From low-level drug dealer to human trafficker: are modern slavery laws catching the wrong people?

From low-level drug dealer to human trafficker: are modern slavery laws catching the wrong people?

When I heard that a boy from my primary school had been convicted of trafficking, I had to find out what had happened to make him fall so far

When armed police burst through his front door in Tottenham, north London, at 5am in September 2014, Glodi Wabelua knew things looked bad. The house was full of drug paraphernalia, including a hydraulic press, scales and mixing bowls, as well as a mobile phone full of incriminating texts advertising deals for crack cocaine and heroin.

The case went to trial in February 2016, and Wabelua’s two co-defendants – who, like him, were aged 20 – received 10- and 11-year sentences. Wabelua, who had lodged an early guilty plea a year before, was handed six years for dealing class A drugs. He was not new to the criminal justice system, having already served three years for drug offences in his teens. But soon he would be charged with an even more serious crime.

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