AG
(202) 514-2007
TDD (202) 514-1888
Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey Announces Higher
Civil Fines Against Employers for Immigration Violations
WASHINGTON—Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey today announced higher
civil fines against employers who violate federal immigration laws. The announcement
was made in a joint briefing today with Secretary of Homeland Security Michael
Chertoff about newly enacted border security reforms put in place by the Departments
of Justice and Homeland Security. Under the new rule, which was approved by
Attorney General Mukasey and Secretary Chertoff, civil fines will increase by
as much as $5,000. The new rule will take effect on March 27, 2008, and will
be published in the Federal Register early next week.
Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, employers who violate employment
eligibility requirements are subject to civil monetary penalties. Employers
may be fined under the Act for knowingly employing unauthorized aliens or for
other violations, including failure to comply with the requirements relating
to employment eligibility verification forms, wrongful discrimination against
job applicants or employees on the basis of nationality or citizenship, and
immigration-related document fraud. For each of these violations, the employer
has the right to a hearing before an administrative law judge in the Executive
Office for Immigration Review.
Under the new rule and applicable law, civil penalties for violations of the
Immigration and Nationality Act are adjusted for inflation. Because these penalties
were last adjusted in 1999, the average adjustment is approximately 25 percent.
Under the specific rounding mechanism of the law, the minimum penalty for knowing
employment of an unauthorized alien increases by $100, from $275 to $375.
Some of the higher civil penalties are increased by $1,000; for example, the
maximum penalty for a first violation increases from $2,200 to $3,200. The biggest
increase under the rounding mechanism raises the maximum civil penalty for multiple
violations from the current $11,000 to $16,000. These penalties are assessed
on a per-alien basis; thus, if an employer knowingly employed, or continued
to employ, five unauthorized aliens, that could result in five fines.
Today’s announcement follows a series of reforms, announced by the Administration
in August 2007, to be made within the boundaries of existing law to secure our
borders, improve interior and worksite enforcement, and improve the current
immigration system. In addition to the higher civil penalties, measures announced
and discussed at today’s briefing included expanded prosecutions and removals
of criminal aliens, a streamlining of existing guest worker programs, and the
Southwest Border Enforcement Initiative.
The Southwest Border Enforcement Initiative includes a $100 million request
in new Justice Department funding for FY 2009 for new hiring and resources to
better enable the United States to combat the flow of illegal immigration, drugs,
and weapons across the Southwest Border, and to arrest, detain, prosecute, and
incarcerate violent criminals, drug offenders, and immigration violators along
the Southwest Border. More information on this funding request can be found
at http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2008/January/08_opa_079.html
and http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2008/January/08_opa_080.html.