Department of Justice SealDepartment of Justice
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
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AG
(202) 514-2007
TDD (202) 514-1888

Former Montgomery County, Maryland Man Sentenced for Holding a Nigerian Teenage Girl in Involuntary Servitude

WASHINGTON - George Udeozor, 52, formerly of Darnestown, Md., was sentenced today for holding a 14-year-old Nigerian girl in involuntary servitude, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Grace Chung Becker and U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein. U.S. District Judge Peter J. Messitte sentenced Udeozor to 97 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release. Udeozor was also ordered to pay $110,249.60 in restitution to the victim.

Judge Messitte enhanced Udeozor’s sentence because Udeozor knew or should have known that the victim was a "vulnerable victim"; the victim was held in a condition of involuntary servitude for over one year; the offense of harboring an illegal alien was committed during the offense of involuntary servitude; and because the victim sustained serious bodily injury.

"The defendant stole part of the victim's youth by sexually abusing and forcing her to serve as a domestic servant," said Grace Chung Becker, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division. "Today's sentence can hopefully provide some measure of solace and closure to this sad chapter in the victim's life as she embarks on a brighter future."

"George Udeozor violated the prohibition against slavery and involuntary servitude, which is a bedrock principle of American law," said U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein. "The U.S. Attorney’s Office will continue to work with the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and federal and state agencies and nonprofit organizations, in conjunction with Maryland’s Human Trafficking Task Force, to locate human trafficking victims and prosecute perpetrators."

"Forcing a helpless and innocent girl into a life of servitude while inflicting physical violence is simply intolerable," said James A. Dinkins, Special Agent in Charge of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Baltimore. "ICE is committed to protecting those who cannot protect themselves and will continue to work in partnership with federal prosecutors, non-governmental organizations and the public at large to ensure that those who engage in such unconscionable crimes are brought to justice." 

According to his plea agreement, in September 1996, George Udeozor traveled to Nigeria and, using the passport of his oldest daughter, smuggled a 14 year old Nigerian girl to his home in Maryland. He and his then-wife, Dr. Adaobi Stella Udeozor, used the girl as an unpaid domestic servant and child care provider for their six children for approximately five years, from October 1996 to Oct. 28, 2001. The victim cooked, cleaned the home, did laundry and took care of the Udeozor children. During that time, the victim was physically abused.

The Udeozors did not send the victim to school and did not pay the victim or her family for her work. At times, the victim also worked in Adaobi Stella Udeozor’s medical offices, for which she did not receive compensation. The Udeozors compelled the victim’s labor by inflicting verbal and physical abuse on her, including when she purportedly did not do her work correctly. They threatened the victim with arrest and deportation if she left the home. Additionally, from sometime after the fall of 1997 when the victim was just 15 years old, until the time George Udeozor left the United States in late 1999 to return to Nigeria, George Udeozor had sexual relations with the victim in the Udeozor home. He warned the victim not to tell anyone about those episodes.

On Oct. 28, 2001, the victim called the police, who took her to a homeless shelter. George Udeozor was extradited from Nigeria in February 2008.

Dr. Adaobi Stella Udeozor, 49, of Darnestown, Md., was convicted in November 2004 by a federal jury following a six-week trial and sentenced to 87 months in prison for conspiracy to commit involuntary servitude and harboring an alien for financial gain.

This case was investigated by the U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Mythili Raman of the District of Maryland and Trial Attorney Kathleen Monaghan of the Criminal Section of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division.

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