Corporate accountability
Track forced labor in supply chains
TruthMark does not aggregate corporate records or rank companies. We direct you to the federal regulators that authoritatively enforce supply-chain accountability — and to the state task forces and AG offices that prosecute related labor trafficking. Why we do it this way →
Federal cross-reference (highest priority)
Federal supply-chain accountability
Seven authoritative federal sources. Most U.S. supply-chain enforcement runs through these. SEC EDGAR accepts a name search via URL; the others are landing-page references and tip-intake portals.
List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor
Open ↗U.S. Department of Labor — Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB)
Biennial report listing goods (and source countries) ILAB has reason to believe are produced by child or forced labor in violation of international standards. Identifies country/good pairs only — does NOT name companies or brands.
List of Products Produced by Forced or Indentured Child Labor (E.O. 13126)
Open ↗U.S. Department of Labor — Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB)
Executive Order 13126 list of products that federal contractors must certify they have made good-faith effort not to source via forced or indentured child labor. Country/product pairs only — no company-level data.
Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA) Enforcement
Open ↗U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
CBP's primary UFLPA hub: rebuttable-presumption guidance, the UFLPA Entity List of sanctioned producers, statistics dashboard, and importer guidance. The Entity List names sanctioned producers but is not a name-aware company lookup.
SEC EDGAR Full-Text Search
Open ↗U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Full-text search of every electronic SEC filing since 2001. Useful for surfacing 10-K / 10-Q / 8-K disclosures that mention 'forced labor', 'UFLPA', 'Xinjiang', or supply-chain audit language. Returns filings, not company-level scoring.
Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit (HTPU)
Open ↗U.S. Department of Justice — Civil Rights Division
DOJ Civil Rights Division unit that consolidates federal labor- and sex-trafficking prosecution expertise. Lists priorities and selected case summaries; not a corporate database.
National Worker Exploitation Task Force
Open ↗U.S. Department of Justice — Civil Rights Division
Joint DOJ/DOL task force coordinating prosecution of involuntary-servitude, peonage, and labor-trafficking offenses, including supply-chain forced-labor cases. Methodology page; no per-company lookup.
FTC — Complying with the Made in USA Standard
Open ↗Federal Trade Commission
FTC's canonical guidance for U.S.-origin and supply-chain claims (the closest federal hook for deceptive supply-chain marketing). Relevant when a company makes 'Made in USA', 'ethically sourced', or 'forced-labor-free' representations. Guidance only — not a search of past enforcement.
Full integration
New York — state-level resources
Use these alongside the federal section above. State coverage is narrower — it focuses on prosecution of trafficking offenses and (in California) public corporate disclosures.
- AG human traffickingOpen ↗
New York State Office of the Attorney General — Human Trafficking
NY AG's combined Labor Bureau / Civil Rights Bureau / Organized Crime Task Force initiative on labor and sex trafficking. Methodology and reporting; no public defendant or employer database.
- Labor enforcementOpen ↗
New York State Department of Labor — Anti-Trafficking (Division of Compliance and Education)
NY DOL's Division of Compliance and Education investigates labor-trafficking tips, recovers back wages, and certifies T-visa applications. Tip-intake and resource page; no employer search interface.
Integrated state portals
States with fuller TruthMark integration (coverage notes per sub-resource). For all 50 states + DC + territories, see the full directory.
Don't see your jurisdiction in the integrated list? Browse the full 50-state + DC + territory directory →
Data via DOL ILAB, CBP UFLPA, SEC EDGAR, DOJ Civil Rights Division (HTPU + National Worker Exploitation Task Force), FTC, and state attorneys general / labor agencies. NGO-curated databases (Polaris Project, NHTH, Stop the Traffik) are intentionally not used here — see methodology.
See also: Full directory · Methodology · Labor module (OSHA / NLRB) · Corporations module