Defendants compelled the unpaid domestic labor and services
of a young, West African girl in their home for over 16 years until neighbors
helped her escape
Mohamed Toure, 57, and Denise Cros-Toure, 57, of Ft. Worth,
Texas, appeared today in federal court in the Northern District of Texas on a
criminal complaint charging them with forced labor, announced Acting Assistant
Attorney General John Gore of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division,
U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox of the Northern District of Texas, and Special
Agent in Charge Michael V. Perkins of the U.S. Department of State, Diplomatic
Security Service, Houston Field Office.
According to the affidavit filed with the complaint, the
defendants and others arranged for the victim, who did not speak English, to
travel alone from her village in the Republic of Guinea, in West Africa, to
Southlake, Texas, in January 2000 to work for the defendants in their home. The
victim’s Guinean passport indicated that she was five years old at the time.
Throughout the years, until the victim escaped in August 2016, the defendants
forced the victim to labor in their home for long hours without pay. The
defendants required her to cook, clean, do the laundry, perform yardwork, and
paint, as well as care for their five children.
Although the victim was close in age to the children, the defendants
denied her access to schooling and the other opportunities afforded to their
children.
As part of their coercive scheme to compel the victim’s
labor, the defendants took her documents and caused her to remain unlawfully in
the United States after her visa expired. They further isolated her from her
family and others and emotionally and physically abused her. Eventually, in
August 2016, the victim escaped the defendants with the help of several former
neighbors.
A complaint is a written statement of the essential facts of
the offense charged and must be made under oath before a magistrate judge. A
defendant is entitled to the presumption of innocence until proven guilty. The
government has 30 days to present the matter to a grand jury for indictment.
The maximum penalty for the offense of forced labor is 20 years in federal
prison.
The case is being investigated by Diplomatic Security Service,
Houston Field Office. It is being
prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Rebekah Bailey and William Nolan of the Civil
Rights Division’s Criminal Section and Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit with
assistance from Assistant U.S. Attorneys Alex Lewis and Chris Wolfe for the
Northern District of Texas.
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