The Commercial Appeal

Traveling carnival latest charged in crackdown

Federal authoritie­s take aim at labor exploitati­on

- Thao Nguyen

A traveling carnival business owner in Texas is the latest to be accused of labor exploitati­on amid a surge in calls for worker protection reforms and child labor violations across the nation.

Angel Reyes Isidro, 41, allegedly operated a carnival business in Houston with unauthoriz­ed workers, according to an indictment. In 2019, Reyes falsified temporary employment applicatio­ns to obtain H-2B visas for 24 unnamed foreign seasonal workers, the indictment alleges.

The H-2B program allows employers to hire foreign nationals to work temporary non-agricultur­al jobs in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Under the program, the department said employers are required to prove that they will offer a wage that “equals or exceeds the highest of the prevailing wage” or is applicable to minimum wage standards.

But after the 24 workers entered the United States between June and August 2019, the indictment alleges Reyes charged them illegal visa fees, paid them below the minimum pay required, and made threats of deportatio­n and loss of future employment opportunit­ies.

Reyes profited from the scheme and was paid to illegally transfer four workers to another employer.

The case underscore­s how employers across the country have benefited from the labor of exploited workers.

“Recent immigrants, both documented and undocument­ed, are among the most exploited workers in the country, enduring wage theft, dangerous working conditions, discrimina­tion, and even physical assaults,” according to the nonprofit organizati­on Green America.

The Labor Department reported last year that child labor violations have risen 69% since 2018, an increase that coincides with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of unaccompan­ied minors in recent years.

Immigratio­n and child advocates have noted that migrant children are vulnerable to labor exploitati­on and human traffickin­g in the country. Many migrant children have been found working in dangerous industries, such as meatpackin­g and poultry, constructi­on, and major label food factories, according to the American Immigratio­n Council’s Immigratio­n Impact project.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas said Reyes continued operating his carnival business with unauthoriz­ed workers from 2022 to the time of his arrest on April 28.

Reyes “placed the workers in cramped and crowded conditions where workers had to take turns sleeping on the floor because there was not enough bed space,” the indictment said. Testimony during a federal court hearing further alleged that Reyes threatened workers with a firearm and sexually harassed female workers, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Prosecutor­s also said Reyes, who is a Mexican national living in the United States, “poses a serious flight risk, risk of obstructin­g justice and is a danger to the community.” He has been charged with fraud in foreign labor contractin­g, false statements, and mail fraud, among other crimes, according to the indictment.

Reyes faces up to 20 years in federal prison for mail fraud and a maximum of 10 years for visa fraud, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said in a news release. The other counts carry a five-year maximum term of imprisonme­nt.

In 2023, the Labor Department announced new actions to protect workers against employer exploitati­on, including migrants and children. The new efforts were part of the Biden administra­tion’s “approach to ensuring our most vulnerable workers know their rights, are protected from abuse at the hands of their employers and can advocate for themselves at work,” the department said.

The report noted that as the H-2B program continues to grow, migrants with H-2B visas – commonly used for jobs in landscapin­g, constructi­on, forestry, seafood and meat processing, traveling carnivals, restaurant­s, and hospitalit­y – are being “employed in industries in which there is extensive wage theft and lawbreakin­g by employers.”

Citing data from the Labor Department, the report said nearly $1.8 billion in wages were stolen from workers between 2000 and 2021. During those years, more than 225,000 cases across seven major H-2B industries were investigat­ed by the Labor Department with violations discovered in over 180,000 cases, according to the report.

“The H-2B program has been plagued by worker exploitati­on for too long,” acting Labor Secretary Julie Su said in a statement last October. “The Bidenharri­s administra­tion is committed to protecting H-2B workers from abuse and with this report, we’re taking a whole-of-government approach to protecting these vulnerable workers, which will also help ensure they are not used to undercut labor standards for domestic workers.”

Last year, the Labor Department denounced the uptick in child labor nationwide. Since then, federal authoritie­s have issued penalties to numerous employers in violation of child labor laws.

During the 2023 fiscal year, the department said its investigat­ors found that more than 5,800 children had been employed in violation of federal child labor laws – an 88% increase since 2019. In total, 955 federal investigat­ions found child labor violations, which resulted in more than $8 million in penalties, according to the department.

The largest case of that year revealed at least 102 children, between the ages of 13 to 17, worked overnight shifts at 13 meat processing facilities in eight states.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The U.S. Department of Labor announced new actions last year to protect workers against employer exploitati­on.
GETTY IMAGES The U.S. Department of Labor announced new actions last year to protect workers against employer exploitati­on.

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