Downloads Events Press Store Contact

Rosie Clyde

“It’s exciting to be able to do something tangible for [The SOLD Project] besides just donating—an area where they had a need that I could fill and assist them in growing their ministry.” -- Rosie Clyde

Rosie Clyde is currently SOLD’s volunteer bookkeeper and an excellent example that there is a place for every single person in the fight against child prostitution. Rosie’s accounting skills are of great value to SOLD, making sure that your gifts go where they are meant to and that we run as efficiently as possible.

I first heard about The SOLD Project in the spring of 2009 at Cornerstone Church in Livermore, California. SOLD had set up a table when Gary Haugen, [International Justice Mission’s founder] came with his organization to an event Cornerstone was hosting.

I soon found out that SOLD’s Executive Director was Rachel Goble, who recently purchases a townhouse in the same complex where I live—and who happened to be engaged to Kevin Carey, a staff member at Cornerstone whose office was right next door to mine!

When Rachel and Kevin [Carey] went to Thailand in January 2010, I made a donation online and my credit card was accidently charged twice. It caused me to think that maybe SOLD could use some help with their accounting while they travel. Since I have years of experience in this area for Cornerstone, I offered to help out with this.  I knew it was God who directed me but had no idea that Rachel and Rachel had been praying for someone to help out with their bookkeeping.  It was very exciting to hear this and confirmed to me that I had heard from God on this!

Rachel and Kevin are amazing young people.   I love their energy and passion for God’s call and to see how He is working through their lives!  It’s exciting to be able to do something tangible for them besides just donating, an area where they had a need that I could fill and assist them in growing their ministry. I am looking for ways to promote their ministry to my circle of friends and family.

Rosie re:acted when we needed her the most. How will you re:ACT?

Heather Budwell

My name is Heather Budwell, and I live in the Saint Louis area with my husband and three children.  Last March, I saw a poster in our favorite Chinese restaurant that advertised The SOLD Project’s film screening at a church in our area. I immediately called the church to see how I could help out, seeing as God had just recently ignited a passion in my soul again to help raise awareness for human trafficking. But I had no idea where to begin!

Read More

Zach McFarlen: Created The FREEDOM Project film

I first learned of The SOLD Project through my good friend, Michael Manes. Having formerly worked with him at a company servicing non-profit organizations, Michael and I have had several conversations about causes that are particularly meaningful to us as individuals.

When Michael shared the grim facts about child exploitation with me, as well as the amazing prevention efforts of The SOLD Project, I knew I wanted to contribute to their work. I definitely could have donated money to The SOLD Project, but I wanted to engage with the organization on a more personal level.

Read More

Maia Sciupac, from Internship to Career

For Maia, modern-day slavery hit home hard when she learned her stepmother had been a victim of sex trafficking as a child.

"I could not believe that this issue touched so close to home, and I became impassioned to do something to end it," Maia explains.

Fresh out of college, she knew she wanted to commit her life's work to fighting sex trafficking, so she began looking for opportunities to get involved in the growing abolition movement. Maia discovered SOLD while searching online for volunteer opportunities and was drawn to the flexibility and independence of the internship; she liked that she could organize events on her own time.

Read More

Alezandra Russell: Traveling to Thailand

Alezandra works with the Latin American Youth Center in Washington, D.C. Following is her story of first being exposed to child prostitution, and her journey towards action.

It was a November day in 2008 when I was suddenly thrown into the nightmarish and unfamiliar issue of child prostitution. She was fifteen, she had just arrived from Honduras and she had just been SOLD by her mother into the hands of a trafficker from North Carolina. The next few days for me consisted of a crash course in Trafficking 101 and a new found commitment to Re:Action that would eventually lead me to the SOLD Project. Assured by police that this was a typical runaway case, the story would soon unfold to be my first peak into the international outbreak of child trafficking.

Read More

Andrew Sullivan: Raising Awareness at Bettendorf High School

I am a part of the student council at Bettendorf High School in Bettendorf, Iowa. We have a relatively active council and every year we put on many different fundraisers and events. A few years ago, I met Rachel at a youth conference in Indiana and heard about the SOLD Project, so when we were looking for a project to raise awareness about a global social justice issue, I immediately thought of SOLD and we decided to run with it. After many weeks of planning and speaking individually with each and every class about what we would be doing and why, we finally arrived at the week of our school-wide project and it couldn't have gone better.

Read More

Christina Louie: Campus Demonstration

Christina Louie, a freshman at UC Davis, hosted The SOLD Project: Thailand on January 29th. Watch this video to find out how she creatively spread the word on campus about SOLD and the issue of child prostitution.

Read More

Zachary Ortega: Poetry

Zachary Ortega wrote the following poem in response to the film 'SOLD:Cat'

i wonder if these children would have wanted to be born
had they known their destiny included the theft of all innocence
they are miraculous beings, the entire city at night suspended in their hands
eyes placed towards heaven as a stranger enters from the east.

Read More

Sarah Montoya: Art Awareness Event

I work with an organization in San Francisco called ReIMAGINE.  At ReIMAGINE we seek to invite people into The Way of Jesus. As a community of people our heart breaks for those living in slavery, and to raise awareness we hosted an event called ABOLITION in response to the twenty-seven million people estimated to be enslaved today.

Read More

Suzy Hunt: Musician

Last year, I got some musician friends together, and we played a concert in a small dark attic-like space on the lower east side of Manhattan.  But this concert was special, and different for all of us.  We weren't playing for money or recognition or to promote a new album, we were playing for The Sold Project and for the millions of victims of child sex trafficking around the world.

Read More

Kaolhi Ly: Fundraiser

I was introduced to the topic of human trafficking through a professor of mine. The issue grabbed my attention and I knew that I couldn't look away. After endless hours of talking to him about it, I decided to do my own research on the topic.

Read More

Keith Brown : Film

When I first heard of the issue of Human Trafficking my heart felt like it was being stuck with a million needles, piercing through every ounce of love I have ever had. From that moment on I knew to much to not do anything. My life will forever be dedicated in the change.

Read More

Alana Downey - Hairstylist

My name is Alana Downey and I’m a hairstylist in Danville, CA and I heard about Sold from my dear friend Rachel Goble-Carey. I had heard about other hairdressers and salons doing fundraisers called “Cut-A-Thon’s” so I thought ‘why not, I could do that’. I had been searching for ways to use my skill to support organizations that I believe in: organizations that are making a difference in the world, and the idea of a cut-a-thon was perfect. I would be able to do what I was good at, donate the money to SOLD, and at the same time educate my clients about the issue of child prostitution and create awareness for The SOLD Project.



Justin Dial - Filmmaker

I still remember my first day of real paid documentary film work. My friend Nate was editing a documentary for a production company in Pasadena called Chronicle Project. Nate had hours and hours of interviews that he needed transcribed and he came to me for help. What happened next changed my life. I began to watch an interview of a young Indian girl forced into prostitution. In her interview she explained how she had been coerced by a boyfriend to move and work in a brothel. She went into great detail about her emotional sickness and told of the beatings she faced if she didn't hand over all of the money she earned to her boyfriend, now turned pimp. I realized the importance of her story, but I managed to convince myself that I couldn't really help this girl.

Read More

Good for Art - Artists for SOLD

Artists Shannon and Erik Newby share with SOLD their passion for the visual arts and how they are using their art to fight for justice…

I used to cry sometimes at night when I was a kid, just from watching the news. I would lie in bed and pray that God would make the newscasters tell only good stories, and that God would take all the “bad guys” away. Over the years, I’ve changed those prayers. Now I ask God to show me the ugly stories, and to show me how I can be a part of turning them into beautiful ones.

Read More

Coffee By The Books: tips as donations


In the early-2000's Coffee By The Books baristas made a unanimous decision to give whatever money was made in tips away to a charity decided upon by the staff. For some in our community, this decision seemed asinine. However, it was the feeling of the staff that we are all blessed beyond measure and thus we wanted to put our belief that those who are in need are worthy of our sacrifice above any desire for some extra weekly pocket change. Oddly enough, once the idea took off, the community really got behind it. We have multiple people who send us literature on charities every month and when people see that our tips go to charity they often donate more. There is also the added perk that when someone appreciates our customer service they throw down a couple extra bucks and the charity we are featuring benefits. I think this also drives many of us to take better care of our customers because the ethos of customer service extends beyond ourselves and benefits others.

Read More

Joshua Morey : Conversation Starter

When I moved to Los Angeles in 2007, little did I know that the simple act of apartment hunting would change my life forever. My roommates and I found a great (and cheap) place in Korea town that had just hit the market. Wood floors, fresh carpets, new counters, you name it! It never occurred to me why the place was so cheap. Little did I know the impact that this new apartment would have on my life.

Read More

Will Roman : roman apparel

My first introduction to The SOLD Project came with a 1 am cross-country phone call to a friend-of-a-friend, Rachel Sparks-Graeser, who shared her incredible heart break and selfless motivation for the child victims of the sex trade in South Asia. This fire inside Rachel was so strong that it immediately ignited within myself a similar desire for radical change. I desperately wanted to lend my support in some way, but wanted to do more than simply donating. Others must know about the crimes that are being ignored abroad, they need to be told about the people who are fighting to stop these abuses, and they need to be inspired to get involved. Thus unfolded the idea for the SOLD t-shirt.

Read More