2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumU.S. Jury Awards $14 Million to Indian Guest Workers in Historic Labor Trafficking Case
Five victims of a massive human trafficking scheme were awarded $14 million by a federal jury in New Orleans today, the largest amount ever awarded by a jury in a labor trafficking case.
The historic decision comes in a lawsuit against Signal International, LLC, a shipbuilding company that, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, lured more than 500 Indian guest workers to the United States with false promises of green cards. After paying exorbitant fees to a network of brokers, the workers were forced to work in horrifying conditions under threat of deportation. The five plaintiffs are among more than 200 workers who have sued Signal. The men are represented, pro bono, by some of the most prestigious law firms in the country, in suits coordinated by the Southern Poverty Law Center.
[The men] were forced to live under guard, in overcrowded and racially segregated mancamps where they slept 24 people in a trailer, in conditions even Signal has acknowledged did not comply with the basic health and safety standards required by law. Signal also admitted in internal emails that the dining facilities in which the workers ate were disgusting so much so that the company prayed they would go undetected by health inspectors.
It doesnt stop there. The workers didnt just have to live in these racially-based ghettos where sickness was rampant due to overcrowding; they had to pay for them a whopping $1,050 deducted from each monthly paycheck. In a blunt admission that Signal had every intention of exploiting its workers to the maximum, its CFO referred to the mancamps as profit centers, which earned the company more than $730,000 in revenue in 2007. And the company found other ways to make money off the workers, who were subject to regular searches and had to pay a $250 fine or $500 for a second offense for violating the mancamps No Visitors and No Alcohol rules. Those penalties only applied to Signals Indian labor force. To keep workers in line, the policies were enforced by the guards who checked their bags upon entering the mancamps, and occasionally conducted searches of their bunks and belongings.
Thanks to ACLU
https://www.aclu.org/blog/human-rights/victory-us-jury-awards-14-million-indian-guest-workers-historic-labor-trafficking-
A Little Weird
(1,754 posts)But that's not enough in my opinion. The leadership of that company should be in jail. There should be actual real penalties for treating people this way.
locks
(2,012 posts)and good point sunlei. A prime example is BP and the oil spill.
Omaha Steve
(99,655 posts)K&R!