Austin American-Statesman

Motel 6 strikes deal to settle suit alleging discrimina­tion

- By Jacques Billeaud

Motel 6 has tentativel­y agreed to settle a lawsuit that alleges it discrimina­ted against some Latino customers at two Phoenix locations by giving their whereabout­s and personal informatio­n to immigratio­n agents who later arrested at least seven guests.

The lawsuit alleges Motel 6 had a corporate policy or practice of giving U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t informatio­n that guests provided at check-in. It also accused Motel 6 of providing such informatio­n without requiring authoritie­s to get a warrant or without having a reasonable suspicion that crimes were being committed.

Details of the tentative deal, revealed in court records last week, haven’t been publicly released. Lawyers said they need until mid-August to turn in the settlement paperwork. Motel 6 has agreed in principle to settle the lawsuit, the deal is subject to the approval of a federal judge.

Don Bivens, an attorney representi­ng Motel 6, and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, which filed the lawsuit in January, didn’t immediatel­y return a call Monday morning seeking comment on the tentative settlement.

The national budget motel chain said in September that its Phoenix employees will no longer work with immigratio­n authoritie­s after the Phoenix New Times reported that workers were providing guests’ names to agents who later arrested 20 people on immigratio­n charges.

In a tweet at the time, Motel 6 said: “This was implemente­d at the local level without the knowledge of senior management.”

Two weeks before the case was filed in Arizona, the Washington state attorney general sued the chain, saying it had violated a state consumer protection law by providing the private informatio­n of thousands of guests to immigratio­n agents without a warrant.

The chain has said it had told its more than 1,400 locations that they were prohibited from voluntaril­y providing guest lists to immigratio­n authoritie­s.

The Arizona lawsuit was filed in federal court on behalf of eight unnamed Latinos who stayed at two Motel 6 locations in the city during June and July 2017. All but one of the eight was arrested.

ICE agents visited some of the guests at their motel rooms a day after they showed passports, driver’s licenses or identifica­tion cards issued by the Mexican government to Motel 6 employees, according to the lawsuit.

As a result, one woman was deported from the United States, while a man spent 30 days in a detention center until he could raise a $7,500 bond. In two instances, ICE agents laughed when guests asked them whether Motel 6 had provided their personal informatio­n, the lawsuit said.

It said the eight guests had a reasonable expectatio­n that their informatio­n would not be shared with federal authoritie­s and alleged that the discrimina­tion was made because of their race or national origin.

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