Human Trafficking & Child Exploitation at Airbnb Rentals in Santa Clara — Attorney911 Holds Short-Term Rental Platforms Accountable Under the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, Ralph Manginello’s 27+ Years of Federal-Court Trial Practice, Lupe Peña the Former Insurance-Defense Attorney Who Knows How the Claims Machine Values and Denies These Cases, We Preserve Booking Logs, Guest Messaging, and Financial Records Before They Are Deleted, California’s Comparative-Fault Rule Means You Can Still Recover Even If You Were Partially Blamed, the Firm Has Recovered Millions for Survivors of Exploitation — Free 24/7 Consultation, No Fee Unless We Win, Hablamos Español, 1-888-ATTY-911
You Are Not the First Person This Has Happened To, and the Building Where It Happened Already Knows It If you are reading this, something happened in a hotel room, a short-term rental, or a vacation property in California. Maybe it was an Airbnb in Santa Clara near Levi’s Stadium during a big game. Maybe it was a roadside motel off a Bay Area freeway. Maybe it was a chain hotel whose brand is on the sign out front. Maybe it was a property management company’s “luxury rental” in a neighborhood you have never lived in. You are not alone, and the people who profited from the room you were kept in were not as surprised as they are now pretending to be. Short-term rental platforms and hotels have known for years that sex trafficking happens in their properties. They have trained their staff to spot it. They have written internal memos about it. They have partnered with anti-trafficking nonprofits in public. And the same properties, in the same weekend, in the same market, continued to rent rooms to the people who were selling you. Our firm takes those cases because the law gives survivors a real path to accountability,…