Home / Full timeline / Riaz Hussain Shah pleads guilty in involuntary servitude case after buying a ten-year-old Black girl from her mother to work as a house servant in exchange for $200 and a promise to educate her.
Riaz Hussain Shah pleads guilty in involuntary servitude case after buying a ten-year-old Black girl from her mother to work as a house servant in exchange for $200 and a promise to educate her.
1978 (Mar 3)
Riaz Hussain Shah, a horticulturist who formerly taught at Miami-Dade Community College, pleaded guilty in federal court in Miami, Florida, to "holding a person in involuntary servitude." Shah admitted that he and his wife, Isharad Majed Shah, an anesthesiologist, bought a ten-year-old Black girl from her mother and employed the child "for at least two years as a house slave." During most of her enslavement, the girl, Rose Iftony, had only one dress to wear, ate rice from a tin plate, and drank from a broken glass. Iftony was ten years old in 1974 when she arrived in the United States from Sierra Leone, where the Shahs paid her mother $200 and promised to educate her. Both of the Shahs, at the time, were registered aliens from Pakistan. FBI agent Joseph Bell called the girl's bondage "the first classic case of slavery in this century [that] the FBI knows of.... That's what used to happen before the Civil War."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.