The Oklahoman

Lawsuit: Traffickin­g scheme lured Filipinos to Oklahoma

- BY ADAM KEALOHA CAUSEY AND KEN MILLER The Associated Press

Owners of an Oklahoma hotel and other businesses engaged in a human traffickin­g scheme that lured workers from the Philippine­s promising good wages but instead paid them less than the minimum wage, according to a lawsuit.

Three Filipino workers brought to Clinton, about 80 miles west of Oklahoma City, paid thousands of dollars in recruiting fees to cover visa-related costs that should be incurred by sponsoring U.S. employers, according to the complaint filed Wednesday in federal court. The lawsuit, filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups, says the immigrants were threatened with physical harm when they complained that their compensati­on didn’t meet contractua­l obligation­s. It also seeks class-action status.

Walter and Carolyn Schumacher, who are married and own a Holiday Inn Express, a steakhouse and a waterpark in Clinton, deny the allegation­s, their attorney said Thursday. “Mr. and Mrs. Schumacher are heartsick about these allegation­s,” Kevin Donelson said.

He said he believes the allegation­s will be proven false once the case is resolved.

An FBI spokeswoma­n and an Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t spokesman said they were not aware of the case, but would not be able to comment on whether an investigat­ion is underway. A U.S. Department of Labor spokesman said he was not aware of an investigat­ion into the case.

Donelson said neither he nor the Schumacher­s have been contacted by any federal agency or prosecutor about an investigat­ion.

Nonprofit law firm the Equal Justice Center and employee rights group Legal Aid at Work joined the ACLU of Oklahoma in filing the lawsuit. It seeks an unspecifie­d amount in punitive and compensato­ry damages for the workers because it alleges they were paid less than their contract allows and less than the federal minimum wage.

The lawsuit contends that from 2008-14, the Schumacher­s’ companies applied to the federal Department of Labor to employ more than 100 foreign workers.

It alleges that workers recruited for housekeepi­ng jobs at the hotel were paid $4.25 per room cleaned. Servers at the steakhouse made $2 per hour plus tips, and housekeepe­rs and servers at the waterpark made $1 to $2 per hour less than promised. Low pay and short workweeks meant the immigrants couldn’t repay debts they incurred just to get to the U.S., the lawsuit says.

One plaintiff worked at the hotel, one at both the hotel and the steakhouse, and one at the waterpark, according to the lawsuit.

The lawsuit says Wal- ter Schumacher intimidate­d employees by saying he was carrying a gun when he picked them up from the airport. The filing also claims that although the Schumacher­s promised they would pay for roundtrip airfare to and from the Philippine­s, Walter Schumacher said the only way he would send anyone back was “in a box.”

Donelson said the Schumacher­s deny “the substance of the allegation­s and what took place.”

Brady Henderson, an ACLU lawyer, said the public often thinks of human traffickin­g in the form of sex work.

“It has a lot more elements of indentured servitude or slavery than they realize,” Henderson said. “Most people probably don’t realize how prevalent it is, potentiall­y in their own communitie­s.”

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said in June there are 20 million victims of human traffickin­g around the world.

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