Jalen Amir Yoakum of Lancaster was found guilty of multiple felony charges related to the trafficking and abuse of a young woman over several months. According to the Ventura County District Attorney’s Office, Yoakum met the survivor of his crimes in July 2024 and the two began dating shortly afterwards.
Abuse and Trafficking
Yoakum became increasingly controlling and then physically abusive once the couple started living together. The young woman testified that he repeatedly assaulted her while isolating her from friends and family. Yoakum then pressured his girlfriend into commercial sex work over her personal objections, and she complied with his demands out of fear of further violent attacks.
The District Attorney’s Office noted that Yoakum created online advertisements using his partner’s photographs, communicated with prospective respondents, arranged commercial sex appointments, dictated where she would go and what acts she would perform, and demanded that she turn over all proceeds to him. Yoakum threatened and physically assaulted her if appointments took longer than he expected or if she failed to satisfy his demands.
In January of 2025, Yoakum attacked his partner, leaving visible injuries to her face and body, and then left her to meet a person for sex while he used her vehicle to commit a series of crimes that ended in his arrest after a high-speed pursuit through Camarillo.
Investigation and Verdict
The pursuit ended in a violent crash that seriously injured another driver. During the investigation into Yoakum’s actions in Camarillo, the survivor disclosed the extensive abuse she had endured, and subsequent search warrants uncovered digital evidence, text messages, and location data that corroborated Yoakum’s trafficking operation and the control he exerted over his partner.
Senior Deputy District Attorney Rikole Kelly, who prosecuted the case against Yoakum, stated, ‘This verdict recognizes the victim’s courage and the brutality she survived. Human trafficking does not always look like chains or locked doors. In this case, it hid under the guise of a relationship and was enforced through violence, fear, shame, and control.’
Yoakum is scheduled to be sentenced in this case on July 21, 2026, where he faces a maximum of 46 years in state prison. He remains in custody without bail and is awaiting a trial on six felony and two misdemeanor charges connected to the January 24, 2025, high-speed chase through Camarillo.
Original reporting: KEYT (Ventura/Santa Barbara) — read the source article.