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McDonalds and Supermarkets Failed to Spot Slavery
Signs that modern slavery victims were being forced to work at a McDonalds branch and a factory supplying bread products to major supermarkets were missed for years, the BBC has found. BBC 2 OCT 2024 ![]() ![]() Ernest Drevenak, 46, and Veronika Bubencikova, 46, began exploiting the men, who were either homeless, unemployed or suffered with addiction issues in the Czech Republic in 2015 On Thursday, 7 December, at the same court Drevenak, of Howard Avenue, Bedford, was jailed for 12-and-a-half years and Bubencikova, of Upper Cambourne, for ten-and-a-half years. ![]() A gang forced 16 victims to work at either the fast-food restaurant or the factory - which supplied Asda, Co-op, M&S, Sainsburys, Tesco and Waitrose. ![]() Trafficking victims Pavel (L) and Roman (R) worked 70 hour weeks but their wages were paid into bank accounts controlled by trafficking gangs Well-established signs of slavery, including paying the wages of four men into one bank account, were missed while the victims from the Czech Republic were exploited over more than four years. McDonalds UK said it had improved systems for spotting ?potential risks?, while the British Retail Consortium said its members would learn from the case. Six members of a family-run human trafficking network from the Czech Republic have been convicted in two criminal trials, which were delayed by the Covid pandemic. Reporting restrictions have prevented coverage of much of the case, but BBC England can now reveal the full scale of the gangs crimes - and the missed opportunities to stop them. Nine victims were forced to work at the McDonalds branch in Caxton, Cambridgeshire. Nine worked at the pitta bread company, with factories in Hoddesdon in Hertfordshire and Tottenham in north London, which made supermarket own-brand products. There were 16 victims in total across both sites, as two worked at both McDonalds and the factory. On several occasions, victims escaped and fled home only to be tracked down and trafficked back to the UK. The exploitation ended in October 2019 after victims contacted police in the Czech Republic, who then tipped off their British counterparts. But warning signs had been missed for at least four years, the BBC has discovered by reviewing legal documents from the gangs trial and interviewing three victims. The undetected red flags include: Victims? wages were paid into bank accounts in other peoples names. At the McDonalds, at least four victims? wages - totalling ?215,000 - were being paid into one account, controlled by the gang Victims were unable to speak English, and job applications were completed by a gang member, who was even able to sit-in on job interviews as a translator Victims worked extreme hours at the McDonald?s - up to 70 to 100 a week. One victim worked a 30-hour shift. The UNs International Labour Organization says excessive overtime is an indicator of forced labour Multiple employees had the same registered address. Nine victims lived in the same terraced home in Enfield in north London while working at the bakery ?It really concerns me that so many red flags were missed, and that maybe the companies didnt do enough to protect vulnerable workers,? said Dame Sara Thornton, the former independent anti-slavery commissioner, who reviewed the BBCs findings. Det Sgt Chris Acourt, who led the Cambridgeshire Police investigation, said there were ?massive opportunities? that were missed to detect the slavery and alert authorities sooner. ?Ultimately, we could have been in a situation to end that exploitation much earlier had we been made aware,? he said. |
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