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Bleeding copiously, Vijayan was carried out of the 24-by-36-foot trailer he shared with 23 other men.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Attorneys for Vijayan at the Southern Poverty Law Center are considering bringing a case against Signal.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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But like many of his compatriots, Vijayan couldn't afford to be sent home.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Vijayan had been fired after complaining about conditions and stirring up discontent at the camp where he lived with 289 workers.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Vijayan remains in the U.S., having applied for a so-called T visa--reserved for immigrants who claim to be victims of human trafficking.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Security guards had just pulled Sabulal Vijayan out of the breakfast line in the canteen at Signal International's shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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Vijayan recovered at a hospital and became the darling of civil rights groups like the Workers' Center for Racial Justice, which demonstrated outside a U.S. Labor Department office in New Orleans.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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That's when Sabulal Vijayan decided to slit his wrists.
FORBES: Labor Unrest
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Having just eaten, Vijayan asked to use the bathroom.
FORBES: Labor Unrest