tv Frontline PBS April 24, 2018 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
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>> narrator: tonight on "frontline". >> this is a crime that hides in plain ght. >> it's probably one of these things that you just don't want to know. >> narrator: immigrant teenagers forced t work. >> they were kids like me, 14 and a half, 15. >> narrator: at farms that feed our families >> they're vulnerable and easy to victimize. and they're alone. >> narrator: "frontline" takes you on a journey fm central america to the american heartland. >> we've got these kids. for us to just throw them to the wolves, it's wrong. >> narrator: reporter ffodil altan, from the uc berkeley imstigative reporting program, goes inside a cral conspiracy. >> altan: is pablo someone you would ever conder dangerous? >> i think he's like a rat in a corner if you trapped in it. >> narrator: "trafficked in america"
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>> "frontline" is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. additional support is provided by the abrams foundati committed to excellence in journalism. the parkoundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues. the john and helen gr family trust. supporting trustworthy journalism that informs and inspires. and by the frontline journalism fund, with major support from jon and jo ann hagr. major support for frontline and for "trafficked in america" is b providthe john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building more just, verdant and peaceful world. more information is available at maound.org. and additional support for this atogram from the international documentary asson and the ford foundation.
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>> daffodil altan: there are some things we don see. not because they're not there, but because we don't always understand what is right in front of us. >> i never heard of hu trafficking before. when i heard it, i thought,, likesex slaves, immediately. i thitght... i never heard of used in this type of way, where it was threats, with being held against their will, you know, stuff like that. i've never heard it like this. no, this was the first time i've ever heard of it. f it this is tst time i've heard of my dad ever doing stuff like that.
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i remember when i was working ere. i was 14 and a half, 14 and a half, 15 at the time. so they were kids like me, working like that. >> altan: they were working here, at trillium farms, in t14, where workers described conditions similthis undercover footage taken at other companies' plants around the country. >> (speaking spanish):
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>> usually we'd show up to the site at about 6:00, and we't wouldnet done until about 5:00. and we didn't get breaks. they could never sit down and, like, take a half an hour break. it was maybe five minutes, tops and they go ey drink some water and their energy drinks and then go back to work. >> (speaking spanish):
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>> i bought my trailer. there was holes in the walls. i guess they were using the closets as spaces to sleep. over here in the left... over here in the right-hand corner, there's been mattresses. there was kids' shoes underneath there. there was somelothing. it looked like someone was recently sleeping there. i mean, i don't know h many people were living here, but to me, it looked like they were stuffing a lot of people in just a three-bedroom trailer. ey had no running water.no
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there was oilet. no toilet. when i came in, there was a five-gallon bucket. ey had feces and stuff already, that was already in there. so it was stinking up the whole trailer. i mean, it was really nasty. it was like... maybe they were being kidnapped or being held hostage or, you know, maybe just like it was in the back old days where they useto take them and use them for slaves or something like that. that's pretty much what ite looked lik me. it didn't look like it was a really good living environment-- it didt at all. >> in our own country, we have, today, a lot of victims of human trficking that are invisib to our own eyes. and let's not forget that some t m are kids. and the end of the game is to subject that person to peonage, to slavery.
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they're an easy prey. they're vulnerablend easy to victimize and they're alone. >> altan: in our years of t reporting exploitation of immigrant workers, we'd come across cases of labor trafficking. but nothing quite like thione. teenagers were being forced to live and work like this in theic middle of amer and for months, no one did anything about it. our investigation into how and why this happened, and who was responsible, would take us inside a criminal network stretching from ohio to central america.
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an: but then one day, in 2014, a neighbor in the village de them an offer. >> (speaking spanish) >> altan: aroldo castillo lived just down the road. his mother told us he was known for successfully smuggling adults to the u.s. and finding them jobs. now he was extending his offer to local teenagers.
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we found some of the teens, but they wouldn't speak to us on camera out of fear for themselves and their families. some wou end up telling their stories in court. >> (speakingpanish): >> altan: the teens say castillo had a network of smugglers who moved them through mexico bbus, on foot, and on the infamous tra known as la bestia-- "the beast." >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: once they made it to the u., most were detained by the border patrol. at the time, the boys were among
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tens of thousands of unaccompanied minors from central america who we fleeing violence and poverty, and coming to the u.s. in record numbers. they were turned over to the department of health and human services, whose job it was to place them with a relative or an adult sponsor. but hhs was overwhelmed, and began to relax their standards for vetting. >> first, the federal government decided to stop fingerprinting most of these sponsors who were coming in to claim children. and then, over a period of months later, they decided to stop requiring that sponsors submit original or certified copies of their birt certificates. and then finallythey stopped requiring fbi criminal background checks for many sponsors. >> altan: castillo took advantage of the chaos. he had accomplicesn ohio waiting to pose as sponsors for the boys. so n the summer of 2014, hhs
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began releasing the teens, and they were brought to ohio, to trailers owned by castillo. >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: it was a farm with a troubled past, going back decades and across the country. before trillium, it was owned and operated by one of the nation's biggest and mostno rious egg producers-- jack decoster. >> just down the road, the chorus comes from thousands of hens packed into cramped littlee
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s. at jack decoster's e farm, human beings don't live much better. i remember pitching it tmy news director, saying, "i want to do a story on decoster egg farm." nobody had ever been in there. we went over there with theca meras and it was worse than i ever could have imagined. >> hello. >> the company owned the trailers and the property that the trailers were on. but decoster did no maintenance on them. the people were crammed into these little trailers,e, eight guys in one trailer on broken bunk beds. there was raw sewage on the ground. the plumbing and the pipes were broken. it was nasty. it was awful. >> we will not tolerate these abuses of working people in the united states. the more i learned about jack decoster, the angrier got. he was very much the most
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egregious serial violator that i d ever seen. and the conditions on his farms for migrant workers were among the worst sweatshops i had, i haever come across. >> altan: in 1997, theme depart of labor fined decoster $2 million for violatio at his facilities in maine. but it didn't stop there. for years, authorities continued to fine decoster for abuses again his workers. >> they couldn't escape, really. they couldn't leave. once they were there, ey were stuck. today we call it trafficking. but back then it was just smuggling people in and treating them like slaves. >> as far as mistreatinghese workers here, i don't... i don't wa to mistreat these workers, and i don't feel i've mistreated these workers. >> but how did decoster get such a bad name? >> i wish i... i'd like to know. (laughs)
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>> i think jack felt the exnditions were better than what they're used to ino. you know, he was out for bestth worker ae lowest price, and for him th was a hispanic worker. >> john glessner worked with decoster for more than 20 years. he ran some of his operations, and was known as hisight-hand man. decoster declined to be interviewed, and glessner has never before spoken pu about his experiences. >> i remember that john glessner s the business manager. he would never talk to us. we tried. he was one of those very elusive figures at the decoster facility. his loyalty was to jack decosteo and to thet of that operation.
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>> altan: though they have since fallen out and have sued each other, glessner played critical role in building decoster's egg empire, which stretched from maine intoe ohio and her iowa. this was your former territory, right? you were running... you builtyo all thiswere running all this. >> yeah, with jack. i mean, you know, obviously was jack's investment, and i oversaw, you know, a lot of the construction and that of it., so, i mebasically lived, lived and died this for eight years, you know, durinthe construction process when these were being built. (police siren blps) >> hello. iv hi. >> can i see your 's license, please? >> sure. what's the problem? >> i think a deputy back here wants to talk to you. so can you have a seat with me, please? >> sure. >> altanwe had attracted the attention of the farm, who'd
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called the local sheriff on us. >> had a report of some people hanging around at 250th and 69. you were seen leaving the scene of the area. >> yeah. >>s that true? >> yes. >> okay. can you tell me what was going on >> no, i used to run these facilities for decoster. >> oh, you did? >> yes.y. >> o >> years ago. okay. what's the guy in the back with the video camera? >> oh, they're just some people thatere doing a story on decoster now. >> yeah? who are they with? o are they working for? >> altan: why are you talking why am i talking with you? our industry, the egg industry, is so tight-lipped. you know, i don't know of anybody that's going to come before yound start talking about these issues openly without bringing some
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repercussions on them or their operations and that. so it's easier for me to do it because i'm no longer in the industry. it's basically to try to help the industry as a whole, so they can improve later on and not run into the same issues tve been involved in in the past that have occurred. >> altan: glessner said one t of biggest issues was trying to find people tdo the work. >> you know, it's pretty physical. >> altan: eight-hour, ten-hour days? >> no, it could be amuch as 16, depending on what was going on. >> altan: will americans do this work? >> boy, i don't think so. i don't even think... i don't even know if wage came into it, whether you could keep the >> altan: to get the work donethey turned to immigrant even though he suspected some of
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them had false documents >> it's probably one of these things that you just don't want to know. do you suspect that there... that this is going on? probably. but do you really want to try digging into it?00 >> altan: in authorities raided decoster's iowa plantand detained approximately 90 undocumented workers. t plant was raided several times throughout several years,e and no one linto human trafficking. no one looked into exploitation of workers. >> altan: sonia parras represented some of the workers. they told her they had been recruited from mexico, gone into debt, and were being threatened when they complained. >> it wasn't until we started unraveling all these multi-layers of victimization that we realized that some of
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these victims werelso victims of human trafficking. >> altan: decoster and glessner were never charged with labor trafficking, buthey were both convicted of charges related to the hiring of illegal workers. you pled guilty to harboring aliens. what does that mean? y know what the problem was? you had people that were working under one name, ok? you could say they're undocumented, using forged car or whatever, and then the next minute they got legal somehow. but i guess basically, they felt i should've known that they were illegal and allowed them to work still. so i guess you call that harboring. >> altan: soid... you pled guilty. did you know? >> mmm... >> the recall has grown to more than 500 million eggs... >> altan: then in 2010, a salmonella outbreak sickened an estimated 56,000 people,
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reputation.the company's >> at that point, of course, i'm telling jack decoster that, you know, e operations need to be sold. where you are now , you feel cleaned up and adequate? >> sir, please, let me talk. g >> t's got so much baggage, it got to the point you couldn't even market the eggs. w t i go dealith jack and say, "you know, you've sell the facilities. you've got to lease them. you've got to do something. you've got to get out."lt >> aan: decoster did get out. he stopped running his plants, and instead leased them to other companies. the ohio operation was leased to trillium farms, which kept mostd ofoster's employees. by 2014, it was one of the five laest in the country, prucing ten million eggs a day. this is where the trafficks forced the guatemalan teens to work off their debts.
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speaking spanish): >> one day i received a phone call. there was a gentleman that had nephew that had been smuggled into the country from guatemala, and was being kept to work against his will in ohio. and within 24 hours, i had a conference call from the head of the fbi, hsi, and th attorney's office in that region. >> altan: two months later,
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federal and local law enforcement moved in. >> a human trafficking bust at an egg farm in... >> aan: in the early morning hours, they raided the trailer park where the teens had been living. >> federal prosecutors call it modern-day slavery. >> their paychecks kept by their traffickers. >> altan: they detained approximately 45 people. >> the human trafficking operation was run by a third- party contractor hired by trillium farms. >> altan: at least ten, they determined, were victims of trafficking, including eight nors. >> the u.s. attorney's office says its investigation is ongoing. >> i mean, how could thatss ly happen? the more we learned ab, the more it became apparent that there was a connection back to our immigration policies and ho the departmentalth and human services deals with kids who come here unaccompanied. what makes the marion case even more alarming is that a u.s. algovernment agency was ac responsible for delivering some of the victims into the hands o users. how could the federal government
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take these kids in and try to protect them, and then as they send them out to families, youa know, pendinurt date, give them right back to the people who had brought them up here? here's one of those homes-- this is a trailer. >> altan: senator rob portman was chairman of the committee that investigated the failures at the department of health and human services-- the agency that released the boys to the traffickers in ohio. >> the more we learned, the more troubling it was from a federal perspective, because no onent seemed to o take responsibility for it. >> what everybody's doing isth doin-- out the door, we're done. >> we've got these kids. ey're here. they're living on our soil. and r us to just, you know, assume someone else is going to take care of them and throw them to the wolves, which is what hhs was doing, is flat-out wrong. i don't care what you think about immigration policy-- it's wrong. >> altan: the hhs division responsible for acing the teens declined to be itterviewed. they told the coe they had
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strengthened their procedures to protect children.t bue committee had found over a dozen her cases of trafficking related to the surge, and said it was impossible to kw just how many more victims there are. >> it was not just the ohio egg farm case-- there were other cases in which multiplchildren were placed with sponsors in homes whe they were subject to human trafficking, sexual abuse, and other severe forms of abuse and exploitation. more than 180,000 unaccompanied minors have been placed in communities across the country. but because there's so little follow-up with them once they're out of the government's care, we have no idea what's happened to them. >> altan: during our investigation, we found that some of the unaccompanied minors ended upin small townss the midwest, like here in clarion, iowa.
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>> so we were getting, like, kidslike, every week. they were coming from all over the place. doand most of them, just r people bring them. and they can say, "they're my cousin, they're my uncle, they're my aunt." and thenhey say, "well, he's not my real uncle, they just tell me to say that." theyome to school, but they don't... they can't function, because they're so tired. and you ask them, "why are you so tired?" and they don't respond. and then you keep pushing d pushing. "okay, i was working, i'm working. t i hawork. you don't understand-- i have to work." they always say they're in dt. that that's why they are working. >> altan: berta alberts works with immigrant teens, and says many of her students have told her the only way they pay off their debt is by worng long shifts at nearby food processing plants. we spoke with some tn workers,
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>> altan: to date, we found no one in law enforcent that has investigated or intervened here. ld people we spoke to said they'd heard of atst 30 teens workinin plants in this area of iowa-- paying off debts, working long hours, unable to leave their jobs. just like the teens in ohio. in the months after the raid at e trailer park, six people were arrested, among them aroldo stillo, the guatemalan trafficker. heled guilty to forced lab and was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison. >> these people charged in this case, they work as a team. so there's leaders. 's then thehat you would call sort of task masters, the people
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who actually oversee the slave labor. and then there's dindividuals who recruit transport them, and they all have different roles. some are more culpable than others. >> altan: after the initial arrests, prosecutors continued looking for biggers. targ >> the fbi and the department os homelaurity, they're continuing to investigate the case. and we will follow the facts wherever they go. wa >> altan: we also ed to know who else was responsible. our reporting led us to focus on a key player in the ohio operation-- a man who worked with decoster, and then trillium. his me is pablo duran, sr., and his company had a multi-million-dollar contract with trillium to supply workers. >> i can see how se of these employers are put in the standpoint, you got no labor ord whateverablo duran shows
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up and says, "hey, i can fix your problem." and it's probably a situation where they're sitting there saying, you know... i'm t going to look too deep into anything. i wasn't out questioning people and sayi, "hey, are you documented, you know, non-doc..." you know mean, why go to that standpoint and destroy your own business? >> altan: pablo duran, sr., left town after the raid,ly leaving his faehind. his son, pablo, jr., pled guilty to running a crew that included some of the teens, but he t wouldn't speus. we found his younger son, marco. told us about the day his brother was arrested. >> i didn't hear about anything unl the week of fourth of july. i called my brother.
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md i'm, like, "what's up,?" he's, like, ell, i'm getting processed." i'm, like, "what the hell do you an you're getting processed?" he's, like, "i'm getting put in jail." y i'm, like, "what d do?" he's, like, "dude, i don't even know." i'm, like, "what do you mean?"y he's, like, "tid they had a warrant." and he's, like, "i'm turning myself in." i was just... i was so... i was , ocked. and then i came hod my mom... tears. showed me the article saying "human trafficking." and i was thinking... i'm, like, "when did thisappen?" like, i thought for a second my brother was living,if like, a double that on one side he was the good family man that we thought, and then the next, he was doing vera things, you know? and then i come to find out he n,s doing his job, you know? >> altan: pablo dur., ended up spending 14 months in ison, but marco says his brother was just following orders from their father. >> my dad was the main boss, so my dad pretty much owned all crews, but that was the crewd that my ve to my brother. >> altan: marco says he alsoed
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woith his father at trillium when he was in high school, and when the guatemalan teens were there. >> i remember when i was workin there,d stopped by, because he was one of the, you know, lead guys.y and he stoppedd he pulled me aside, he's, like, "you need to look around." he's, like, "these young people," you know, "younger than you," he's, li, "these people come from poor countries and they're working harder than most people that wereorn here with the citizenship, and, you know, all those rights." my dad told me their ages andey how anged from 13 to about 18. so they were high schoolers in the u.s., you know, schoolers, barely middle schoolers, kids like me, working like that. you n't see my dad going to jail or going to prison and being taken away from his family. my dad was smart about everything, and s able to make it that he wouldn't get taken htay. he's in mexico row. >> altan: in fact, we found out there was a warrr his arrest, and an order to extradite him. and we found court records that
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alleged he had been in regulart contth aroldo castillo about smuggling in minors to work at trillium. we kept looking for duran and people that knew him. one of his crew leaders agreed to talk from prison. >> (speaking spanish): >> alt: bartolo dominguez says he knew some of the teens, but didn't know they were being abused or having their wages take >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: dominguez says thatco duran ran hiany with his brother ezequiel. >> (speaking spanish):
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>> altan: ezequiel duran was never charged in the case. we went looking for him, and were surprised to find him living with his family in a iet ohio suburb. (doorbell rings) hi, i was wondering if ezequiel's here. >> no, he's not.: >> alt's not, okay. i gave them my number and left. it felt li a dead end. but a few minutes later, as i was driving away, the phone rang. it was ezequiel. >> altan (speaking spanish): >> (speaking spanish):
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>> altan (speaking spanish): >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: a month after this call, ezequiel duranas found dead in his home with a gunshot wound to the head. his death was ruled a suicide. after months of looking for him while he was wanted by the fbi, we tracked down blo duran. he agreed to meet us in mexico city.
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is pablo someone you would ever consider dangerous? >> i wouldn't. i think he's like a rat in a corner, though. i think he'd do anything to get out of that corner if you trappehim in it. he's so stubborn, he believes exactly what he's doing. and he's going to come across like he didn't do anything wrong, iyou could get it out of him and stuff. and, "it wasn't me." i mean, he'll have the biggest story like you can't... and he'l.. if you didn't know better, you'd almost believe him. >> (speaking spanish):
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>> altan: one of your sub-contractors was your own son, pablo duran, jr. and your son, he did have minors on his crew, right? that's what he pled guilty to. >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: you never talked to him about it, or... >> no. >> altan: the federal judge in the case said that your son pablo, jr., took the fall for w you, ft you knew. >> (speaking spanish):
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>> altan: well, i think it was because there were so many minors working on different crews that... how could you miss them? >> (speakingpanish): >> aan: as a sup... as somebody in charge... >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: so you never had any interaction with, knowledge of, any minors that were there? >> no.re >> altan: soll these people, are they lying? >> (speaking spanish
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>> altan: d you know a man named aroldo castillo? >> no. >> altan: and so you never had any conversations? you never met aroldo? >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: i'm going to read you what the government says about your relationship.ka >> >> altan: they say, "castillo serrano talked regularly on theb phone with duran, sr. those discussions included the fact that minors were having an easier time getting across the border and that they should therefore focus their ties on teenagers." shat do you say to that? >> (speaking spa >> altan: so y say you did not have any relationship? you don't even know who he is? >> no. >> altan: and you never spoke on the phone with him?
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>> (speaking spanish): >> altanso you do have a memory, then, of speaking with him at one point on the phone? >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: did trillium know that there were minors working there, do you think? >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: how does it work? do the trillium managers check the plants, or would they be able to see? tell me a little bit. >> (speaking spanish):
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>> altan: so the relationship is a trillium supervisor and a subcontractor would be seeing each other every day? w yes. >> altan: and thld be seeing the workers? >> yep. >> altan: so in your opinion, would trillium have been able to see that there were minors working there? >> (speaking spanish): >> altan: trillium ended its contract with pablo duran shortly after the raid, and has not been charged with any wrongdoing. r more than a year, they refused our interview requests. but finally, the company's vice president agreed. when you heardhe words "human trafficking," had you encountered is in the business before? >> no, i had not. i was stunned. my first reaction was, i
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couldn't believe that anything like this would be happening on our farms or in our environment. looking back on it, i was naive. i did not understand what i o understand todhow prevalent it is around the country. and i am responsible for the day-to-day operations, and iton happened hery watch. and so i do have a duty to do everything we can do to ensure this doesn't happen again and to spread the word so that others are aware of this. this occurred, it did occur under my watch, but we did not know this and we did not see it. >> altan: how do you not see teenagers, the ages of your own kids, how do you how do you miss that?n' >> we supervise those contract service providers.er so our man our supervisors, they're checking that the work is complete, they'rchecking that the work gets done adequately, but they're not actually telling this person to go here or that person to go do this. so we're not directly supervising the people doing
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that work. >> altan: but there was someone inside who might have known what was going on: ezequiel duran. although he was fired in 2014, for several years he was actually a trillium manager atth the same tim the company he ran with his brother was bringing in workers. were you aware that he was both an employee and a contractor? >> i don't believe i knew that, no. >> altan: because if he was, then as a manager who was also running the contracting companies, he's somebody whoha woul known potentially that there were kids being brought in.on >> i know. my... my understanding... i believe that i don't remember the date that ezequiel left employment with the company. as we came to understand that people weren't comporting with w our values at our expectations were, we made changes-- we asked them to leavh company and we made
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improvements, changes. >> altan: i mean that, would be something... to have an employee who's also the contractor seems like a joint emoyment issue. so, you know, that's one thing that's been confounding to us, is that ezequiel was b manager who was overseeing plants, and also was running this contracting company, haba lyn by... with his brother. >> we were obvioied to. we were obviously misled at numerous points in this process. and as i said, we've done a lot of learning as this process has commenced. was everything correct? no. are we learning? are we making changes?e making improvements? yes. did we act swiftly when law thenforcement alerted us t problem? yes. have we complied and cooperated with the investigation? yes. >> altan: should trillium have been held responsible in any way for whatappened on their property? >> i'm confident that if the federal offials would have believed that and would
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have found wrongdoing on our part, weould have been held accountable. in that way-- criminally. >> altan: trillium has partnered with a leading anti-trafficking organization to implement reforms and train their employees. the mpany would not allow us to film inside their plants, but they sent us this video toin show what wothere is like. toey say they're trying to reduce using contr to find workers, but haven't eliminated them completely. and ey're currently hiring. back in guatemala, the teens families would eventually get their deeds back, as a result of aroldo castillo's sentencing. his mother had been holding on to them.
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>> alberto (speaking spanish): >> altan: alberto still tends the fields he worked with his oldest son, but he hasn't seen him in almost fo years. alberto's son and some of the other teens from guatemala were given special visas for some are in school, others are working. but even tay, the ones we've found are still too afra to go on camera.
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two months after we'd interviewed him mexico, pablo duran attempted to return to the u.s. he was arrested at the border and is now in ohio facing labor trafficking charges. the u.s. attorney says the investigation is ongoing. >> until our laws and our systems and our society held responsible everyone that profits from human trafficking, we're not ending human trafficking. and we don't know how many other ses are out there, and the crime continue
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>> once you went inland ited lookike a bomb hit puerto co. >> narrator: the hurricane ravaged the island. a decade earlier, a financial storm devastated its economy. >> who gets left paying the bill? >> banks get out andrybody else gets stuck with the bill. >> narrator: frontline and npr investigate...>> lmost all the warehouses were empty. generators, blue roof material...were just not there. >> narrator: "blackout in puer rico". >> got to pbs.org/frontline to learn more about labor trafficking and how widespread it is. >> they're an easy prey. y they're vulnerable and e to victimize, and they're alone. >> see how states are dealing with the pro >> the more we learned, the more troubling it was from a federal pective... >> then watch our past films about the abuse of immigrant
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workers.ec coto the frontline community on facebook and twittter. then sign up for our newsletter at pbs.org/frontline. >> "frontline" is made possible by contributions to your pbs stion from viewers like yo thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. additional support is provided by the abrams foundation. committed to excellence in journalism. the park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness ofritical issues. the john and helen glessner family trust. supporting trustworthy journalism that informs and inspires. aland by the frontline joum fund, with major support from frn and jo ann hagler. major support fotline and for "trafficked in america" is provided by the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundationcommitted to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. i more informatiavailable at macfound.org. and additional support for thist
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♪ you're watching pbs. george lopez: 'charlotte'steb'. slie stahl: 'war and peace' john green: 'the catcher in the rye'am vo: but what is erica's slie stafavorite book?eace' gabrielle union: 'the color rple' allison williams: 'frankenstein' wil wheaton: 'ready player one' vo: we've got a list of america's one hundred best-loved novels, and we need you to help aus pick number one.d ming-na wen: 'the joy luck club' devon kennard: 'to kill a mockingbird' nna bush: 'the book thie leland melvin: 'the martian' vo: is your favorite on e list? join host meredith viera, and cast your vote in the great american read. it all begins tuesday, may 22nd at 8/7c. only on pbs.
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women from all over the worldar trailblazing through gender barriers in difficult and often erous environments. they are defying cultural norms and fin dreams and change their future. in our first story, we visit senegal, where a woman's family criticized her for choosing to be a mechanic rather than a tailor, hairdresser, or secretary. now she runs femme auto, an auto repair shop focusing on employing top focusing on employing top qualified women technicians.
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