|
EMPLOYER SANCTIONS:
PENALTIES FOR EMPLOYING UNAUTHORIZED FOREIGN CITIZEN WORKERS
To consult a Los Angeles Immigrant Lawyer, please call us at (626)
279-5341 or e-mail us at info@bccvisalaw.com.
An attorney in our office would be happy to assist you.
CIVIL MONEY PENALTIES
The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is authorized to conduct
investigations to determine whether employers have violated the prohibitions
against knowingly employing unauthorized foreign workers and failing
to properly comply with the Employment Eligibility Verification form
(Form I-9) for newly hired individuals. If ICE believes that violations
have occurred, ICE may issue a Warning Notice, a Technical or Procedural
Failures Letter notifying the employer of technical or procedural failures
in need of correction, or a Notice of Intent to Fine (NIF). In cases
where a NIF is issued, employers may request a hearing within 30 days
of service of the NIF to contest the NIF before an Administrative Law
Judge of the Office of the Chief Administrative Hearing Officer (OCAHO),
Executive Office for Immigration Review, US Department of Justice. Hearing
requests must be in writing and filed with the ICE office designated
in the NIF. If a hearing is not requested within the 30-day period,
ICE will issue a Final Order to cease and desist and to pay a civil
money penalty. Once a Final Order is issued, the penalty is unappealable.
If a hearing is requested, ICE will file a complaint with OCAHO to begin
the administrative hearing process which may end in settlement, dismissal,
or a Final Order for civil money penalties.
Hiring or Continuing to Employ Unauthorized Foreign Workers
An employer found to have knowingly hired, recruited or referred for
a fee, or continued to employ, an unauthorized alien for employment
in the United States shall be subject to an order to cease and desist
from the unlawful behavior and to pay a civil fine. An employer can
be fined $250 to $2,000 per unauthorized alien with respect to whom
the First offense occurred before September 29, 1999, and not less than
$275 and not exceeding $2,200, for each unauthorized alien with respect
to whom the offense occurred on or after September 29, 1999. An employer
can be fined from $2,000 to $5,000 per unauthorized alien for a Second
offense that occurred before September 29, 1999, and between $2,200 to
$5,500 if occurred on or after September 29, 1999. An employer can be
fined from $3,000 to $10,000 per unauthorized alien for each Third or
Subsequent offense that occurred before September 29, 1999, and between
$3,300 to $11,000 if occurred on or after September 29, 1999.
These penalties are not limited to employees for whom employers complete
and retain I-9 files, but also cover employers’ use of contract
personnel known to them to be unauthorized to work in the United States.
If an employer can demonstrate compliance with Form I-9 requirements,
a good faith defense with respect to a charge of knowingly hiring an
unauthorized alien will have been established unless the government
can prove otherwise.
Failure to Comply with Form I-9 Requirements
Employers who fail to properly complete, retain, and/or present Forms
I-9 for inspection as required by law may be subject to a civil penalty
for violations occurring on or after September 29, 1999 from $110 to
$1,100 per employee whose Form I-9 is not properly completed, retained,
and/or presented. For violations occurring before September 29, 1999,
civil penalties range from $100 to $1,000. In determining the amount
of the civil penalty, the following factors are considered: size of
the business of the employer being charged; the good faith of the employer;
the seriousness of the violation; whether or not the individual was
an unauthorized alien; and the history of previous violations of the
employer.
Requiring Indemnification
Employers found to have required a bond or indemnity from an employee
against liability under the employer sanctions laws may be fined $1,000
for each violation before September 29, 1999, and $1,100 per violation
on or after September 29, 1999, and ordered to make restitution to the
person required to pay the indemnity. If that person cannot be located,
payment is made to the US Treasury.
CRIMINAL PENALTIES
Engaging in a Pattern or Practice of Knowingly Hiring or Continuing
to Employ Unauthorized Foreign workers
Employers convicted of having engaged in a pattern or practice of knowingly
hiring unauthorized foreign workers or continuing to employ foreign
workers knowing that they are or have become unauthorized to work in
the United States, after November 6, 1986, (e.g. expiration of work
authorization), may be fined up to $3,000 per unauthorized employee
and/or face up to 6 months of imprisonment.
Engaging in Fraud or False Statements, or Otherwise Misusing Visas,
Immigration Permits, and Identity Documents
Persons who knowingly use fraudulent identification documents, identity
documents that were issued to persons other than themselves, or false
attestations for the purpose of satisfying the employment eligibility
verification requirements, may be fined and/or imprisoned for up to
5 years.
CIVIL DOCUMENT FRAUD
It is unlawful for any person or entity knowingly to engage in any
of the following activities:
• Forge, counterfeit, alter, or falsely make any document for
the purpose of satisfying a requirement of the Immigration and Nationality
Act (INA) or to obtain a benefit under the INA;
• Use, attempt to use, posses, obtain, accept, or receive or
to provide any forged, counterfeit, altered or falsely made document
for the purpose of satisfying a requirement of the INA or to obtain
a benefit under the INA;
• Use or attempt to use or to provide or attempt to provide any
document lawfully issued to a person other than the possessor, including
a deceased individual for the purpose of satisfying a requirement of
the INA or to obtain a benefit under the INA;
• Accept or receive or to provide any document lawfully issued
to or with respect to a person other than the possessor for the purpose
of complying with the employment eligibility verification requirements
or obtaining a benefit under the INA;
• Prepare, file, or assist another in preparing or filing, any
application for benefits under the INA, or any document required under
the INA, or any document submitted in connection with such application
or document, with knowledge or in reckless disregard of the fact that
such application or document was falsely made or, in whole or in part,
does not relate to the person on whose behalf it was or is being submitted;
or
• Present before boarding a common carrier for the purpose of
coming to the United States a document which relates to the alien’s
eligibility to enter the United States, and to fail to present such
document to an immigration officer upon arrival at a United States port
of entry.
If an investigation reveals that an individual has committed or participated
in any of the acts listed above, the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement
may issue a Notice of Intent to Fine (NIF). Within 60 days of the NIF,
the person or entity that receives the NIF may make a written request
for a hearing submitted to the appropriate ICE office or face an unappealable
Final Order to pay a civil penalty, per fraudulent document or proscribed
activity, in the amount of: $250 to $2,000 or, if on or after September
29, 1999, $275 to $2,200, for the first offense; and $2,000 to $5,000,
or, if on or after September 29, 1999, $2,200 to $5,500, for each subsequent
offense. For an individual who is not a US citizen, waiver of a 274C
hearing will result in the issuance of a final order and removal from
the United States.
UNLAWFUL DISCRIMINATION
If an Office of Special Counsel for Unfair Employment-Related Discrimination
(OSC) or Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) investigation
reveals employment discrimination covered by the Immigration and Nationality
Act, the employer will be ordered to cease the prohibited practice and
may be ordered to take one or more of the following steps:
• Hire or reinstate, with or without back pay, individuals directly
injured by the discrimination;
• Lift any restrictions on an employee’s assignments, work
shifts, or movements;
• Post notices to employees about their rights and about employers’
obligations;
• Educate all personnel involved in hiring and in complying with
the employer sanctions and anti-discrimination laws;
• Remove a false performance review or false warning from an
employee’s personnel file.
Employers may also be ordered to pay civil monetary penalties of $250
to $2,000 per individual discriminated against for the first offense,
$2,000 to $5,000 per individual discriminated against for the second
offense, $3,000 to $10,000 per individual discriminated against for
subsequent offenses.
DOCUMENT ABUSE
Where employers are found to have requested more or different documents
than an employee has chosen to present from List A or Lists B and C,
they may be fined $100 to $1,000 for each individual determined to have
suffered such document abuse.
THE INFORMATION ON THIS WEBSITE IS NOT TO BE CONSIDERED LEGAL ADVICE.
SUCH INFORMATION IS INTENDED TO EDUCATE MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC GENERALLY
AND IS NOT INTENDED TO PROVIDE SOLUTIONS TO INDIVIDUAL PROBLEMS. READERS
ARE CAUTIONED NOT TO ATTEMPT TO SOLVE INDIVIDUAL PROBLEMS ON THE BASIS
OF INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN AND ARE STRONGLY ADVISED TO SEEK ADVICE
FROM AN EXPERIENCED IMMIGRATION LAWYER REGARDING SPECIFIC CASE SITUATIONS.
Return to FAQ
|