Primary Reporting Pathway
Simply Report
Missouri has launched Simply Report statewide as a modernized way to report suspected human trafficking ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Kansas City.
Why this matters now
Missouri has made Simply Report part of its statewide trafficking response infrastructure.
On May 21, 2026, Missouri’s Attorney General signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Safe House Project to launch Simply Report statewide. The announcement said the system allows Missourians to report suspected trafficking and routes actionable intelligence into law enforcement dashboards across the state.
This matters for Kansas City because the launch was timed ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, when Kansas City will serve as one of the U.S. host cities and the region expects major visitor activity.
What It Is
A safer way for everyday people to report concerns.
Simply Report describes itself as a simple, secure app and web tool that helps users identify and report possible human trafficking. It is designed to help people act when they are unsure what they are seeing.
How It Works
Notice. Submit. Let trained systems respond.
Notice a concern
Something may feel controlled, unsafe, hidden, exploitative, or not right. Trust that instinct.
Submit what you observed
Simply Report gives the public a secure way to describe concerns without investigating alone.
Let trained systems respond
Reports can be screened and routed to appropriate systems and partners for follow-up.
Who Runs It
Simply Report is connected to Safe House Project.
Safe House Project is a national anti-trafficking nonprofit focused on identification, education, survivor care, safe housing, prosecution, and prevention infrastructure.
Simply Report describes its platform as developed with input from survivors, psychologists, healthcare providers, law enforcement, educators, and anti-trafficking professionals.
Training & Certification
Move from awareness to action.
Safe House Project and Simply Report connect awareness with training, community education, and survivor-centered systems. These offerings can support schools, hospitality workers, healthcare providers, in-home service providers, faith communities, and public agencies.