they have gone to other countries for exploitable workforces. in that area they have -- like met american south, drive the children out of school. have the children working in the cotton harvest. one of the first cases i did as a civil prosecutor in the civil rights division a few years ago, was a migrant worker case in south carolina. the prosecutor they was working with from south carolina one day was astounded to find out that some of the fields that the mexican and the guatemalan immigrants were being used to pick were being exploited in were fields that he as a child had to pick cotton in, in much the same situation. it is very interconnected. as we fix things at home, some of the unscrupulous employers swing into action in their own industry overseas. host: will the cotton picked with the kids find its way into the united states? guest: indeed. one of the things we're working on is to see how to make sure that the supply chains in america is free from slave-made goods. we will work with companies working with watchdog groups to make sure t