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Four people have been jailed for a combined total of more than 23 years for offences relating to the exploitation of migrant vegetable harvesting workers in Fenland.

Juris Valujevs, 37, Lauma Vankova, 27, Oksana Valujeva, 35, and Ivars Mezals, 30, were found guilty of conspiracy to acquire criminal property in March following a trial at Huntingdon Crown Court. Vankova, Valujeva and Valujevs were also found guilty of assisting an immigration offence, namely arranging sham marriages.

At the same court on Friday (20 May), Valujevs, of Turbus Road, King's Lynn, was jailed for three years for the criminal property offence, and five and a half years for the immigration offence, with the sentences to run consecutively.

Vankova, of Creswell Street, King's Lynn, and Valujeva, of Turbus Road, King's Lynn, were each jailed for two years and four years on the same charges respectively, again to run consecutively.

Mezals, of St Bartholomew's Road, Reading, was jailed on his single charge for three years.

Vankova, Valujeva and Valujevs had been tried for the sham marriage offences as part of a previous trial at Blackfriars Crown Court in December 2014, however, the jury had failed to reach a verdict.

At that same trial, Latvians Valujevs and Mezals had been found guilty of acting as unlicensed gangmasters.

Their convictions are a result of Operation Endeavour, a joint police and Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA) investigation to tackle the large-scale exploitation of workers.

Detectives working on Endeavour discovered all four defendants were using the bank accounts of victims to commit offences.

The court heard victims would be brought to the UK, housed in accommodation controlled by the defendants and placed in debt bondage through the withholding of work and overcharging for transport and rent.

They would be taken to banks to open accounts in their own names but using the contact details of either Vankova, Valujeva or Mezals so they could control the accounts.

The jury also found that Vankova, Valujeva and Valujevs had either offered or forced three women to go through with sham marriages in order to repay debt.

One woman was offered £2,000 but refused to go through with the marriage while another was told she would receive £1,500 for marrying a man in India. She did go through with the marriage in order to pay a £1,000 debt but said she was never paid and Valujevs used the money to buy a new car.

Detective Inspector Jenny Bristow said: “I hope today's sentencing and the previous two trials have shown how seriously we and the courts take this type of exploitation.

“The operation run by the defendants left many people in abject poverty and debt and all four defendants ruthlessly took advantage of the victims for their own gain.

“We know the exploitation of vulnerable people, many of whom simply want to make a better life for themselves in the United Kingdom, is still happening. However, we are committed to working with colleagues in partner agencies to protect vulnerable people and bring those who commit criminal offences against them to justice.”

Operation Endeavour was launched as a result of a joint agency campaign called Operation Pheasant, which began in early 2013 with the aim of tackling homes of multiple occupancy and poor living standards affecting economic migrants, mainly from Latvia and Lithuania, in the Wisbech area.