icScotland - Four convicted in 'slaves' trial
icScotland logo
icScotland News Sport icHomes
Search icScotland for:
Today's UK news
News  UK  Today's UK news  Article

Four convicted in 'slaves' trial

17:05, Jul 11 2012

 

Four members of a traveller family have been found guilty of forcing destitute men into servitude.

Tommy Senior, James John, Patrick and Josie Connors were convicted of controlling, exploiting, verbally abusing and beating the men for financial gain at a caravan site near Leighton Buzzard in Bedfordshire.

During the trial, the jury at Luton Crown Court heard that the complainants, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were forced to work in the Connors' block paving business.

The 13-week trial heard the men were allegedly given next to no food, forced to wash in cold water and paid little or no money for working up to 19 hours a day, six days a week.

Josie Connors, 31, sobbed in the dock as other members of the family wept in the public gallery as the verdicts were read out. Connors and her husband James John, 34, were convicted of two counts of holding a person in servitude and two counts of requiring a person to perform forced or compulsory labour.

James John was also convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm and cleared of additional counts of holding a person in servitude and requiring a person to perform forced labour. The jury failed to reach a verdict on a battery charge.

Tommy Senior, 52, faced 11 counts and was convicted of one servitude charge and one false labour charge, as well as one of ABH. The jury failed to reach verdicts in seven counts and cleared him of one charge of conspiracy to hold a person in servitude.

Patrick, 20, was convicted of conspiring to hold a person in servitude, as well as false labour and ABH charges. He was cleared of two other counts but the jury failed to reach a verdict on seven others.

A total of seven members of the family were on trial but the jury failed to reach verdicts on counts regarding Tommy Junior, 27, Johnny, 28, and James Connors, 24, after deliberating for 38 hours and 48 minutes. It cleared them all of several other counts.

The trial, which lasted for 13 weeks, heard men were given next to no food, forced to wash in cold water and paid little or no money for working up to 19 hours a day, six days a week. Living in caravans and sheds deemed unfit for human habitation, prosecutors said the men spent Sundays doing further work by way of door-to-door selling.

 
Multi-faith invitation to service
Woolwich murder: Three more arrests
France probes Woolwich terror link
Road verge management questioned
Tories look at limiting GP visits
PM launches anti-terror task force
Murder sparks anti-Muslim backlash
Davey demands EU emissions target
Well-wishers flock to pay respects
Fatal tiger attack failings probed
EDL demo ends without major trouble
Thousands run final marathon mile
48 rescued as boat runs aground
Father's hope for missing daughter
Nine-year-old boy admits burglary
Wall of flowers for slain soldier
Three arrested ahead of EDL march
Child abduction cases up by 81%
Travellers escape UK's cold spring
Two questioned over mid-air 'fight'
Top Top

Back Back

E-mail this article to a friend

Printable VersionPrintable version

 
News  UK  Today's UK news  Article
 


Copyright and Trade Mark Notice
© owned by or licensed to Scottish & Universal Newspapers Limited 2013.
icScotland™ is a trade mark of Scottish & Universal Newspapers Limited.
Please read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Statement before using this site.

 
Advertisements
 
Jobs in Scotland: