The Bakersfield Californian

Sacramento councilman charged with illegally hiring workers, wire fraud and blocking federal probe

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SACRAMENTO — A Sacramento City Council member pleaded not guilty Friday to federal charges that he hired undocument­ed workers at his local grocery stores, underpaid them and cheated the government on COVID-19 relief funds.

Council member Sean Loloee and Karla Montoya, the general manager of Loloee’s four Viva Supermarke­t stores, entered not guilty pleas to conspiracy to defraud the U.S. Department of Labor, possession and use of false immigratio­n documents, obstructio­n of agency proceeding­s and wire fraud.

Loloee also pleaded not guilty to charges that he falsified records and took park in a pandemic relief fraud scheme, said a statement from the U.S. attorney’s office. Both were ordered released from custody.

“Today’s news comes as a shock, particular­ly since I came to this country as a teenager in 1989 with absolutely nothing and have worked tirelessly to meet the needs of the underserve­d in both my grocery stores and as a member of the City Council; both of which I will continue to do as I fight these allegation­s,” Loloee said in a statement to KTXL-TV and the Sacramento Bee.

According to the Bee, Montoya’s attorney, William Portanova, told the court that she “is a hard-working mother” who has “raised a family, paid her taxes, and she is unfortunat­ely in this situation at this moment. But, by the end of it, we expect to remove her from the situation.”

Loloee, whose term of office expires in December 2024, has been under pressure to resign since federal investigat­ors raided his stores and home in October. Loloee has said he won’t seek reelection.

An indictment issued by a federal grand jury alleges that since 2008, Loloee and Montoya conspired to employ many workers who lacked authorizat­ion to work in the United States and didn’t pay them overtime in a bid to reduce labor costs.

Loloee and his manager controlled the workers through intimidati­on tactics, prosecutor­s alleged, including making threats involving immigratio­n authoritie­s and making workers who didn’t speak English sign untranslat­ed documents before employing them, prosecutor­s said.

Workers were paid in cash or in “green checks” that could only be cashed in the store, with workers forced to pay a surcharge for the service, prosecutor­s said.

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