
News

Share
27th September 2021
02:28pm BST

Squalid living conditions at one of the homes in the Midlands[/caption]
One man was paid just £10 for working up to 13 hours a day for three weeks, the Birmingham Crown Court heard.
Recruitment agency boss, Handy, made almost £1 million supplying slave labour to parcels firm XDP sent to him by their Polish gangmasters.
Handy - who ran recruitment firm ASAP 24/7 Ltd - skimmed off some of his victims’ earnings before paying wages directly into their exploiters’ bank accounts.
He also received back-handers from the traffickers for agreeing to find work placements for victims who were under their control.
Handy, of Stoke-on-Trent, paid off his mortgage and other debts after raking in over half a million pounds and was also able to amass savings of around £400,000.
He was jailed for seven years last Friday after being found guilty of conspiracy to force people into forced labour, conspiracy to traffic people for the purpose of exploitation and money laundering.
Wyrwinski admitted conspiracy to force people into forced labour, conspiracy to traffic people for the purpose of exploitation and money laundering and, Natkowski was found guilty of the same charges following a trial. The pair were both jailed for more than four years.
[caption id="attachment_290861" align="alignnone" width="706"]
Some of the credit and debit cards created in the victims' names[/caption]
Shane Lloyd was also jailed alongside the trio after he began to launder money for Handy in a bid to prevent his illicit gains from being discovered.
Nearly £140,000 was paid into the 47-year-old's bank account, which he then cashed and passed back to Handy.
Lloyd, of Newcastle-under-Lyme, pleaded guilty to two counts of money laundering and was sentenced to 20 months jail, suspended for two years, and ordered to do 200 hours of unpaid work.
The Polish gangmasters behind the operation were jailed for a total of 55 years in July 2019 following the biggest slavery and trafficking investigation ever in the UK.
Handy – the only British member of the conspiracy to be charged – was introduced to the gangmasters in 2015 and later supplied workers to XDP in Sutton Coldfield.
Detective Chief Inspector Nick Dale, of West Midlands Police, said: “Handy was an integral part of the crime gang, finding work for the victims and maximising their exploitation.
“He made far more money than any legitimate employment agent would have been able to – and there was evidence the gang also gave him £20 for each victim he employed.
“Handy made a significant amount of money while the victims – aged from 17 to a man in his 60s – effectively worked for just 50 pence an hour.
"He also went to considerable effort to protect himself, creating worthless contracts and filming himself informing workers of their rights, when in reality he was instrumental in taking away those rights.”
An investigation was launched in 2015 when two victims bravely broke free from their captors and disclosed offences to slavery charity Hope for Justice.
Paul McAnulty, UK & Europe Programme Director at Hope for Justice, said: “Human traffickers profit from the misery and desperation of others, exploiting vulnerabilities in good people.
“This exploitation is often perpetuated by a network of others who choose to look the other way, fail to live up to their responsibilities or, worse, are actively complicit in these crimes.
“Employers, retailers, labour providers, landlords, banks, consumers, all of us owe a duty of care – we must collectively look to shine a light on the abhorrent and reprehensible crime of modern slavery.
“Hope for Justice is proud of our role in working alongside West Midlands Police and partners to bring an end to this particular gang’s activities, and in assisting the survivors to freedom and supporting them towards their preferred futures.”
Neil Fielding, specialist prosecutor from CPS West Midlands, said: “The extent to which this gang callously exploited and deprived their victims of basic human rights is truly appalling.
"The scale of the suffering they inflicted on huge numbers of mainly vulnerable people is difficult to comprehend."Explore more on these topics:

Crime
crime