TWO Carlisle car wash bosses have been jailed for the shocking mistreatment and exploitation of workers who travelled to the UK from their native Romania in search of better lives.
Defrim Paci and Sitar Ali were locked up tfor modern slavery crimes by a judge who heard of the harrowing impact their offending had on four men who bravely gave evidence to police and helped bring the pair to justice after a painstaking multi-agency investigation.
Carlisle Crown Court was told 42-year-old father-of-four Paci led a criminal plot to exploit employees who were left exhausted having been forced to work long hours in poor conditions for less than the minimum wage at Shiny on Warwick Road. They were also housed in filthy city accommodation.
Some were left with only £20 left in weekly pay packet despite working 11 hours a day, six days a week as their freedom, according to the prosecution, was “effectively over-ridden”. Wage slips overstated pay and understated the working hours of workers left with sore feet, cracked hands and exhausted. Documents found in Paci’s possession and phone evidence revealed Paci’s ongoing interest in the car wash despite his denials.
Meanwhile Ali managed the Shiny site, denying the men proper breaks and days off. Some spoke of the skin on their being “burned” by “toxic” cleaning chemicals, and of receiving no protective clothing. One worker recalled buying cheap gloves from Tesco to protect his hands.
Despite their firm denials, Paci, of Windmill Close, Sutton-in-Ashfield, and Ali, of Adelaide Street, Carlisle, were each convicted of two modern slavery crimes committed over a 15-month period during 2016 and 2017. Ali was also found guilty of possessing criminal property after £16,000 was found in his car after police began making arrests during their criminal investigation.
The four Romanian victims, who can’t be identified for legal reasons, were aged 49, 34, 32 and 21.
Judge Nicholas Barker noted Ali was a man of previous good character and had since taken steps to run the business properly.
Judge Barker jailed Paci for 45 months and Ali for 39 months, stressing it was necessary for “deterrent ambits” within the sentence to show such offending “will not be tolerated by the courts”.
“I am satisfied upon the evidence you worked in partnership with Defrim Paci. Although you each performed different roles, you did so at equal levels within her organisation,” Judge Barker told Ali. “You realised that by reducing the cost of labour it would significantly increase your profits.”
He told both men: “It was the circumstances in which workers found themselves, designed by you, which rendered them vulnerable and helpless.
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