He says, now let me show you. And he took us to where the kids were, et cetera. The federal agents in that country, when I typed up the report that night, the next morning I had missed nine phone calls. They're like, get out. I'm like, what?
Starting point is 00:38:44 We've been trying to get with this guy for three years. And you got his phone number within 24 hours in the country. These are the kind of things that happen when you're going up against these guys who are really, truly selling traffic and kidnapped children. But the reality is, the majority of the problem that we need to fix as society. is not just liberating a 10-year-old from the traffickers' hands in Honduras. It's liberating the 10-year-old inside
Starting point is 00:39:11 of every 20, 30, 40-year-old man or woman who's dealing with childhood trauma and dealing with the fact that most of our children at some point in their childhood are in a precarious position with somebody who potentially could be a pedophile or could be harming them physically or verbally. I did see quite a bit of criticism
Starting point is 00:39:29 before I went to go see the movie. And a lot of it hinges on hey, the film portrays children being snatched and kidnapped by strangers. And of course, that happens. But it's, like you said, a myth that most traffickers target victims that they don't know. And I verified this. The U.S. National Human Trafficking Hotline actually said most victims are trafficked by somebody that they do know. So it's not where somebody gets nabbed in a target parking lot. I think the criticism is well-intentioned, though, right? It's the idea that if human trafficking or child trafficking involves forceful kidnapping and imprisonment,
Starting point is 00:40:02 it makes it harder for people to grasp more complex trafficking cases. Just from a legal perspective, if you've got a case of, let's say, coercion or psychological manipulation, which is usually what gets people trafficked, children especially, and the jury is expecting a Liam Neeson movie, you're not going to get a conviction. And it makes it harder for survivors. Wait, so this person just said they were going to do bad things to you, but you were related to them and then you did all this stuff? I don't know. That doesn't sound like, that doesn't sound like what I have in my head. We have a same problem with DNA evidence and
Starting point is 00:40:36 trials, right? Everybody's seen so much damn CSI that when somebody has a bunch of evidence, the prosecutor has a bunch of evidence, they'll go, where's the DNA evidence? We don't need DNA evidence. We have a body, we have a weapon, we have a motive. The alibi doesn't hold up and they're like, if there's no DNA evidence, then you should be able to get that really easily because I watch CSI Miami and they always have DNA evidence. They found a hair in the parking lot. And it's like, that's the criticism that people are leaning into. But I get it, Paul. I get it because we want to believe that the people who are selling children and trafficking
Starting point is 00:41:08 children for sex are the people in the movie, right? Scorpion tattoo on the face. It makes people really uncomfortable to think, and myself included, it makes me uncomfortable to think that some of these things happen in your own neighborhood by the person that you think is probably just a normal guy in a normal house with normal kids. or somebody they've run into it at Starbucks. Yeah, it is. And a lot of times it's family members.
Starting point is 00:41:33 You have to be super careful. I have family members that were raped by their father, by their grandfather, that nobody even knew about until they were adults. In fact, the average age of somebody who comes out and says and admits or tells other people that they were sexually abused as children, the average age is 52 years old. That's my age. I've got grandkids. If you've held on to that kind of trauma,
Starting point is 00:41:56 your whole life, how does it come out? Was it coming out in verbal abuse, in anger issues, in sometimes physical abuse? Literally, two out of every three people, God bless them. If they were abused as children, two out of every three, are able to grow up and never pass that on. In fact, most of them use it as a motivation to make sure that children are protected in their life. However, one third of people who are abused in any way as children become contact offenders
Starting point is 00:42:24 themselves. Pass that abuse on. And so people ask me a lot, Jordan. Paul, how can you go face to face with somebody selling you a child and not have them see your anger and your hatred? And my answer surprises them. And it pisses them off sometimes. And this is what it is. There's a part of me that feels some compassion. You have compassion. They're selling you a child. No, I will do everything in my power to ensure they never hurt another child again. But what I wish more than anything is that I had a time machine could go back 10 years or 15 years or 20 before they ever hurt a child or touched a child. What if we could go back to that point and say, okay, what is it about your childhood that we need to work through? What do we need to fix in your life that's leading you down this dark road?
Starting point is 00:43:09 Now, that's not an excuse for anybody who's ever passed it on. There's no excuse there. However, there's no such thing as a time machine, but there are hundreds of millions of people today who have not yet passed on their trauma in any way, that if we could have a compassionate heart and come forward and say, okay, these kids in elementary school and junior high school and high school that had some challenges were abused as children,
Starting point is 00:43:35 can we help them, can we put together programs for them so that they can truly let go of that trauma and not bring it into their adulthood where they could ever pass it on. Those are the ones that we should have compassion for and help. then the next generation won't have this massive amount of generational trauma being passed down again.
Starting point is 00:43:59 This is the Jordan Harbinger Show with our guest, Paul Hutchinson. We'll be right back. If you like this episode of the show, I invite you to do what other smart and considerate listeners do, which is take a moment and support our amazing sponsors. All of the deals, discount codes, and ways to support the show are at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals. And you can always search for any sponsor, well, at least most sponsors, using the AI chatbot on the website at Jordan Harbinger.com slash AI.
Starting point is 00:44:26 Thank you for supporting those who support the show. Now for the rest of my conversation with Paul Hutchinson. Before I went to see the movie, a lot of people were like, oh, this is QAnon adjacent. And I was like, oh, gosh, I'm not going to go see that. And then I went to go see it because I needed to sort of hear it for myself. I actually didn't get that messaging at all, as people know from the show,
Starting point is 00:44:48 I am not interested in QAnon's conspiracy theories. we debunk that disinformation all the time. I'm very vocal that those people are bat-shit crazy, believing in a lot of this stuff. I've researched when this movie was produced and filmed. It was actually produced before Q&N was really a thing. If it is Q&N adjacent, it's purely coincidental because the whole movement started after the movie was produced.
Starting point is 00:45:11 There's no tie within the movie itself or the original producers. There's nothing. The only ties that people are getting is the fact that Jim Caviesel, who plays the Homeland Security agent in the movie, Jim has spoken at some of those conferences, and Jim believes a lot of those things, and I'm not dishing him for his beliefs there, but when people ask me, do you believe that stuff? I say, listen, I'm sorry, but I'm going to tell you exactly what I have seen, and that's bad enough. So all of this other crap about people drinking blood and adrenachrome or even the QAnon stuff,
Starting point is 00:45:46 where, now understand this. I've voted right, pretty much my whole adult life, but this is not a political issue. It's not. And anybody that would make this a political issue is going down the wrong path. It shouldn't divide us. This subject should unite us. All of us can come together and say, okay, this motivated me and woke me up about, hey, there's probably problems out there. Let me get some more information about really what's going on. And how can we come together in a spirit of unity to truly help to liberate humanity as a whole from whatever this dark plague is that's affecting our children.
Starting point is 00:46:26 That's not political. So, yeah, the only reason why people are tying it is because some of the people involved in the movie have spoken at some of those conferences are involved with that. Yeah, that's a very diplomatic way of putting it. And good job, because this is definitely where the audience was going to decide
Starting point is 00:46:41 if you're insane or not. But it's also a tough one because on the one hand, and I'm not, again, I'm totally not accusing you of this. it helps sales when tons of conspiracy theorists buy tickets for your movie. So do I want to discourage that? But on the other hand, it does damage the cause that you're passionate about when people say there's trafficking, but then they follow it up with an insane theory about how Hillary Clinton is drinking kids' blood in the basement of a pizza parlor in order to stay young or whatever. And people will throw the baby out with the bathwater. I was almost one of these
Starting point is 00:47:09 people. They'll say, well, crazy Uncle Frank is the one who told me about the trafficking problem. But then she thinks there's microchips in every vaccine and that chemtrails are changing our DNA. So we can write off anything that crazy uncle Frank says. It's a logical fallacy to do this, but that's how people operate. It's the genetic fallacy. But at the same time, if somebody says crazy shit all the time and they get one thing, you don't go, oh, let me investigate that. You just go, I don't even want to hear it anymore, Frank.
Starting point is 00:47:36 Have a good day. And that's the worst thing that can happen with this division is for people to, as you say, throw out the baby with the bathwater. We can't allow the crap that's out there that's trying to divide us on this principle. The kids are something that we can all come together. I tell people, I don't care if you're white or black or rich or poor or fat or skinny or it doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:47:59 We are all one people. We are all one. In fact, the very thing that is at the root of trafficking and of sexual exploitation of children, the thing at the root, it starts with when we look at each other as anything other than that divine light of God that is in each one of us. I see everybody as an equal. It doesn't matter if they're a woman, if they're a different color than me, if they're a
Starting point is 00:48:26 different country, it doesn't matter. And this is why pornography is challenging for people is because when you take a woman from a divine feminine to an object and you start objectifying that and you dehumanize that intimacy and that connection, that's what takes people. down this road of now dehumanizing more. And so when we're looking at each other and seeing each other as anything other than the divine light that's in us, then we start going down that road. And this division is not going to help this problem. It's going to exasperbate. You said exasperbate, but I feel like we should leave that in because that is a funny,
Starting point is 00:49:02 that is a funny flub in the context of this episode. Yeah, that's right. How much, how much does it cost to do these rescue operations changing the subject because I'm going to start giggling. In fact, I'll answer that with this question. This is a beautiful story. I just got married two months ago and I met my wife about five years ago. We were in Haiti. I had done the undercover work for the 34 kids that were there. Did you meet your wife in Haiti? We met in Haiti. Yeah. Wow, you don't hear that every day. Well, and here's the thing. Meeting a beautiful Colombian actress is cool, but when she's donating her time in an orphanage in Haiti, that's badass. And I've been to Haiti a lot. And girls like that aren't there.
Starting point is 00:49:39 The girls have beautiful hearts there, but you don't find it. Actress level just gorgeous. But she had a heart, like a huge heart. And it was like, wow, okay. An example of that in terms of how much it costs for the kids is a few months later, we were going to a gala. It was one where I needed my tuxedo. She didn't have a gala dress.
Starting point is 00:49:57 So I took her shopping and we found this beautiful dress. It was a huge expense. It was about $2,000. And she looks at the tag and she said, Paul, was the average cost? of rescuing one of these traffic children. I said average, it cost us average about $2,000 a child is what it cost. She said, I'm not wearing a child. She said, you can buy me a $200 dress instead, and we can donate the rest of the money to the foundation. I'm like, oh, that's my girl right there, because my past relationships, all were all about Louis Vuitton shoes and all this crap. And she's like,
Starting point is 00:50:29 no, I'm not wearing a child. That's the average cost. In fact, one of my undercover operators, one of the best ones, he came into my office years ago, and he said, Paul, he said, I want to fund a mission. What does it cost? I said, the average cost is about $25,000 per mission. We were averages 10 to 15 kids that were able to get on a mission. He writes a check right there. He said, here's 25,000. I want to fund the mission. And he hands it to me. And he said, now I want to go with you on the mission. I gave him the check back. I said, bro, you can't buy your way on a mission. I said, this is really. I said, I've been training for decades. This is super dangerous. You can't just show up. Here I am. And he said, listen, you tell me what I have to do. I don't care if it takes me 10 years to get to the point where I'm ready. And so I gave him the phone number of my Krav Maga trainer. And this guy, my trainer, he's one of the best. He's like one of only 10 that's qualified to go back to Israel and train the trainers every year. And so his name is Joseph. And Joseph calls me like five, six months later. He said, Andy has been in every single day. He's been training two to three hours a day. He hits like a freight train. He said he's probably safer undercover than most of your Navy SEALs. So,
Starting point is 00:51:33 That's the two stories to answer the question of what it costs to rescue a child. But that's just in our undercover stuff in third world countries. It's about $2,000. Who trains the undercover work? Because Kravaghan hitting like a freight train is great. But the idea is not to get caught and have to use Krav Magat to get out of a sticky situation, right? Like that would be the most important skill set followed very distant second by the ability
Starting point is 00:51:55 to not get killed doing it. Yeah, absolutely. In fact, your goal is to not ever get in a place where you have to use self-defense. to deal with it. And so years ago, we had about 350 guys try out that were all people that wanted to do undercover. Most of these guys were former special forces. These are Green Berets, Navy sales, just badasses. And they all came out to Utah and we had like a two-week training type of a thing. There was only three of them out of the 300 that ended up going undercover with these because most people can't do that. We had one of our former CIA guys who had been doing
Starting point is 00:52:30 training with him. Okay, now I want you to have a conversation with me about, and it's a dark conversation, one too dark for the radio, right, for us to be talking about here. He said, I want you to say this and this without throwing up. And most of them can't. Those are dark conversation. The very first time I went undercover and this trafficker leans forward halfway through this meeting and he says, Pablo, I have a gift for you. I said, really, what's your gift? And he hands me his phone and there's a picture of an 11-year-old girl on the phone. Now, in the movie, that was to pick. as Tim giving me the photo of the little girl, and that convinced me. In reality, I was already there. I was already in that first meeting with the traffickers, but that galvanized my commitment.
Starting point is 00:53:11 When he shows me this phone, and there's an 11-year-old girl, and he says, she's still a virgin. We call her princess, and he starts going down this road of things I could do to this little girl. And I was like, and the Navy seal that was behind me, he had to excuse himself. He's like, I'm going to go check out the perimeter, make sure that we're good. He said later, he said, I almost unholstered my weapon and shot him right there. That girl looked like my daughter at home, but I knew if I did, would never get to the rest of the kids. Yeah, you need acting chops, and you need to be able to think on your feet.
Starting point is 00:53:41 We've done many an episode with an undercover agent here. By the time your weapon is out, the cover's blown, and you're probably seconds from dying, depending on how far your team is away from you, slash wherever you are. And that makes a lot of sense. So the movie's just massive. I know you're down in Honduras right now
Starting point is 00:53:58 in Central America trying to spread the word about the movie itself. How's that going? Yeah, everybody here has already heard of it. The movie's been out three weeks. Every TV station has already heard about it, all the people, the restaurants, this guy that's hosting me, he's running for president down here. He introduced everybody's already heard of the movie down here. And they're so excited to see it. So excited. So what's next for me? First of all, continuing to tour around and doing these screenings with the film. That's priority number one is to make sure that the momentum that we saw in the U.S. continues everywhere so that we can start having the conversations that couldn't be had before. I was with a gal last night and she said,
Starting point is 00:54:36 the thing that I like best about what you're doing here is the fact that this is opening up the ability for us to have conversations. Nobody wanted to talk about trafficking before in any way. Now, she was one that understands really what's going on in terms of the grooming and the house and the 90 plus percent of people who are trafficked or by a familiar member, et cetera. So she understands that. She said, but I could never talk about it because it was too dark for polite conversation. Now, this movie is making it so that the conversation is somewhat palatable. So by continuing with this process, going around the world with this.
Starting point is 00:55:09 Now, realize this, I had zero social media for 10 years, zero. I couldn't. I was doing all the undercover work. And so I shut down Facebook, Instagram, all of this stuff. And it was about six months ago where I decided I had just finished some rescue missions in Ecuador, and I looked at the numbers, and I realized there was more children being sold today than there was 10 years ago. So if my goal was to eradicate child trafficking, if that's the commitment that I made when I'm sitting in front of that little girl that was crying in Colombia,
Starting point is 00:55:44 if that's the commitment that I made, I wasn't doing a very good job because there's still children and it's growing faster than what we're doing. And so I thought about it and I thought, you know what? First of all, I'm now in a relationship that I really enjoy and I don't want to get shot. And number two, everybody was pressuring me. They're saying, Paul, you need to go out there and be the voice. And I said, listen, I don't want to be. I would be super happy with a cabin on a river, with a garden and a gun, not having to deal with people. I don't want to do that.
Starting point is 00:56:13 But can it just be about the message and not the messenger? Can I not be the messenger? Because that puts my family in danger with me going public. And everybody, including my family, is like, no, Paul. you have been there. You've been in the pit of hell. You have seen the depravity of what happens when people continue down this dark road and you've got the credibility with the business world, with the fund that you've built, and the credibility in the philanthropic world here, you need to be the voice. And I told him, I'm not interested in people come into Paul Hutchinsonofficial.com. I'm not. That's not me. Okay,
Starting point is 00:56:46 we're going to focus on liberating humanity. So that's the answer to your question. Where or two from here is liberating whatever that looks like. I'm pulling together anybody who has programs they've already created to help people overcome childhood trauma, to help them overcome sexual addictions, pornography addictions, et cetera. If I can pull together all of these tools in place and put them on a platform of liberating humanity, then I can give people the ability to break free from this low vibration that is creating all of these challenges right now. So that's what my goal is. I'm going to start speaking. I haven't really spoke a lot, but I'm going to start speaking on podcasts.
Starting point is 00:57:27 I actually had my personal podcast just open today, very first day. We'll see how it works. I'm just here just saying, God, lead me, whatever I need to do. It's an admirable mission. You said you're dating a Colombian actress, though. You may still be in danger, Paul. You may still be in danger. Okay, so here's my favorite story.
Starting point is 00:57:44 You ready, Jordan. My claim to fame is not building a big company or even all that charity work. Here's my claim of fame. So Henry Cavill plays Superman, right? He's the actor who plays Superman. All the girls will swoon over his name, whatever. So my wife's name is Ada Vanessa. H-A-D-A is her first name, last name, Vanessa.
Starting point is 00:58:00 And she was working in New York, and he came in. She was like bartending or whatever else after. Because she had been an actress before it. He came into her work every single day for a couple months. They started to date, and then she met me. I stole Superman's girlfriend. Not really girlfriend, but there's my claim to fame. That's quite a flex, man.
Starting point is 00:58:19 That's quite a flex. and I appreciate that you left us here with something a little bit lighter than child trafficking because I was going to ask you to do that. Yeah, decent flex, man. I really appreciate you coming on all the way from Honduras. I'm glad we were able to clinch this one
Starting point is 00:58:33 right in the middle of the PR theory over Sound of Freedom, and I really appreciate your time. Thank you, Jordan. You're about to hear a preview of the Jordan Harbinger Show with former professional skateboarder and entrepreneur Rob Durdek. I made my mom come in and meet with the council
Starting point is 00:58:50 learn the principal and just basically sold them on this idea that I'm going to be a pro skateboarder now. Jordan, I live in kill mode. Kill mode is like my lifestyle. You know what I mean? Like I am so optimized and operated such a high level. That alone gives me energy. I track every hour of every single day and have it tagged and it all pumps into a living dashboard of how perfectly balanced my time in. So I've gamified living at this deeply, highly optimized existence that's also 100% balanced by design. I live as light as a feather.
Starting point is 00:59:31 When that system is out of balance, it's impossible to grow into your full potential, right? And then if you haven't defined what your full potential is and what the life that you want to live and what all aspects of that look like. then you're never going to find it. It's looking at everything you want to achieve and breaking it down to the very first task that you know you can do. The most extraordinary way
Starting point is 00:59:57 is to begin to turn the idea of deciding what you want, defining, you know, four or five milestones, and then doing one after another until you get to it. And doing that in all aspects of life over and over again, you begin to feel as if you control reality. Because you put something that this, didn't exist as the mile marker. And then you built a plan to do it, and you did it.
Starting point is 01:00:21 To learn more about how Rob Durek dropped out of high school at age 16 and how he now optimizes his life to the fullest potential, check out episode 498 on the Jordan Harbinger show. At the end of the day, I'm glad I covered this. I'm glad I talked to Paul. Interesting story. By way of numbers, the U.S. State Department has reported that 600,000 to 800,000 people are trafficked across international borders per year with about. half of those cases being children. Now, that does not mean sold for sex. That means labor trafficking,
Starting point is 01:00:54 people smuggling, and other types of traveling. It is a staggering number, but it doesn't mean that all of these people are tiny kids in sexual slavery. Again, we're looking at 3 to 400,000 children mostly sold for, which is still gross, labor trafficking and other forms of trafficking. 67% of children trafficked are between the ages of 15 and 17. While they're, There are, of course, cases where child trafficking victims are much younger than that. They overwhelmingly and heartbreakingly tend to involve the parents of those children with substance abuse issues selling their own children for drugs. So it's gross, but it's usually the family and it's usually older children.
Starting point is 01:01:35 Not that that makes it any better, but just your kid's not going to get snatched out of a target parking lot, statistically speaking here. My point is, you don't have to manufacture conspiracy theories about child sexual abuse. It doesn't help anyone. It does more harm than good. It distracts from the real problem. It scares people for no reason. It makes organizations that want to do the real work
Starting point is 01:01:57 have a harder time doing it. There are plenty of facts at hand that don't involve spreading rumors about a furniture company or a pizza parlor. So let's not do that. And let's not support other people who are doing that because they are either insane or they want clicks or donations. So that's where I stand on that.
Starting point is 01:02:15 If you want to hear our earlier episode with Tim Bauer, That was episode 369. He's no longer with his rescue organization, OUR. I don't know the circumstances under which he left. So there's that. There's more background on it. Take it with a grain of some salt, just given the numbers I gave you. I'm not saying Tim Ballard wasn't telling the truth. I am saying the problem of needing to rescue children who are sold into slavery for these particular reasons while totally disgusting is a tiny percentage of the problem. And I want to highlight that to unscare you and so that good organizations can do their work. All right, I've beaten that horse quite to death, haven't I? All things Paul Hutchinson will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com or ask the AI chatbot. Transcripts in the show notes, advertisers, deals, discount codes, and ways to support the show are all at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals. Please consider supporting those who support the show. And yes, the newsletter highlights and takeaways from the most popular episodes of the show. Going all the way back to the start, Jordan Harbinger.com slash news is where you can find it.
Starting point is 01:03:15 We'd love to know what you think of the newsletter. six minute networking, don't forget it, Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter. I'm not calling it X folks and Instagram or connect with me right there on LinkedIn. This show is created in association with Podcast One. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Emilio Campo, Ian Baird, and Gabriel Mizrahi. Remember, we rise by lifting others.
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