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Four Travellers found guilty in servitude trial in England

The men lived near Leighton Buzzard at Greenacres site in Bedfordshire
The men lived near Leighton Buzzard at Greenacres site in Bedfordshire

Four members of a Traveller family have been found guilty in a British court of forcing destitute men into servitude.

Tommy Connors Senior, James John Connors, Patrick Connors and Josie Connors were convicted of controlling, exploiting, verbally abusing and beating the men for financial gain at a caravan site near Leighton Buzzard in Bedfordshire.

During the trial, the jury at Luton Crown Court heard that the complainants, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were forced to work in the Connors' block paving business.

Josie Connors, 31, sobbed in the dock as other members of the family wept in the public gallery as the verdicts were read out.

Connors and her husband James John, 34, were convicted of two counts of holding a person in servitude.

They were also convicted of two counts of requiring a person to perform forced or compulsory labour.

James John Connors was also convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

He was cleared of additional counts of holding a person in servitude and requiring a person to perform forced labour.

The jury failed to reach a verdict on a battery charge.

Tommy Connors Senior, 52, faced 11 counts and was convicted of one servitude charge and one false labour charge, as well as one of actual bodily harm.

The jury failed to reach verdicts in seven counts and cleared him of one charge of conspiracy to hold a person in servitude.

Patrick Connors, 20, was convicted of conspiring to hold a person in servitude, as well as false labour and actual bodily harm charges.

He was cleared of two other counts but the jury failed to reach a verdict on seven others.

A total of seven members of the family were on trial.

The jury failed to reach verdicts on counts regarding Tommy Connors Junior, 27, Johnny Connors, 28, and James Connors, 24, after deliberating for over 38 hours.

It cleared them all of several other counts.

The trial, which lasted for 13 weeks, heard that men were given next to no food, forced to wash in cold water and paid little or no money for working up to 19 hours a day, six days a week.

Living in caravans and sheds deemed unfit for human habitation, prosecutors said the men spent Sundays doing further work by way of door-to-door selling.

Many of them were alcoholics, drug addicts or had previously been in trouble with the law, and were picked up off the streets, at soup kitchens or in homeless centres.

One told police he had been warned he would be "murdered" if he ever tried to leave, the trial was told.

Another said that living at the caravan site was like being in a "concentration camp".

Most of the workers sooner or later managed to escape but remained fearful of being "recaptured", the jury heard.

The crimes came to light last year after police raided the Greenacres caravan site on 11 September.

The Connors were charged with offences related to servitude and forced labour under the Coroners and Justice Act 2009.