The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Modern-day slavery’ alleged in South Georgia

Human traffickin­g operation targeted migrant workers.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com Lautaro Grinspan is a Report for America corps member covering metro Atlanta’s immigrant communitie­s.

A yearslong human traffickin­g operation trapped migrant workers in “modern-day slavery” on South Georgia farms, according to a federal indictment unsealed last week.

Alleged victims include more than 100 laborers smuggled from Mexico and Central America into “brutal” and “inhumane” working conditions. Under the threat of gun violence, some were allegedly forced to dig for onions with their bare hands, earning only 20 cents for each bucket harvested. At least two people died on the job. Another was allegedly repeatedly raped.

When not out in the fields, workers were detained in work camps surrounded by electric fencing, or held in cramped living quarters, including dirty trailers with raw sewage leaks. There was little to no access to food or safe drinking water.

Twenty-four members and associates of the alleged criminal enterprise that perpetuate­d the exploitati­on face a slew of felony charges, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Georgia. The multiagenc­y cooperatio­n that yielded the indictment — dubbed “Operation Blooming Onion” — may be one of the largest human traffickin­g and visa fraud investigat­ions in the country, VICE News reported.

Only two of the defendants are described in the indictment as South Georgia business owners; most were labor contractor­s or recruiters. Their alleged criminal mistreatme­nt of workers took many forms.

According to the indictment, laborers were charged unlawful fees for transporta­tion, food and housing. And though they were putatively hired for agricultur­al work, some migrants were illegally used for lawn care, constructi­on and repair tasks. To prevent escape, members of the alleged crime ring unlawfully confiscate­d workers’ passports and documents, authoritie­s said. Conspirato­rs also sold and traded workers amongst themselves, according to the indictment.

“The American dream is a powerful attraction for destitute and desperate people across the globe, and where there is need there is greed from those who will attempt to exploit these willing workers for their own obscene profits,” David Estes, acting U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Georgia, said in a statement.

“Thanks to outstandin­g work from our law enforcemen­t partners, Operation Blooming Onion frees more than 100 individual­s from the shackles of modern-day slavery and will hold accountabl­e those who put them in chains.”

The crimes chronicled in the indictment were alleged to have occurred in the South Georgia counties of Atkinson, Bacon, Coffee, Tattnall, Toombs and Ware, where local farmers paid the defendants to provide contract laborers.

The crime ring that orchestrat­ed the human traffickin­g operation reaped over $200 million from the illegal scheme. Conspirato­rs are facing charges including mail fraud and mail fraud conspiracy, forced labor and forced labor conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy and witness tampering.

‘This has been happening for a long time’

Solimar Mercado-Spencer is a senior staff attorney at the Farmworker Rights Division of the Georgia Legal Services Program, a nonprofit law firm that represents low-income farmworker­s in Georgia with issues related to their wages or working conditions. Among its clients are victims of the criminal enterprise uncovered by Operation Blooming Onion.

Mercado-Spencer said the revelation­s in the federal indictment were no surprise. “This has been happening for a long time in Georgia. … And these people that were arrested are not the only ones doing these things. I hope [law enforcemen­t] keeps busting these operations because that’s not the only one going on in Georgia.”

Because it’s happening in rural areas, nobody sees the victims, Mercado-Spencer said.

“All you see is, you know, your onions at Kroger. You can go buy them. You don’t know where they came from. But this is happening and nobody notices it. And these are essential workers that have been keeping us fed through the pandemic.”

According to the indictment, the exploited foreign workers were admitted to the U.S. through fraudulent use of the H-2A guestworke­r visa program, which has been booming in Georgia as farmers struggle to find domestic sources of labor. According to the federal Office of Foreign Labor Certificat­ion, Georgia had 27,614 H-2A positions certified in fiscal year 2020, up from roughly 5,500 in fiscal year 2010. Georgia is second only to Florida for the most H-2A workers in the nation.

Under the H-2A program, a worker’s legal status in the U.S. is contingent on remaining under the employment of the party that sponsored the worker’s visa. Mercado-Spencer said that structure can put workers at a disadvanta­ge, with limited worker protection­s included in the program being overlooked.

“It’s not like they can just leave and go work for another employer because the visa is tied to that one employer. So that is the problem with the H-2A visa program, is that it gives too much control to the employer over the worker. And once the workers are here, they are kind of stuck.”

Sometimes, Mercado-Spencer said, employers “want to cut corners and make as much profit as possible … and that’s how they do it, by exploiting these workers.”

A shift in immigratio­n enforcemen­t

Among the federal agencies involved in uncovering the South Georgia traffickin­g ring was Homeland Security Investigat­ions (HSI), which is part of U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE). In a statement released Monday, ICE said that Operation Blooming Onion is the first investigat­ion brought to a close under the agency’s new “labor exploitati­on model.”

In October, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas announced a shift in priorities for immigratio­n enforcemen­t. Instead of targeting unauthoriz­ed workers through mass raids on workplaces — as was the norm in past administra­tions — authoritie­s are now taking aim at “exploitati­ve employers” and businesses that violate labor laws.

“We will not tolerate unscrupulo­us employers who exploit unauthoriz­ed workers, conduct illegal activities, or impose unsafe working conditions,” Mayorkas said in a memo.

Mercado-Spencer said she welcomes the change in policy establishe­d by Mayorkas’ directives, with reservatio­ns.

“It’s not something permanent. It is not establishe­d law. With a different president, things could shift again in the opposite direction. What immigrants need is legislatio­n to protect them.”

 ?? AJC 2007 ?? Migrant workers harvest Vidalia onions from a field in South Georgia. A federal indictment stemming from a human traffickin­g investigat­ion alleges more than 100 laborers smuggled from Mexico and Central America to work in the onion fields were kept in “brutal” and “inhumane” working conditions.
AJC 2007 Migrant workers harvest Vidalia onions from a field in South Georgia. A federal indictment stemming from a human traffickin­g investigat­ion alleges more than 100 laborers smuggled from Mexico and Central America to work in the onion fields were kept in “brutal” and “inhumane” working conditions.

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