Compton Woman, Son Accused of Forcing 2 Teens Into Sex Trafficking

The 13-year-olds were picked up in Bell Gardens and taken to a Lynwood home, where they were allegedly forced to engage in sex and pose for photos.
Compton Woman, Son Accused of Forcing 2 Teens Into Sex Trafficking
Kern Valley State Prison in Delano, Calif., in February 2021. (Google Maps / Screenshot via California Insider)
City News Service
5/9/2024
Updated:
5/9/2024
0:00

A Compton woman and her adult son were indicted on federal charges of forcing two teenagers to engage in sexual activity for money, prosecutors announced May 8.

Daisy Pollard-Gilliam, 41, and her 24-year-old son, Reuben Gilliam, were each charged with a single count of conspiracy to commit sex trafficking and two counts of sex trafficking of a minor. Pollard-Gilliam was additionally charged with a single count of being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Reuben Gilliam was already in state custody on unrelated charges, and will be transferred to federal custody in the coming weeks. Pollard-Gilliam was arrested April 24 and jailed without bail. She is due in court for arraignment Tuesday in downtown Los Angeles.

According to prosecutors, the two 13-year-old alleged victims were walking in Bell Gardens around 2 a.m. June 3, 2023, when a vehicle containing Reuben Gilliam and two other men pulled alongside them, and one of the occupants ordered the teens to get in. The teens were then taken to a home in Lynwood.

Prosecutors contend that over the next week, the victims were forced to engage in sex acts with both defendants and other “customers,” at least one of whom claimed to have paid the defendants $100 to have sex with the teens.

The teens were also directed to wear lingerie and pose for provocative photos that were used to advertise the commercial sex operation, prosecutors said.

After several nights at the Lynwood location, the defendants saw social media posts about missing children that depicted the two victims and described them as being only 13 years old, prosecutors said. At that point, the victims were moved out of Lynwood.

Law enforcement officials found the teens on June 9, 2023, in a recreational vehicle in Gardena, prosecutors said. Investigators also recovered clothing, shoes, eyewear and a cellphone that was allegedly given to the teens by the suspects.

Pollard-Gilliam also allegedly distributed photos and videos of the victims to an inmate at Kern Valley State Prison, prosecutors said, while Reuben Gilliam allegedly communicated on Instagram with other users about his trafficking of the two victims.

The weapons charge against Pollard-Gilliam stems from April, when she allegedly possessed a semiautomatic pistol and 25 rounds of ammunition, despite being prohibited from doing so due to a 2021 conviction for child abandonment.

Both defendants face possible life sentences if convicted, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.