• Cannabis farms are a modern slavery 'bli

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Sep 15 21:30:44 2020
    Cannabis farms are a modern slavery 'blind spot' for UK police, study
    suggests

    Date:
    September 15, 2020
    Source:
    University of Cambridge
    Summary:
    Migrants arrested for tending plants in the flats, houses and attics
    where cannabis is grown in bulk are often victims of trafficking
    and 'debt bondage' - yet many are not recognized as such by police,
    according to a new study.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Migrants arrested for tending plants in the flats, houses and attics
    where cannabis is grown in bulk are often victims of trafficking and
    "debt bondage" - - yet many are not recognised as such by police,
    according to a new study.


    ========================================================================== Research from Cambridge criminologists suggests that those charged with
    drug cultivation have often been forced into illegal work as a condition
    of debt to criminal gangs for smuggling them into the UK.

    The researchers, including a Detective Inspector who completed a Masters
    at Cambridge's Institute of Criminology, argue that police take too
    narrow a view of modern slavery when it comes to "growers" arrested
    during cannabis farm raids.

    While growers -- often Vietnamese nationals -- are not always imprisoned
    within farms, many work under threat of extreme violence towards
    themselves or family back home, with little in the way of language or
    contacts in the UK.

    The researchers say that arresting officers often lack detailed training
    on modern slavery, and make only "perfunctory" enquiries: a brief
    question that places the onus on a victim who doesn't understand their
    own situation.

    As such, migrants end up serving years in UK prisons despite being
    forced to commit the cultivation crimes by gangs who seize passports
    and threaten -- and administer -- violence.



    ==========================================================================
    "The abuses of freedom in cannabis farm cases do not tally with
    traditional perceptions of slavery. Victims may be held against their
    will, forced to work and unable to leave, despite an unlocked door,"
    said Prof Heather Strang, the study's senior author.

    "Big questions remain about how the criminal justice system should
    ethically manage modern slavery victims who are also illegal immigrants involved in illegal activity," she said.

    The new study, published in the Cambridge Journal of Evidence-Based
    Policing, was co-authored by DI Adam Ramiz of Surrey Police as part of
    his research at Cambridge, where he worked with Strang and Prof Paul
    Rock from LSE.

    Cannabis farms are unassuming abodes in towns and city suburbs that
    house hundreds of plants in blacked-out rooms, grown with equipment such specialist lighting. A live-in "grower" will work for criminal gangs to
    feed and protect the Class B drug crop.

    The latest study is small in scale -- gaining access to growers willing
    to talk is difficult -- but criminologists say that it's an important
    addition to this under-researched area.



    ==========================================================================
    The team looked at criminal histories of 19 Vietnamese nationals
    arrested in connection with cannabis farming in Surrey and Sussex between 2014-2017, and conducted in-depth interviews with three further growers
    -- two Vietnamese and an Albanian -- as well as the arresting officers
    in those cases.

    The growers all described being in hock to human smugglers, working
    in farms to pay debts, and some spoke of death threats and physical intimidation. Two spoke of dangerous journeys to the UK via lorries,
    similar to the 39 Vietnamese nationals found dead in Essex last year.

    One witnessed murder by smugglers while trekking for days through forests.

    Another was locked inside the house once in the UK. The victims didn't
    consider themselves such, as they had wanted to come here, yet had been
    forced into illegal labour on arrival: smuggling that becomes trafficking.

    Interviews with officers revealed police questioning on slavery to be
    limited, cursory and "binary" -- whether or not the grower was physically locked in - - and conducted with a presumption of guilt on the that the
    grower is an offender.

    "We found that some officers only had an hour of modern slavery training,
    and felt that the onus is on trafficking victims to volunteer that
    information, rather than police to investigate further," said Ramiz,
    who led the study.

    "The brief question or two on slavery will often come after a grower has
    been given the standard legal advice to say nothing and later to plead
    guilty," he said.

    Police frustrations focus on growers, with one officer talking of "hitting
    a brick wall" if they won't open up, but researchers say that the legal
    advice offered to trafficked cannabis growers is routine and uncritical:
    "go quietly." They argue that police should "re-frame" their response to cannabis farms so that the possibility of modern slavery is "more fully considered," and suggest detailed training for front-line officers along
    with greater willingness to refer cases to specialist investigators.

    Dame Sara Thornton, the UK's Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner,
    described the study as a "welcome contribution to building an
    evidence-based approach to preventing modern slavery." "The Modern
    Slavery Act includes a statutory defence for those compelled to commit
    an offence as a direct result of their being a victim of modern slavery.

    It is essential that the police investigate all lines of enquiry when
    they come across these complicated cases," said Thornton.

    Added Ramiz: "While much more research is needed, these accounts of debt bondage and fierce intimidation suggests the mass cultivation of cannabis
    is rife with modern slavery, and the grey area between offender and victim
    in these cases can become a blind spot for UK police." Case study: A 34-year-old Vietnamese man now in an English prison for growing cannabis
    told researchers he had been a taxi driver, before fleeing his home after taking part in protests against a Chinese oil rig in the disputed South
    China sea.

    Accused of betraying his country by police, he entered into contract
    with a smuggler after fearing for his life when a friend disappeared
    following arrest.

    Unable to pay in full, he ended up in debt bondage to a criminal gang.

    Believing he was going to the UK to work in kitchens, the grower found
    himself in a series of lorries and flights across China and Russia,
    and taken into Europe via the forests of Poland.

    "You have to walk for maybe two, three days... I saw one person had been
    beaten up... when I turned around he was unconscious... he walked too
    slow," the grower told researchers. He believed the person he described
    had died.

    The grower arrived in the UK in a lorry container. He was eventually
    taken to a house already full of cannabis plants and shown how to tend
    them, and given an allowance for food and phone calls home.

    "I do not dare leave the house without telling them, because I fear for
    my life... They told me if I tried to escape they would harm my family,"
    said the grower.

    He remembered police asking some questions about being forced to work, and
    he had told them. His legal advisor asked no such questions. He did not consider himself a trafficking victim, as he had wanted to come to the UK.

    The police interviewer of the grower was a 33-year-old probationary
    police officer. He had been given an interview plan, and told researchers
    he viewed the matter in simple terms: ." ..you're interviewing him as
    a suspect to get a confession, or to get the points across to get the conviction or charge...." No trafficking questions were in the officer's
    plan, but he asked some anyway based on the grower's response. The officer acknowledged his ignorance of modern slavery legislation to researchers.

    A further interview was done by the officer's supervisor, who was in
    charge of the investigation. He told researchers the training given
    to police on slavery -- one hour-long session -- was insufficient,
    and until guidance improved they had to rely on instinct.

    The officer-in-charge entered a submission to the National Referral
    Mechanism - - the framework set up in 2009 to ensure victims of
    trafficking receive help.

    The NRM returned a decision that the grower had "consented" to the
    illegal work, so was not a victim, and he was sentence to prison.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Cambridge. The original
    story is licensed under a Creative_Commons_License. Note: Content may
    be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Adam Ramiz, Paul Rock, Heather Strang. Detecting Modern Slavery on
    Cannabis Farms: The Challenges of Evidence. Cambridge Journal of
    Evidence-Based Policing, 2020; DOI: 10.1007/s41887-020-00052-1 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/09/200915090106.htm

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