South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

3 charged in conspiracy to force immigrants to work

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TAMPA — Three people have been indicted in a multistate conspiracy involving the forced labor of Mexican agricultur­al immigrants, federal authoritie­s announced Wednesday.

A federal grand jury in Tampa formally charged Bl adi mir More no, Christina Gamez and Guadalupe Mendes Mendoza under a six-count indictment last week.

Moreno, a Mexican citizen and permanent U.S. resident who owned and managed Los Villatoros Harvesting, and Gamez, a U.S. citizen who worked for the company as a bookkeeper, manager and supervisor, face charges of conspiracy under the RICO Act, conspiracy to commit forced labor, forced labor and conspiracy to obstruct proceeding­s before department­s, agencies and committees.

Mendes Mendoza, a Mexican citizen who worked as a manager and supervisor for the company, was charged with conspiracy to obstruct proceeding­s before agencies.

According to the indictment, Moreno, Gamez and Mendes Mendoza ran a labor contractin­g company for migrant workers with temporary agricultur­al visas from 2015 through 2017.

Los Villatoros Harvesting subjected multiple Mexican agricultur­al workers employed in Florida, Kentucky, Indiana, Georgia and North Carolina to forced labor, investigat­ors said.

The company also harbored migrant workers in the U.S. after their H-2A visas had expired for financial gain and committed visa fraud and fraud in foreign labor contractin­g, officials said.

Mo reno and Gamez operated Los Villa tor os Harvesting as a criminal scheme, prosecutor­s said.

They’re accused of forcing workers to complete hundreds of hours of physically demanding agricultur­al labor through coercive means, such as imposing debts, confiscati­ng passports, poor living conditions, verbal abuse and isolation, as well as threatenin­g workers with arrest, deportatio­n and physical harm.

Online court records didn’t list attorneys for the three defendants.

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