Request Podcast

Transcript of The Billionaire Who Risks His Life to Save Trafficked Children ft. Paul Hutchinson

The Level Up Podcast w/ Paul Alex
Published 3 months ago 117 views
Transcription of The Billionaire Who Risks His Life to Save Trafficked Children ft. Paul Hutchinson from The Level Up Podcast w/ Paul Alex Podcast
00:00:00

He said, Pablo, I have a gift for you. I said, Really? What's your gift? And he hands me his phone, and there's a picture of an 11-year-old girl on his phone. This is Princess. She's 11. She's zero kilometer miles. And I said, Fuego, you have more like her? Zero kilometer? He goes, Oh, yeah, I got three or four more. I said, I want every one of those newer models. It ended up being the largest child rescue mission in one day. Largest we ever did, 124 children.

00:00:37

Hey, guys, and welcome back to the LevelUp podcast. My name is Paul Alex, and today we have a very special interview, guys. I want to tell you that Today's guest is Paul Hutchinson, an entrepreneur turned undercover hero. I like to call him Bruce Wayne. Seriously, okay? He is the real-life Bruce Wayne. He built a billion-dollar businesses, guys. Yeah, it would be billion-dollar business, but it's not about money, guys. He then walked away to rescue kids from human trafficking. We're about to get deep, guys, because I have been in that field as well. I have helped fight against human trafficking, and I'm a big believer against this. He now works side by side with his wife, Vanessa, to fight those who can't fight for themselves. Paul, welcome to the show.

00:01:23

Thank you. Super excited to share with you and your audience today.

00:01:26

No, absolutely, man. Let's go ahead and start this out. How was life for you growing up, man?

00:01:34

It was beautiful. Yeah? Yeah, it was beautiful. I realized over time that very few people had the blessings I had as a child. I had four younger sisters. I will say that I started recognizing the darkness that existed when in high school, I was asked to be the President of what they called the Peer Leadership Team, which it was a peer counseling because a lot of kids, if they have domestic abuse in the home or other things like that, if they go to a teacher and they talk about it, then legally that teacher has to go to the authorities. And so a lot of kids won't say anything, and they just don't trust the adults. And so I went through a bunch of training paid for by the school that helped me recognize those things and became a peer counselor. And I'll say this, at that point, I recognized how many kids deal with abuse in in the home, physical, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and they carry that with them throughout their life if they don't get the help that they need.

00:02:38

Wow. So you were out there helping the community, helping people that needed help at a very young age.

00:02:44

Yeah, I remember I had a party at my house. We were helping kids with drug and alcohol abuse and things like that. I realized that... I don't remember what it was, where there was something like the end of the school year where there was a lot of kids, a lot of parties with a lot of crap going on. So I said, You know what? We're going to throw the party. And multiple schools, my parents stopped counting it at, I don't remember, 300 and something kids that were there at the park in the backyard and everything else, that no sex, no drugs, no alcohol. We had a live band and a bunch of stuff. So, yeah, that defined it when I was younger. And I've always had a heart for wanting to make a difference, but I didn't know where that would go.

00:03:31

Paul, were your parents a big advocate of you doing this? Were they like, Paul, go ahead. Were they enforcing that action? Were they like, Paul, what are you doing? Why are you exposing yourself to that?

00:03:42

They were supporting whatever. I remember when I was When I was a little kid, I went in and I said, Mom, I want to know what I… I figured out what I want to do when I grow up. She goes, Oh, really? What do you want to do? I said, I want to be a brain surgeon. She goes, Why do you want to be a brain surgeon? I had just gotten beat up at school and whatever. I said, Because I want to fix how people think. And then later, I changed that to being a heart surgeon for real. I took all the pre-med, everything. I think innately, I realized that in order to change that behavior that was plaguing me, that it wasn't about changing how people think. It's about changing the heart. So I did. I remember doing a report in third grade on the human heart, and I had taken all of the required pre-med classes. I was literally two months They were months away from taking the MCAT. When I got in a major car accident, I severed all the tendons in my hand. They didn't know if I'd have the dexterity to be a surgeon.

00:04:38

They said, Well, you can be a regular doctor. I said, I don't want to be a regular anything. If I'm going to be A garbage man, I'm going to own the dump. That's just how I think. I said, I don't want to be a doctor. I want to be a surgeon, not a regular surgeon, a heart surgeon, not a regular heart surgeon, but one who specialized with children. I wanted to be a pediatric cardiologist, but that accident changed everything, and I changed into business and finance.

00:05:02

You were very aware at a young age what type of person you were. Because I'll give you a great example. For me, I was an introvert. I barely spoke to people because I was raised in a single mother household. My mom, I was a Latchki kid. I was raised on movies. I used to watch Leave It A Beaver. I used to be like, Wow, what a dream life. I wish I was able to live my life. For you, where did you get those traits? Was Was it your parents? Was it your dad? Was it your mom?

00:05:32

Where did you learn that habit? It's interesting. My parents were good people. They weren't really involved with a lot of charity work.

00:05:40

Did you have friends? Did you have a girlfriend at the time? Did you have a mentor? A lot of girlfriends.

00:05:46

That's a whole other story. Yeah, no, absolutely. Someday I'm going to write a book called How the Hell Do I Get Off the Short Bus? It's going to be all about the girls I've dated around my life.

00:05:54

Yeah, no, absolutely. I can't wait for that one.

00:05:58

That's right. I will say that from a charity standpoint, early in my career, not even my career, I was 21, 22 years old, and I had a mentor, and he Paul, he said, There's a few force multipliers in the universe. He says, You have 24 hours in your day just like everyone else. He said, If you want to be infinitely more successful in your business, this This is when I changed over from medicine to business. And he said, If you want to be infinitely more successful, you can't be trading time for money for things forever. You've got to figure out how to multiply your efforts. I'm like, Okay, what does that look like? Building the right team, whatever. He said, One of the keys is charity work. I'm like, What do you mean by that? He said, This isn't a religious thing, but I'm just going to tell you. He says, Jews, Muslims, Christians, all of them believe in some version of the Old Testament. There's the last book, the Book of Malachi. There's something in there that says, Prove me now herewith, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, that there will not be room enough to receive it.

00:07:10

What's God talking about? He's talking about charity. He says, They call it the Why? Giving at least 10%. He said, Sadly, the average person gives about 2% of their income annually to making a difference in the world, to charity work. He said, Millionaires? It's even less than 2%. However, Deca millionaires, centimillionaires, billionaires, the number is significantly higher. He said, If you want a force multiplier of a 10X or more on your efforts, he said, You can call it God, you can call it karma, you can call it the universal law of exchange. You can call it whatever you want to. There's a higher power, very interested in us doing good. And when we do that, when we put that time or money into making a positive impact in the world, then those windows of heaven open. I believe that's absolutely true in my life. I mean, how does somebody become a partner, let alone a founder of what is now well over a $50 billion AUM investment fund? You're not a University of Utah dropout, right? That's what I am. The only way that I can understand it is that I made that decision early on to give until it hurts.

00:08:26

I remember I told him, I said, That's why I want to be rich. I want be charitable. I never realized that I should be charitable so that I could be rich. You don't want to just give out money in hopes that it's all coming back. But in reality, that's what happens. Literally every bit of my actions as I was building those companies, there was an unseen force that was helping the success happen as long as I was in alignment with showing that I was a good steward of the money.

00:08:56

You actually cared. You actually looked after people. You had the right intention. People could see that, man. That's why that creates great leaders, great founders. Not everybody can lead. There's a difference between being a supervisor, being a manager, being an owner, and then being a leader. I'm a big believer in leading by example. I would never ask my people to go ahead and do something that I've never done myself. I like that, man. So let's transition into the big turning point here, Paul. What happened that made you walk away from the business world?

00:09:32

I saw firsthand the darkness that happens when we have an unhealed world. The high-level story, I received a phone call from our attorney general, said, Paul, I know you've donated a lot of money to child-related charities over the years. He said, I need to talk to you about something that's pretty dark. It's the fastest-growing criminal enterprise in the world, and good people don't know that it's happening. He started talking about human trafficking, child trafficking. He introduced me some operators, and these guys were in Colombia, had found some kids that were being sold for the unthinkable, and they needed some money to rescue the kids. I was already helping with a lot of different child-related charities. That's where I had decided that I was going to put my money. I decided a long time ago that my charity money, although given it to the guy on the side of the street who's asking me for money that may use it on drugs, I can't judge because I don't know if I wouldn't be there if I hadn't been raised in a somewhat healthy home. But I decided to focus my charity on the truly innocent, a nine-year-old child in a place completely outside of any decisions that she made.

00:10:54

And a big part of it is on law enforcement. I know that you served as well. A lot of our close friends I, anybody who puts their life in danger to protect mine and my family is something that I want to serve in some way. That's where I put a lot of money. I was on the Make a Wish board of directors for about seven years, incoming chairman in our area. My fund was growing huge. It was in the billions already. I got a phone call saying, Hey, Paul, I know you've helped with these rescues. He He said, We found over 100 kids in Columbia, in three different cities. He said, We have a plan that if we can rescue them all on the same day, he says, Because if we take down one operation, the others might go into hiding. He said, We've got to do a simultaneous ding on three cities to make this happen. He says, I need your help. And I said, Well, how much do you need? He said, I need you. Can you be in Columbia in two days?

00:11:55

Wow. And when he told I told you that, what was your thought process? What was your thought process? Because not many people, man, it's easier said than done. It's easier because obviously you have the money to go ahead and say, Hey, how much do you need? But it's another I think, to go ahead and risk your life.

00:12:17

I don't think I recognized right at first how dangerous it was. I'm like, Okay, what do you need it for? He says, Why do you need me there? He says, Well, he said that there's a trafficker down here who's got 14 kids, and he has access to over 50 through some other traffickers in Cartagena alone. He said, We've got to figure out how to get him to call the other traffickers and get them to bring all their kids together at the same time. He said, The plan And the plan is this. This guy's got this business dream of being able to build almost a Jeffrey Epstein Island. He wants to have this resort that you can bring wealthy Americans in and and sell his victims. And he believed he could make tens of millions of dollars a year selling these victims. But he needed a few million dollars to build it out. And it's like $8 million. And this operator is like, Look, I can't teach my Navy Seals had to negotiate this deal. These guys will see through fake money all day long. I immediately said, Yeah, I'll be there. It was interesting. I had one of my business partners that was in the room and heard me overhear the conversation.

00:13:30

An hour later, John Pennington, he's the co founder with me of Bridge, he calls me up. He goes, Paul, I heard what you just agreed to. He said, Have you thought this through? He said, This is incredibly dangerous. He said, Why would you do this? He said, You're set. You could sell out, buy an island, be happy the rest of your life. I said, Would I really be happy if I bought an island? I said, Tell me this. If I was doing something else dangerous, and so I told to John, I said, If I was climbing Everest tomorrow. You and I would probably have the same phone call, right? You'd call me and say, What are you thinking? He goes, Yeah, I probably would. I said, And when I'm 95 years old and I look back upon my life and I say, I climbed this mountain, I built this multibillion dollar Company, and they helped rescue this many children, which one of them matters? Yeah. He's like, Yeah, you're right. You need to go. Well, once I got to Columbia, a few things happened that scared the shit out of me. I thought, Oh, my word.

00:14:28

I said, Maybe John's right. Maybe I should have thought through this. This is a dangerous place. On the way down there, I'm googling, looking up everything. I realized at one time in the '80s that Pablo Escobar had a $200 price tag on any people involved in any law enforcement or whatever. At one time, my life would be worth 200 bucks down there. I was supposed to show up as a wealthy playboy. I've got $2,000 cufflinks on. I've got a $50,000 watch. I've got a suit that costs more than my first car. I'm there playing this role, but I was dressed as a target in a country. Now, Columbia, there's areas that place that we have a sanctuary down there. Medi-yin is literally safer than most US cities today. But back then, I didn't know what to expect, and it was pretty sketchy.

00:15:18

Paul, back then, are you referring to what year?

00:15:22

This was 2014, a little over 10 years ago.

00:15:26

So 2014. 2014 is when I got hired for the Police Academy. Is he really? Yeah. That was the beginning of my journey when I needed to transition to do a greater good for myself and to help the community. But man, that's insane. What did your wife... I Just one year anniversary with my wife just happened. We were expecting a baby boy, and I know my wife would be like, Oh, no, you're not going. I know for a fact, because she won't let me jump out of a plane now. I should have done it before I got married, but it is what it is. I married the love of my life. How did your wife, Vanessa, react when you told her what you wanted to do?

00:16:07

Well, first of all, congratulations on having a baby coming. That's super awesome. Thank you. Second of all, Vanessa is actually my third in life now. All right.

00:16:17

We dropped the gun.

00:16:18

I mean, I was like, Oh, my God. We met in Haiti. Vanessa and I met after I was doing undercover work. I had done 12 undercover missions in Haiti. I tell people meeting a beautiful Columbian actress is cool, but when she's donating her time at an orphanage in Haiti, that's my girl.

00:16:37

It brings it up. It's such a flex.

00:16:39

No. Back up, I was in this unhealthy relationship at the time. One where I've thought about it, I've looked back. There was a part of me that was really looking for purpose. I had everything. I had I think. Sadly, my first marriage ended in a divorce. I was in a second marriage or I was dating at the time, and it was toxic. I was like, Okay, is happiness going to come from one more party, one more girl, one I had two helicopters, one more helicopter. Who the hell needs two helicopters? This was this energy of arrogance that just wasn't fulfilling in any way. I was looking for that. I didn't have to ask anybody. I just said, Yeah, I'll be there. That was the best decision of my whole life up to that time.

00:17:41

At that time, we're painting a picture here for the audience and the listeners, is you could have anything that you wanted during that time, and you still can. But during that time, what you're saying is you were looking for purpose, fulfillment. You were trying to find it. So you were like, Hey, you know what? Why not? Why not go ahead and do this for a good cause? Why not?

00:18:06

I was donating a lot to child-related charities. There's a big difference between writing a check and getting involved. It's huge. When I got involved with the kids, with the Make Wish Foundation, we helped to raise money. I was on the board there. But when I got involved in fulfilling the wishes for those kids, that was so much more It's beautiful. We have a friend, he's making a million dollars a week in his company. His wife, every Thursday, physically goes to feed the homeless. She's at the soup house type of a thing because of the fulfillment of physically getting involved. In fact, early on, my mentor, I remember him now, he said, when he was telling me I should donate 10, 20% of my income, he said, You should also consider giving 10% or more of your time to the charity work that you're doing. That's powerful. Deciding to go was the first decision. But Being there in person is what changed everything. Seeing that darkest part of humanity firsthand completely transformed my life.

00:19:30

How long was the duration of that first mission in Columbia?

00:19:37

The very first time I went down, it was to set up the sting. It was literally one day in and out meeting with the traffickers, with the undercover operators. In the middle of that meeting, we were negotiating this meeting, one of the traffickers, who was so excited, I was willing to fund his project. He said, Pablo, I have a gift for you. I said, Really? What's your gift? He hands me his phone, and there's a picture of an 11-year-old girl on his phone. He said, This is Princess. She's 11. She's zero kilometer miles. You can guess what that means, right? He was selling her purity. He was selling her innocence. He just said something about he just took delivery or something. I remember he... I realized that if we could get these kids out before they're ever trafficked the first time, that's a miracle. I said, Fuego, I said, You just took delivery. You have more like her, zero kilometer, as you call them? He goes, Oh, yeah, I got three or four more. I said, You're going to bring those to my party, right? Because Our sting was, Hey, I'll fund your project under one condition.

00:20:49

I'm going to have a party in a week or two. I'm going to bring a bunch of my rich friends. They're into this thing. You show up with all of your inventory and any of the others that you're connected with down here so I can make sure that you have the inventory. You do that, I'll fund your project. I told him, I said, You're bringing those, too, right? He goes, Oh, no. He says, They're too expensive. I'm already paying $25,000 for this party. I'm paying $500 per child for Fifty children minimum just for two hours in the afternoon. He goes, Oh, jefe, you already paid $25,000. You want to F those other virgins. It's going to cost you maybe $10,000 more. It'll take $2,000, maybe $5,000 for that little one. It costs you maybe $10,000 more. Now, at this At this point, I'm legitimately pissed. No acting involved. I wanted to shoot him in the head. In fact, my Navy seal that was right behind me, he clears his throat. I need to check out the neighborhood, the restaurant, make sure we're all good. Later, in deep Briefing, he said, I almost unholstered my weapon right there.

00:21:47

He says, That little girl looked like my daughter at home. Wow. He's like, This is going to cost an extra $10,000. I'm like, I put my hands on my chest. I'm like, You don't think I can afford an extra $10,000? Yeah. He said, Oh, no, Hefe, no. I said, I want every one of those newer models that you have right now to the party. He goes, Oh, yeah, Hefe, I understand. So two weeks later, we had the sting all set up, and It ended up being the largest child rescue mission in one day that I knew of at the time. Largest we ever did, 124 children.

00:22:23

Wow. How did you feel seeing the children in person?

00:22:31

It almost broke me. We had rented an island. Actually, the federal agents gave us access to one and had a beautiful palapa-type house. And these two boats show up, 54 kids. And they get off of this boat and they're funneling them all into the house. I recognized one of them is that little girl that he had shown me on the phone, that 11-year-old.

00:23:06

Princess. Yeah.

00:23:08

The one that we... And the movie Sound of Freedom. It was the one that we highlighted there. She was actually at the island. In the movie, we did eight different rescue missions and put them all together. The jungle scene with the doctor, that was actually a different country all together. It was in Haiti, et cetera. So she was there and some of the others. In the movie also, in The Sound of Freedom, my character is Pablo Delgado, the billion-dollar fund manager who quits his job to rescue kids and helps fund it. When Jim Caviezel is like, Hey, if we can convince Pablo. In the movie, my character is like, I don't want to go. It wasn't until Jim gave a picture of this 11-year-old girl to my driver. I look at this picture and see that face of what I knew was a trafficked child. He says, Don't do it for the 50s. It's just do it for the one. In real life, I was already there. I was face to face with these traffickers when he showed me that picture. Fast forward, we have the sting all set up. Boom, they could show up with these kids and that little girl getting off the boat with all the others.

00:24:11

She had red long pigtails, braids. She had a little kitty cat on her shirt. She was just a child. About halfway through the negotiations, one of the traffickers gets up and says, I'm going to show you the gifts that I brought you. He goes, In the house, we could hear some of the kids crying, including this little girl. They came back out in the most transformational moment for me up to that point was when they had this little girl in front of me. I'm sitting down, she's standing up. She's not much taller than I was sitting down. We're almost eye level like you and I are right now. This is just a child. All I could see was fear in her eyes. Her makeup had been smeared because she was crying. I made a promise at that moment to myself, to God, to that child, that I would dedicate my life to eradicating that evil. I couldn't imagine anything worse. All the other child-related charities I was ever a part of, it was Would I rather have a child of mine that was struggling with cancer or in an accident or in the hospital? Whatever, all these child-related charities, there was nothing I can imagine worse than what I was seeing in front of me.

00:25:45

The most beautiful moment was after the agents came and stormed the party and arrested everybody, me included. The bad guys think we got extradited to the USS Jan trial. The child protective services people, there was about 30 of them. In the house with the kids, I could hear them laughing and singing with the children. That sound of freedom was the most beautiful sound that I ever heard, especially compared to the crying that we heard half an hour before. I turned to the operator, I said, Bro, I spent my whole life making money, making rich people richer. I want to make a difference.

00:26:27

Oh, yeah.

00:26:28

This difference. What can I do? How can I fund things? He told me at that time, he said, Paul, he said that, Sadly, there's a large demand for stuff like this that comes from guys like Jeffrey Epstein, guys who are filled with arrogance and greed and lust and wear $50,000 watches. Now, they're not the only people that do the abuse, but in situations like that, it worked really well. He said, I can't teach my Navy Seals how to pose like that. He said, I don't know of any ultra successful business owners who've had the training that you've had. He said, If you're willing to be the bait, I'll change your whole life.

00:27:12

Wow. That's crazy, man. And I resonate with your story so much, dude. I mean, being in seven years in law enforcement, I've arrested anybody from murders to rapists, child molesters. I mean, the worst of the worst. I worked in Oakland, California for seven years. It took a piece of me, man. I lived it. I lived it. But some of the scenarios that I've been in, okay, when you speak about how you felt when you see the children, dude, It takes me back to this one incident. I was two years in patrol. I was very proactive cop. I wanted to make a difference in the community. I remember there was a wanted 261 suspect, meaning a rape suspect. It was a 35-year-old man at that time that was raping his girlfriend's kids while she was at work. I looked at that picture. The gift that God gave me, Paul, was I'm able to see people's faces and remember them on the spot. I'm not good with names, but I have that facial recognition. I remember doing my own research as a patrol officer, as a They considered me a rookie at two years. I remember I did my research.

00:28:35

I found out what the guy worked. He was a chef at a taqueria. I remember going to that taqueria by myself, and I said, I'm going to take this guy in by myself. I remember we locked eyes. He started running. I chased him down, and it took everything for me not to beat him Everything. I don't know how you held your peace, man. Because number one, hurting children is something that I cannot stand. When I watched your movie, dude, when it came out, Sound of Freedom, I'm going to be very transparent with you. I broke down in the theater because of the PTSD that I had from doing that type of work back when I was in Special Victims Unit. It is not the type of work that Anyone should see. But it is the reality of what's out there. I feel like it should be brought up to light even more. I was enraged that they didn't broadcast your movie even more? Why do you think that was, man? Why do you think they kept your movie from being broadcast everywhere?

00:29:57

Because too many people are involved.

00:29:59

Too many people are involved.

00:30:00

Yeah. I can't even tell you how prolific this is in the elite circles. But the problem is, though, it's a problem everywhere. This isn't just people going to a third-world country and doing these horrible things. Literally, if you walked out in your front door, I don't care if somebody's in an apartment complex or an affluent neighborhood. If they walk out their front door and they look left, they look right, there's There's a very high chance that one of those doors in their neighborhood is a dangerous place for children.

00:30:35

Absolutely. I agree.

00:30:37

People will leave the sound of freedom and they're like, Oh, I want to do something. I want to help. The worst thing you can do is go to Mexico and try to go undercover. You're going to get arrested. You're probably going to get shot. You're going to get killed. Yeah. The best thing you can do is go home and hug your kids. People are like, Well, how does that make a difference? Well, the majority of children who are being trafficked or moved around don't come from a healthy home. They come from a broken home, a broken foster care program, run aways, etc. Those are the easy targets. However, the real number isn't the 10 million plus children that are being sold, trafficked, that are taken from their parents. The real number is this. One in every four women who are listening to this today, one in every four women that we know have admitted that they were a victim of this abuse as a child, sexual abuse, physical abuse as a child. As a child, that's one in four. That's just the ones that talk about it. The average age of somebody talking about is 52 years old.

00:31:38

That's my age. I've raised my kids. I have grandkids. Sadly, There are so many people that are holding on to this pain. Somebody doesn't just grow up and at 45 years old, go to Columbia, go to Mexico, go try to do things to kids. Chances are it's already happening in their own homes, in their own neighborhoods. 92% of of the victims of sexual abuse as children, 90% of them, it was familial. It was somebody they knew. You need a relationship with your kids where they can very comfortably come to you and say, Hey, dad. Hey, mom, I don't like it when you tell me to go hug Uncle Harry. He touches me weird. He says that we need to have sleepovers at his house. He tells us that we should have secrets outside of you. He looks at me in a really weird way. These Kids know when things are out of alignment. You need a relationship where they can easily come to you and say, Hey, dad, I really screwed up. I was playing on this online gaming platform, and this girl was on there, and she We started talking privately, and she sent me some pictures, and I sent some to her, and now she wanted more, and now they're videos.

00:32:50

I don't even think it's a 13-year-old girl. I think it might be somebody else. And sure enough, that's a 45-year-old dude that's using sextortion, that's telling Telling the kids, Hey, if you don't do this and this, send more and all of this stuff. I'm going to send this all over your school. It happens all the time. There's even apps out right now where a predator can, we call them nudify apps. They can literally take a picture of a celebrity or your child off of the internet and use this app to take their clothes off and it looks real. And then they send that picture to your kid saying, This is what I got. So there's There's so many things that we can't be helicopter mom and dads and just control everything, but it's so important when it comes to the safety of your kids. In fact, that's one thing. The movie created massive awareness, but I knew that parents needed the tools. It's one of the reasons, we'll talk about this later, but that's one of the reasons I put so much time into the Sound of Freedom book. It's out on Amazon. Well, it will be on the 29th, but it gives parents these tools, the signs that they need to be looking for when something is off with their kids.

00:34:00

Oh, absolutely. You're a 12, 13-year-old daughter, if all of a sudden she goes from being super outgoing to a recluse, don't just think that that's going through puberty. The average age of a child brought into these horror is 12 years old. It's so important that we are hyper-aware and have those healthy relationships where you are the 911 to your kids. You're the one that they call if something's out of alignment, that they can very comfortably They come to you and you tell them, Listen, I love you unconditionally. It doesn't matter because these perpetrators will use shame and guilt to control the kids. Absolutely. You help them get out of that shame and guilt. You let them know it doesn't matter. I don't care if I need to have You knock somebody off. I don't care if you got drunk on your way home. Whatever it is, let's talk about this so that we can resolve whatever it is.

00:34:52

A few things that you said. Well, number one, being a former police officer, and specifically, the city of Oakland. City of Oakland has A very problematic issue with underage prostitution. The average prostitute or escort in that city would range anywhere from, I believe the youngest I've seen was 10 years old, all the way up to 17. You see this 10 years old with a face full of makeup. You're like, Hey, what are you doing here? I ran away from home. Where's home? We're in Oakland, Northern California, Bakersfield, LA. I'm from another state. I was like, What are you doing? Where are your parents? My parents don't know I'm out here. I'm out here with a friend, and my friend introduced me to this guy, and he actually dropped me off here and told me to make him money. These are kids, kids that don't even understand what's going on. It happened over and over and over and over. Mind you, Paul, I was in special victims unit for only two years out of my seven-year career. I was taking down cartel members in her narcotics. When I went in there and I saw, I was shocked.

00:36:05

It's a big problem. They're not putting the awareness out there. Watch your kids. Be a parent. Tell them the hard things now. See, the reason why I was so aware is because my mom cared. Even though she was a hardworking Latina, she wasn't able to go ahead and afford a babysitter. She said, Paul, I'm a stranger goes and tries to get you in their car. What do you do? You run. You run. You ask for help. She would make it aware. That's what we need to have this hard conversation. You're absolutely right, dude. Everything to the T, Paul, that you are saying is absolutely correct, dude. This is coming from somebody that I've seen the worst of the worst. I agree, dude. Kudos to you, man. No, seriously. Kudos to you, dude. You're the real deal.

00:36:54

Well, so many parents, it's important to know that in today's age, that the The dangers for our kids isn't lurking in some dark alley. The dangers for our kids is in their backpack and in their back pocket. Yeah, absolutely. I can't tell you how many of the operations the perpetrators identified their victims through online contact. Whether they were traveling to Cancun, whether they knew a lot about their personal life and their home life, et cetera. So they could identify those who were the easiest targets, the soft targets to be able to bring into this. And sadly, there's a huge percentage of kids who are being trafficked by a trafficker who sleep in their own beds at night. And their parents have no idea because that traffickers got some dirt on them or whatever. They go to a friend's house and the friend's brother takes pictures of them while they're changing and says, Hey, I'm going to use these all over the school unless you come every Tuesday after school here and we're going to do some things with my friends. Whatever it is, these kids are being controlled through fear, guilt, manipulation. It's so important that we have a healthy relationship with our kids where we can find out when something's not right.

00:38:09

Absolutely. It goes to, number one, your environment. That's why every entrepreneur that I've interviewed on this podcast, I always ask them the question, was your parents a big impact in you being successful in life? Every single person that I've interviewed this week, every single one of them said, Yeah, they said that I could do anything in this life. I look at them, I'm like, Dude, you're so lucky. You're so lucky because you're not limiting your kid's belief, even to reach out to you, even to communicate to you, man. The first time I ever experienced depression in my life was at the age of 29. The reason why I say this is because I wasn't able to reach out to anybody, not even my own mother. I love my mother. She does everything. She's my heart. But at the end of the day, she raised me to be hard. Me, as a new father in the next couple months, I told my wife, Yes, I'm going to be strict. I believe traditional values, but I'm going to have an open line of communication with my son. So at the end of the day, best believe, man, we're going to have those hard conversations.

00:39:13

It's needed.

00:39:14

You're going to be a great dad.

00:39:15

Dude, I can't wait. I can't wait, dude. You don't understand. I used to mentor the police officers to become detectives, and I loved it. I loved it. I do the same thing with the guys that work for me. I trained them to be like me, carbon copy to me. I'm a big nurture, dude. I have a big heart for sure. Paul, I want you to give a little bit of advice to our viewers because you're a man of purpose, fulfillment, dude. You have a big heart. What advice would you give to someone that is chasing money but feeling lost right now?

00:39:58

I'll say this. It's okay to create value in the world and to have wealth because of it. There's nothing wrong with that. At one point, I had a house that had 10 bathrooms, 8 private suites, three kitchens, seven fireplaces, a basketball court in my basement, and I lived there by myself.

00:40:20

That's crazy.

00:40:21

It's crazy. Bruce Wayne. I'm just saying that. Off the charts, just crazy. It was funny you say that because I was living there when I was doing some of the undercover work, and I had a guy came in to put in a new camera system, and I wanted four cameras. He said, Paul, he said, Paul, I have to tell you this. He said, You're the closest thing to Batman if anybody I've ever met. He said, I'm not trying to upsell you, but he said, You need more. So we put in 32 cameras.

00:40:46

For a spot like that, man, absolutely. 100%.

00:40:50

But here's what I will say. Yes, it's okay to have a vision board that's got Lambo's and Jets and nice houses and everything else. I talk about that. We'll talk again in a few months when my next book on infinite abundance and being a conscious capitalist, what that is, how you can create massive abundance in the world while creating value for yourself. But one of the most important pieces of that puzzle is ensuring that your heart's in the right place and the contributions you're making to the world. People say, How do you make a billion dollars, Paul? Well, create a billion dollars worth of value in the world and set your system up in a way where you have a billion dollars. That's all money is. Money is simply reward for your efforts and your contributions. And so I encourage people to have a vision board, to work hard, to create value. I use things, jets and cars and boats and stuff. I use things to motivate myself, to get out of bed, so I'm not as lazy, to motivate myself to do the right thing long enough until I realized the right reason to be doing it.

00:42:02

And the right reason isn't things, it's making a difference. But it's hard to make a massive impact if you don't have the resources to do so. You're absolutely right. I'm the primary investor in Sound of Freedom movie, and investing in movies is usually a waste of money. I knew that even if we had a chance of getting these stories out to the world, it was worth the risk. So the money that I put in to Sound of Freedom was considered in my book, throw away money. If I never make a penny of this, but we have a tool that can show... I knew that we couldn't take millions of people to see what I had seen, but we could help millions of people feel what I had felt.

00:42:43

Oh, I felt that.

00:42:44

Trust me, dude. You can use money for good. You're using money for good. I mean, you've been very successful in business, and you're now saying, Okay, how can I use that to create a beautiful studio, to build an audience so that I can make a powerful a positive impact in the lives of others. I had a poster on my wall when I was a kid, and it had a bunch of Lambo's and Ferraris and a nice house and a helicopter on the side. I had a sign that said, He who has the most toys wins. I now have one that says, He who has a powerful, positive impact in the most lives wins.

00:43:21

Oh, yeah. I love that, man. It's actually going to tie into my next question. Now that, obviously, you've mastered what I like to call life by design. Life by design, guys, you guys always hear me saying this, life by design is not only being financially successful, but it's also having core values, having faith, having fulfillment, helping other people, just being a good person. Now that you've done everything, man, you're still doing it, right? What does success mean to you now, today?

00:43:58

I I believe that at the end of this life, when I'm meeting my maker, the conversation is going to look like this. Paul, these are the gifts that you received in this life? The ability to communicate, the success in your businesses, your childhood, all of these, what did you do with them? Success is a journey, not a destination. Every Every single day we wake up and we can choose to contribute positively or negatively to the world. That all starts with the man in the mirror. I love the story of a man that's sitting on a couch He's reading his newspaper, and his little boy comes in and says, Hey, Daddy, I want to play. You're having a little boy or a little girl? Little boy. Little boy. Imagine. Maverick. Maverick. Okay. Imagine this little boy comes in and says to his dad, Hey, Daddy, I I'm going to play baseball. You want to play baseball? Let's say this guy didn't have it together like you do. He's reading his newspaper, I'm busy right now. Not prioritizing that time with his son. The little boy comes back a little bit later. Daddy, it's a beautiful day outside.

00:45:15

Can we play ball? Please, please, please. His dad turns the page of the newspaper, and on the next page, there's a map of the world. So he has an idea. He tears it, tears out that map, tears it up in a little piece of paper, throws it on the floor, and he goes, Son, you need learn your geography. You go get some tape. You tape together every single country, every single state, exactly where it's supposed to be. If you do that, I'll go play baseball with you. Turns the page of the thing, thinking it's going to be a few hours. Five minutes later, this little boy comes back and the map is taped together perfectly. The man's like, How did you do that? Did your mom help you? That's great. The little boy says, Oh, no. He turns it over. He says, There was a picture of a man on the other side. I just put the man together and the the whole world came together.

00:46:01

Wow. That was good.

00:46:05

That was good. That's the answer. It starts. We can sit here and say, Okay, I want to change the world. I want to fix this. I want to fix this. Start with yourself. Start with that man in the mirror. You put that together. You find the ways to fix that, and you can heal humanity. That's really what's every single day. My goal is to be a better version of me than I was the day before, because in doing so, I know that the ripple effect of my words, my thoughts, my actions will show up throughout humanity if I start with the man in the mirror.

00:46:46

Oh, yeah. I always get asked this question, what keeps you pushing when you've already obtained the majority of the goals that you've had in life? The answer that I always I've said this in a few of our podcasts earlier this week, is I'm always chasing the better version of myself, man. Kudos to you, brother. Kudos to you, man. Let's talk about your book. Let's talk about that book. Now, I know you have another book coming out, but specifically, what can people look forward on this book? You're saying that you wrote it with the intentions of helping parents understand their kids. So specifically, what can they and look forward in your book?

00:47:31

There are the stories of the rescue missions, the one in Columbia, the one in Haiti, a bunch of others, different missions that we put together as part of the Sound of Freedom movie. Through those, I take the reader through the emotional transformation that I went through in seeing that darkest part of humanity and then going from that darkness into the light with the kids, with the rescue, rehabilitation, reuniting of the the kids with their families. But the first part of the book is all about, I call it the making of an undercover operator. It goes through the training, the situational awareness training, how to read a room, how to identify where there's abuse going on, all of these things that I learned in that peer leadership team in high school, all of those things so that parents can say, Oh, wow, that makes sense. Okay, I'm going to write that down. I'm going to write that down. Now I see ways to keep the kids safe. Then I go through some of the rescue missions. The last part of the book, I call it Liberating Humanity, because I recognize recognized after 10 years of doing undercover work, over 70 undercover child rescue missions in 15 countries, I recognized that just pulling the children out of hell was never going to fix the problem.

00:48:45

We needed to pull the hell out of humanity. We need to take away the demand. How do we fix that? How do we fix humanity? Why in the world is there something like trafficking even going on? Why is this the fastest growing criminal enterprise in the world? Why do we have one women in their home that have been abused as children? Why do we have one in five men at some time in our life and a majority of those as kids? Why is this even a thing? What is it that needs to heal? I talk about creating global awareness. That's step one. Realize this, back at the time of Abraham Lincoln, it wasn't guys like me and my team rescuing the slaves that created the biggest difference. It was people like you. It was influencers. Back at the time of Abraham Lincoln, it was people like Harriet Beecher-Stowe. She wrote a book called Uncle Tom's Cabin, which was the media. It was the podcast of the age. Created an awareness with good people of what was going on in the South. In fact, years later, when Abraham Lincoln met Harriet, he shook her hand. He said, So you're the little lady that wrote the book that started the big war.

00:49:46

She made the noise.

00:49:47

Exactly. That's the key. Creating awareness, and we talk about that here. We talk about identifying those traits in the kids so you can keep them safe. We talk about situational awareness. Most, that whole last section is about us as adults, about the guy in the mirror that say, I put the man together and the whole world came together. That's what it's about. I talk about some things in some healing retreats that I did that completely transformed my life in every way because I was still living in some of this darkness, even after I had started doing some of the undercover work.

00:50:22

Wow, that sounds amazing. When is this book coming out?

00:50:26

It'll be out July 29th. July 29th. It'll be in bookstores It'll be on Amazon for sure. They're coming out in bookstores as well later. But yeah, July 29th. You can pre order it today. You can go on Amazon. Just type in Sound of Freedom. It's there. Or you can go to liberatinghumanity. Com, and you can get information to keep your kids safe there. You can pre order the book there. You can get information on personal healing and what that looks like. All of that is right there on liberating humanity. The Child Liberation Foundation, there's a link on that as well in order to help the foundation in fighting trafficking.

00:51:02

I love that, Paul. I love that. The last and final question, my friend. If you could say one sentence to the world, what would it be?

00:51:20

You have to limit it to one sentence. That's it.

00:51:21

Let's figure it out. We only got one sentence.

00:51:23

I would say, recognize the divinity within yourself. Learn how to love yourself with infinite unconditional love and release all those things that no longer serve you. In doing so, we'll save millions of children, not just 20 at a time, not just 50 at a time. We'll save millions of children.

00:52:00

I love that. And that's what we call the LevelUp, guys. Paul Hutchinson, an entrepreneur turned undercover hero, built billion dollar companies, but left all of that to go ahead and battle I'm going to say the worst of the worst, man. The worst of the worst. And he's making a big difference, making a bigger impact. And that movie made a big impact when it came out in my life, dude. That was just like, wow, this is as real as it gets. Watch it, guys. If you haven't watched Sound of Freedom, get the book when it's coming out. Also, it's going to be in the link in the bio, guys. That's it, guys. The Level of Podcast, guys, we're currently ranked number one in business on Apple podcast, ranked number 19 in all categories right now. If you guys love this podcast, make sure to share with someone that you care about, okay? We need to spread the message. Spread the message that Paul started out here with battling human trafficking, guys. He is doing it for a real good cause. Dude, you're amazing, bro. With that being said, guys, we will catch you on the next one.

AI Transcription provided by HappyScribe
Episode description

In this powerful episode of The Level Up Podcast w/ Paul Alex, we sit down with Paul Hutchinson (@liberating.humanity), a billionaire entrepreneur turned undercover operative who left his $50B investment empire to fight child trafficking across the globe.

Paul shares the real-life story behind the hit movie Sound of Freedom, detailing how he infiltrated trafficking rings, posed as a wealthy buyer, and helped rescue 124 children in a single day. This episode pulls back the curtain on the dark world of human trafficking, the emotional toll of undercover work, and the courage it takes to fight evil face to face.

Whether you're a parent, entrepreneur, or someone searching for deeper purpose, this interview will leave you inspired to take action.

🔑 In this episode, you'll learn:

How Paul went from managing billions to risking his life undercover

The truth about child trafficking no one talks about

Practical tips for parents to protect their children

Why purpose and fulfillment matter more than money

The story behind Paul’s book Sound of Freedom and the real rescue missions that inspired it

📢 Subscribe now and don’t miss this unforgettable conversation that exposes the truth and empowers change.

Your Network is your NETWORTH!

Make sure to add me on all SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORMS:

Instagram: https://jo.my/paulalex2024
Facebook: https://jo.my/fbpaulalex2024
YouTube: https://jo.my/ytpaulalex2024
LinkedIn: https://jo.my/inpaulalex2024

Looking for a secondary source of income or want to become an entrepreneur?
Check out one of my companies below to see if we can help you:

🌐 www.CashSwipe.com

📘 FREE Copy of my book “Blue to Digital Gold - The New American Dream”
www.officialPaulAlex.com

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices