A unified child-safety platform — for the record
This page is intended for journalists and media partners. It is a stable reference for facts, talking points, and contact channels. Live operational numbers appear separately on the impact page.
At a glance
- Owner
- America's Future Inc.
- Project name
- Project Exodus
- Mission
- Detect, recover, and protect children from trafficking.
- Approach
- Three operational components plus continuous intelligence.
- Phase
- Phase 1 prototype — building toward production deployment.
What the platform does
Train, certify, and equip Certified Child Safety Advocates (CCSAs) — community members credentialed to recognize trafficking and submit field reports. Reports route to law-enforcement task forces and federal hotlines.
Trauma-informed care from rescue through reunification — five phases, four levels of care, continuous case management with optional paid adult-survivor mentors and a panic button reaching a trained responder.
Real-time placement of children into vetted hospitals, group homes, and foster families. Modeled on organ-donation networks; periodic re-vetting cadence enforced by an automated watcher.
Key talking points
- Project Exodus does not perform rescues or investigate. CCSAs are explicitly trained against vigilante action; the platform pushes signals to law-enforcement partners.
- Survivor data is never sold. Sharing happens only with named partners for the purpose of the survivor's care or the routing of a tip.
- Every action that touches a survivor record is recorded in a hash-chained, append-only audit log with periodic external anchoring. Tampering is detectable.
- Adult-survivor mentors are paid. Survivor advisory council seats are paid. Lived experience is treated as work, not free labor.
- The survivor surface is built bilingual-by-design — six languages currently, with American Sign Language video as a near-term addition.
Quotable
We are not a rescue operation. Our job is to make the right partner unmistakable to the right person at the right moment.
Trafficking is detected at the community level. The credential and the routing are what turn observation into action.
A trauma-informed platform does not just translate strings. It returns control of pacing, language, and consent to the survivor.
Partners and references
Partial list. Full directory and engagement status at /partners.
- Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force
- FBI Innocence Lost National Initiative
- Homeland Security Investigations — Center for Countering Human Trafficking
- National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC)
- National Human Trafficking Hotline (Polaris)
- American Red Cross
- ECPAT-USA
- DOJ Office for Victims of Crime (OVC)
Press inquiries can be sent through Get involved with the subject line beginning PRESS:. Background briefings on the platform architecture and survivor-advisory governance are available on request.
See also: How it works · Impact · Partners · Status