Cockle picker gang leader found guilty

BRITAIN: The head of a gang of Chinese cockle pickers was found guilty yesterday of the manslaughter of 21 workers who drowned…

BRITAIN: The head of a gang of Chinese cockle pickers was found guilty yesterday of the manslaughter of 21 workers who drowned on a wild winter night off northwestern England in February 2004.

Lin Liang Ren had taken the pickers to the scenic but treacherous Morecambe Bay in Lancashire where, at low tide, a rich harvest of the lucrative shellfish can be dug out of the sands. As the tide turned and began to rush back to shore, they found themselves stranded far from dry land and 23 of them drowned. Two bodies were never found.

Preston Crown Court also found Lin guilty of perverting the course of justice and facilitating illegal entry into the country after a trial lasting almost six months.

The case made international headlines and highlighted the plight of immigrant - and often illegal - workers, unprotected by national labour regulations.

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The Chinese men and women, smuggled into England to live effectively as slaves, drowned due to the "goldrush fever" for cockles, lead prosecutor Tim Holroyde told the court when the trial opened last September.

The sands of Morecambe Bay are said to hold millions of pounds worth of cockles, a small edible mollusc. The court also found Lin's girlfriend, Zhao Xiao Qing, guilty of perverting the course of justice and facilitating illegal entry, while his cousin, Lin Mu Yong, was also guilty of facilitating illegal entry.

Manslaughter carries a possible life jail term as does perverting the course of justice. Sentencing is due on Tuesday.

The court cleared an English father and son, both named David Anthony Eden, of the same immigration charge but the judge insisted they pay their own costs.

The five had denied all the charges.

Morecambe Bay, some 300km (200 miles) northwest of London, is known for its rip tides and quicksands. Even local fishermen familiar with its secrets have had horses and tractors sucked into the sands.

The cocklers, many of whom could not swim, were far out in the bay at low tide and had no chance of surviving as the sea rushed in that night.

"It was horrendous for them. There, 1½ to two miles out in the bay, there was no way they could reach land," said Det Supt Mick Gradwell outside the court.

"It was bitter and they'd been working hard. Listening to some of the phone calls [they made] you can hear the harrowing noises as people tried to save themselves." - (Reuters)'