|
||||||||
Individuals Held Liable For Hiring Illegal WorkersPublished April 10, 2007
The Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has declared that it is "dramatically enhancing its enforcement efforts against employers that knowingly employ illegal aliens." They aren't kidding. In fiscal year 2006, ICE set records for worksite enforcement. It arrested 716 individuals on criminal charges (against both employers and employees) and 3,667 individuals on administrative charges. Combined, these figures are more than seven times greater than the total number of individuals arrested in worksite enforcement cases in 2002, the last full year that the INS was in operation. It's not just large companies that need to worry about ICE breathing down their neck. Said an ICE official: "No matter how large or how small the company, ICE has no tolerance for individuals who use illegal aliens in their workforce." And, as the following cases show, ICE is not only going after employers, but the individual executives and managers who actually hire illegal workers are being held accountable. In March of 2007, ICE arrested the owner and three managers of a Massachusetts-based manufacturing company for allegedly knowingly accepting fraudulent "green cards" and Social Security cards, among other charges. If convicted, each of the four individuals could face up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Late in 2006, two executives of a California fence-building company pleaded guilty to knowingly hiring illegal immigrants. One agreed to pay a fine of $200,000; the other, $100,000. Even if you don't knowingly hire illegal aliens, inadvertent I-9 mistakes can still result in penalties, not to mention the sudden loss of workers if ICE audits your records and removes employees who are not eligible to work in the U.S. Be sure you:
Related Topic(s): Hiring/IRCA |
||||||||
| Copyright © 2009 Alexander Hamilton Institute | ||||||||
| Alexander Hamilton Institute, 70 Hilltop Road, Ramsey, NJ 07446 | ||||||||
| Toll-Free Phone: (800) 879-2441, Fax: (201) 825-8696 |