A jury on Monday convicted a millionaire couple of enslaving two
Indonesian women they brought to their mansion to work as housekeepers.
Mahender Murlidhar Sabhnani, 51, and his wife, Varsha Mahender
Sabhnani, 45, were each convicted of all charges in a 12-count federal
indictment that included forced labor, conspiracy, involuntary
servitude, and harboring aliens.
Prosecutors said the women were subjected to repeated psychological
and physical abuse and were forced to work 18 hours or more a day.
The Sabhnanis, who have four children and operate a worldwide
perfume business out of their Muttontown home on Long Island's Gold
Coast, could face up to 40 years in prison, although attorneys
predicted the punishment would be considerably less. He is from India,
and she is from Indonesia, but both are naturalized U.S. citizens.
As the verdict was read, one of the couple's daughters, Dakshina,
collapsed in the front row, prompting the judge to clear the courtroom
while medical personnel attended to her. Soon after, her mother went to
comfort her, and she also fainted.
Both women were taken to a hospital, leading the judge to postpone
the remaining court proceedings until Tuesday, including the scheduling
of a sentencing date. The mother and daughter were released from the
emergency room later Monday.
Defense attorney Jeffrey Hoffman said he would appeal. "Apparently,
the jury was taken by the histrionics" of the Indonesian women, he said.
Fellow defense lawyer Stephen Scaring said another of the Sabhnanis'
children, daughter Tina, told him: "We never did anything to anybody.
How could this happen to us in America?"
Prosecutors refused to comment until court proceedings were completed.
A representative of the Indonesian consulate in New York declined to comment.
Over six weeks of testimony, prosecutors called it a case of
"modern-day slavery." Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Lesko said in
closing arguments the poorly educated women worked as housekeepers for
$100 or $150 a month — all of which was sent to their relatives back
home.
Lesko said the women, known only as Samirah and Enung, were
subjected to "punishment that escalated into a cruel form of torture"
that ended when one of the women fled on Mother's Day.
Allegations of abuse included beatings with brooms and umbrellas,
slashings with knives, being made to repeatedly climb stairs and take
freezing cold showers as punishment for misdeeds that included sleeping
late or stealing food from trash bins because they were poorly fed.
Samirah, the woman who fled the house in May, said she was forced to
eat dozens of chili peppers and then was forced to eat her own vomit
when she could not digest the peppers, prosecutors said.
"This did not happen in the 1800s," Lesko said. "This happened in the 21st century."
Enung testified that Samirah's nude body once was covered in plastic
wrapping tape on orders from Varsha Sabhnani, who then instructed Enung
to rip it off. "When I pulled it off, she was screaming," the
housekeeper said through an interpreter before breaking down in tears
on the witness stand.
The trial also provided a glimpse into the problem of domestic
workers being exploited in slave-like conditions. Experts hoped that
the verdict would have a lasting legacy.
"This certainly does send a message that people can't do this," said
Nancy Foner, a sociology professor at Hunter College in New York City.
"This is a lesson; I hope this verdict will make people frightened."
The Sabhnanis' defense attorneys contended the two women
concocted the story of abuse as a way of escaping the house for more
lucrative opportunities. They argued the housekeepers practiced
witchcraft and may have abused themselves as part of an Indonesian
self-mutilation ritual. They also said the couple went on frequent
vacations that would have given the two women ample opportunity to
flee.
The Sabhnanis spent nearly three months in jail until a judge
approved a bail package that required them to post $4.5 million and pay
an estimated $10,000 a day for security monitoring while they were kept
under house arrest. The bail package remained in effect Monday.
The women have been cared for by Catholic Charities during the
investigation, and it was unclear where they would go now that the
trial is over.(yahoo)
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