CINCINNATI
- Two temporary labor companies, the president of these companies and two of
their corporate officers pled guilty today in United States District Court here
to conspiring to provide hundreds of illegal aliens to work for a national air
cargo firm in Wilmington, Ohio.
Entering pleas were:
All three pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to induce, aid and abet
illegal aliens to reside or remain in the
Gregory G. Lockhart, United States Attorney for the Southern District of
Ohio, Julie L. Meyers, Assistant Secretary for U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE), William Cotter, Special Agent in Charge, U.S. Social
Security Administration Office of Inspector General, Chicago Region, and Gordon
S. Heddell, Inspector General, U.S. Department of Labor
announced the pleas entered today before Senior United States District Judge S.
Arthur Spiegel.
The maximum penalty for the crime for each individual is ten years
imprisonment and a fine of $250,000. The companies face a maximum punishment of
five years probation, and fines of $500,000 or twice the gain they received
from the crime. Judge Spiegel will determine the actual sentence. There is no
agreement as to what the sentence will be.
Maximino Garcia's plea agreement also calls for
him to forfeit $12,000,000 representing the proceeds of the crime and the
property used to commit the crime.
Since about 1993, Maximino Garcia has owned Garcia
Labor Company, Inc., a labor leasing firm located in
The workforce of temporary laborers assigned to sort freight at
"Companies that use cheap, illegal alien labor as a business model
should be on notice. ICE is dramatically enhancing its enforcement efforts against
illegal employment schemes," said Julie Myers, Assistant Secretary for
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). "Garcia Labor learned its
lesson the hard way. We believe today's guilty pleas, which subject three
defendants to potential 10-year jail terms and, in one case, calls for a $12 million forfeiture, will serve as a deterrent to
other violators."
"From December 1999 until January 2005, Garcia Labor through their
representatives, recklessly disregarded the fact that virtually all of their employees
were not authorized to work in the
The companies and the individuals pleading guilty had an understanding that
as long as the applicants presented passable identification cards, they would
be hired, despite facts which would lead a reasonable person to conclude that
such workers were not legally present in the
The Social Security Administration issued a number of notices in 2002, 2003,
and 2004 in which hundreds of Hispanic workers employed by Garcia Labor were
listed as using invalid Social Security account numbers. Despite such notices,
Garcia Labor continued to employ these workers and took no substantive action
to determine whether they were authorized to work in the
Beginning in February 2004,
In addition, Garcia Labor took steps to provide transportation and housing,
and assistance with check cashing for the Hispanic workers, the majority of
whom had no drivers' licenses and lacked valid identification to cash their
paychecks.
In January 2005, the Transportation Security Administration, which has
jurisdiction over the administration and operation of airports in the
Cooperation in this investigation was provided by Clinton County Sheriff's
Office, the Social Security and the Department of Labor, as well as Assistant
U.S. Attorney Anne Porter, who prosecuted the case.
A sentencing date has not been scheduled at this time.
--ICE--