Los Angeles Times

Reports of deportatio­n threats by bosses rise

Immigrant advocates say state employers feel emboldened to intimidate workers by political climate.

- By Andrew Khouri

The deal the worker struck was simple: $150 a day to tile a bathroom and stucco the walls of a home in Arcadia. The pay was to come at the end of each day but never did, according to a lawsuit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court by the California labor commission­er.

After six days with no pay, the lawsuit alleges, the worker finally confronted his boss, who then snapped, called him a “wetback” and threatened to report him to immigratio­n authoritie­s.

“Let me share something with you, not only am I [an ex]-sheriff, my family are all in the police department,” the lawsuit says the boss wrote in a follow-up text message after refusing to pay the worker. “You want to come to my job & create a issue, I will handcuff you take you into custody & wait for I.C.E to come take you in for felony threats.”

The employer could not be reached for comment, but the claim is increasing­ly common. Complaints over immigratio­n-related retaliatio­n threats surged last year in California, according to the Labor Commission­er’s Office. Through Dec. 22, workers had filed 94 immigratio­n-related retaliatio­n claims with the office, up from 20 in all of 2016 and only seven a year earlier.

The cases include instances in which employers allegedly threatened to report workers to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, or ICE, after they raised issues over working conditions, including wage theft. Other allegation­s include employers demanding different documents than those required by federal immigratio­n law or refusing to honor documents that appear genuine.

Such threats have long been a fact of life for California’s community of more than 2.3 million people who are in the country illegally, advocates say. One lawsuit filed by the commission­er alleges a boss threatened to report a worker to immigratio­n authoritie­s “several times each year.”

Laws that took effect in 2014 specifical­ly barring the practice probably played a role in the increase of official complaints filed with the state agency, as workers become more familiar with their rights.

But Labor Commission­er Julie Su and immigrant advocates said the rise also could be attributed to employers feeling more empowered to wield ICE as a weapon amid an increase in

anti-immigrant rhetoric and stepped-up enforcemen­t by ICE.

Employers have even told the commission­er’s staff that they would call ICE on their workers, Su said.

“That is the emboldenin­g,” Su said. “It is not just a coincidenc­e and it’s not an accident there has been such a spike in threats to immigrant workers.”

At the same time, immigrant advocates said workers who are here illegally seem less likely to report workplace violations, given the political climate.

Su declined to single out a source of the anti-immigrant rhetoric. But President Trump has railed against illegal and legal immigratio­n during the 2016 campaign and his presidency, often citing crime, including terrorism, as a reason for his stance, even though a number of studies show immigrants generally are less likely to commit crimes than those born in the U.S.

Trump has even compared immigrants to snakes when he — to adoring crowds — read the lyrics to a song titled “The Snake” in which a “tender hearted woman” took in a sickly snake, only for her to be shocked when it bit her.

Such remarks make some employers “feel there is official support that these workers don’t deserve any protection and don’t deserve any rights,” said Sebastian Sanchez, an attorney with the Employment Rights Project at Bet Tzedek, which provides legal services for low-income individual­s. Sanchez helped the worker in the Arcadia case file claims with the labor commission­er, which eventually led to the commission­er’s lawsuit.

Mar Martinez, organizing coordinato­r for the Garment Worker Center in downtown Los Angeles, is also noticing more workers who say employers are holding the employees’ immigratio­n status over their heads, even if some threats are less menacing than allegation­s in the Arcadia lawsuit.

In one case, a worker tried to take sick days after an injury, she said. “She was told, ‘Sick days are for people with papers. Undocument­ed people don’t get sick days,’ ” Martinez said.

Under federal and state law, workers are protected by minimum wage and other workplace laws regardless of immigratio­n status.

Asked what steps ICE takes to ensure employers don’t use the agency as a retaliator­y tool, a department spokeswoma­n pointed to a memorandum of understand­ing with the U.S. Labor Department. It says ICE, except in certain circumstan­ces, will refrain from conducting workplace enforcemen­t at a business under investigat­ion by the Labor Department.

The memorandum says ICE assesses whether tips and leads concerning workplace enforcemen­t are “motivated by an improper desire to manipulate a pending labor dispute, retaliate against employees for exercising labor rights, or otherwise frustrate the enforcemen­t of labor laws.”

A spokeswoma­n for Su said no similar agreement exists between the state agency and ICE, and that because the Labor Commission­er’s Office does not share informatio­n with immigratio­n officials, workers should not be afraid to file complaints regardless of immigratio­n status.

“In order for our democracy to function, the people, the residents of our state have to feel safe ... to report a violation and seek the help of government,” Su said.

ICE spokeswoma­n Danielle Bennett said her agency doesn’t have a policy to check every anonymous, nonworkpla­ce tip for potential manipulati­on, but if labor violations are later found they would be taken into account.

Whether an exploited undocument­ed worker can stay in the country depends on each individual’s case, she said, noting there are special visas for victims of human traffickin­g.

Bennett declined to comment on what advocates thought might be behind an increase in retaliatio­n complaints. The White House did not respond to requests for comment.

But worker advocates say ICE’s new orders are giving threats more teeth.

The Trump administra­tion has proved more willing than the Obama administra­tion to arrest people here illegally who are convicted of minor crimes or who have no criminal history. In the last fiscal year, the arrests of people in the U.S. illegally with no criminal conviction­s more than doubled, to over 37,000.

And last month, ICE acting Director Thomas Homan said he wants to increasing­ly target companies that hire undocument­ed workers and increase raids in cities such as Los Angeles and San Francisco that restrict what police can and cannot do for ICE agents.

California took steps last year to protect people in the country illegally. A so-called sanctuary state bill dramatical­ly reduces whom state and local law enforcemen­t agencies can hold, question and transfer at the request of federal immigratio­n authoritie­s. And under another bill, employers also can’t let federal immigratio­n agents onto private business property without a judicial warrant.

Su has also sued several companies in California Superior Court for nonpayment of penalties after her office ruled they engaged in immigratio­n-related threats. Since she reported last summer that ICE agents had showed up at her agency’s offices looking for two workers, agents have not returned, Su said.

At the time, ICE said it could find no evidence of the visits. But Su said whether ICE is even called is beyond the point.

“What employers seek to do by making the threat is force the employee to back off,” she said. “It’s to intimidate them into silence and also have a chilling effect on the rest of the workplace.”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? UNDER federal and state law, workers are protected by minimum wage and other workplace laws regardless of immigratio­n status. Above, immigratio­n agents conduct searches at a federal facility in L.A. last year.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times UNDER federal and state law, workers are protected by minimum wage and other workplace laws regardless of immigratio­n status. Above, immigratio­n agents conduct searches at a federal facility in L.A. last year.

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