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Inside LA’s notorious kiddie sex-trafficking corridor ‘The Blade’

October 28, 2025
in News
Inside LA’s notorious kiddie sex-trafficking corridor ‘The Blade’
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Anyone who wants to have sex with a young girl in Los Angeles can drive to “the Blade,” a notorious red-light district where 12-year-olds are openly walking the streets — and cops are all but powerless to thwart the disgusting pedo bazaar.

The children line up along a 2-mile section of Figueroa Street — a k a “the Kiddle Stroll” — clad in next to nothing to indulge in their johns’ sickest fantasies for around a hundred bucks.

Many of the girls were recruited from the foster-care system after being seduced on social media, authorities said.

Officers of the  Los Angeles Police Department's vice squad arrest a  woman on Figueroa Street.
Members of the LAPD’s vice squad arrest a woman on Figueroa Street in Los Angeles on May 18, 2017. Getty Images
Young women are loaded into a police van in The Blade -- the nickname for LA's most notorious red light district.
Young women are loaded into a police van in “The Blade” — the nickname for LA’s most notorious red-light district. Getty Images

Occasionally, they do their rounds with bruises and split lips — souvenirs from violent pimps who savagely beat them when they step out of line or don’t meet their quota.

Earlier last year, a group of local and federal law-enforcement agencies launched an initiative to crack down on the trafficking and rescue the victims.In August, the city attorney’s office announced that 190 traffickers had been arrested and 200 children rescued, some as young as 12.

Yet a trafficking victim interviewed by the New York Times said “the Blade” is now busier than ever before, with young girls being shipped in from across the country.

An officer processes a suspected prostitute.
An officer processes a suspected prostitute after a bust in “the Blade.” Getty Images

The growing throngs of exploited children inspired a nickname for the district from the LA city attorney: “Kiddie Stroll.”

At the state level, new laws have hampered authorities’ ability to identify victims and prosecute their traffickers.

Some of these laws were meant to shift blame away from trafficking victims and onto their pimps, including one law passed in 2019 that treats underage prostitutes as victims of abuse rather than criminal offenders.

But another controversial law — SB-357, passed in 2023 — bars law enforcement from approaching an underage victim based on how she’s dressed.

Three women wearing short shorts and platform heels stand on a sidewalk next to a chain-link fence.
The area has seen an explosion of trafficked women. Getty Images

A 12-year-old girl could walk by in lingerie, and there would be nothing a police officer could do about it.The law kicked off a prostitution free-for-all, critics claim — and not just in Los Angeles.“Did you know that the traffickers and the buyers were boasting on social media because of the new law that they can openly sell human beings for sex on our streets?” lamented San Diego District Attorney Summer Stephan in a press conference.

Police arrest suspected sex workers; state laws limit when a cop may approach sex workers, but also call for underage prostitutes to be treated as victims, not criminals.
Police arrest suspected sex workers, but they just keep returning to the street. Getty Images

LA’s notorious Hoover Gang is behind much of the trafficking on Figueroa Street, authorities say.In August, the US Attorney General announced the arrest of 11 Hoover ringleaders, including Amaya “Lady Duck” Armstead, 25, an alleged prostitution queenpin who was specifically charged with trafficking a 14-year-old girl.

The joint bust by local and federal agencies was a crown jewel in LA’s ongoing fight against exploitation in Los Angeles. Yet business continues to boom.

A recent police ride-along by a Times reporter revealed that young girls are still walking Figueroa Street.

Many of the underage girls arrested by police during that ride-along had been booked before, but they had refused to go to a shelter and ended up back with their pimps.

The post Inside LA’s notorious kiddie sex-trafficking corridor ‘The Blade’ appeared first on New York Post.

Tags: Californiahuman traffickingLos Angelesprostitution
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