Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-American CEO Who Made Maid 'Sleep Near Dogs' Told To Pay $135k

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Apr, 2017 12:29 PM
    An Indian-American CEO has been ordered to pay US$ 135,000 to her former domestic worker after a Labour Department investigation found she underpaid and mistreated her.
     
    Himanshu Bhatia, CEO of Rose International and IT Staffing, will have to pay her former live-in domestic service worker back wages and damages under the terms of a consent judgement entered into the US District Court for the Central District of California.
     
    The judgement, entered on April 11, resolves a complaint filed by the US Department of Labour in August last year. An investigation by the department's Wage and Hour Division found that Bhatia willfully and repeatedly violated federal labour laws' minimum wage and record keeping provisions from July 2012 to December 2014.
     
    The complaint alleged that Bhatia paid her domestic service worker, who had been identified in an earlier complaint as Sheela Ningwal, a fixed monthly salary of US$ 400 plus food and housing at Bhatia's home in San Juan Capistrano and other residences in Miami, Las Vegas and Long Beach.
     
     
    Investigators found that the employee suffered "callous abuse" and retaliation, including being forced to sleep on a piece of carpet in the garage when ill, while Bhatia's dogs slept on a mattress nearby. The complaint also alleged that Bhatia confiscated Ningwal's passport.
     
    Bhatia terminated the worker in December 2014 after she allegedly found her employee researching labour laws online, and after the worker refused to sign a document stating she was being paid an adequate salary and had no employment dispute with Bhatia.
    "This consent judgement underlines the department's commitment to protecting workers from exploitation," said Janet Herold, solicitor for the Department of Labour's Western Region.
     
    "The department will take strong and immediate action to ensure that workers are protected against retaliation." 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    US Group To Hold Conference On ‘Make In India’ In Houston

    US Group To Hold Conference On ‘Make In India’ In Houston
    The two-day Houston India conference conference will begin from March 24. The theme of the Conference is ‘Make in India – The Inside Story’.

    US Group To Hold Conference On ‘Make In India’ In Houston

    US Man Charged With Hate Crime For Assaulting, Abusing Indian-American

    US Man Charged With Hate Crime For Assaulting, Abusing Indian-American
    Jeffrey Allen Burgess, 54, of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, has been accused of intentionally harming a man named Ankur Mehta on November 22 because of his "perceived race, colour and national origin".

    US Man Charged With Hate Crime For Assaulting, Abusing Indian-American

    Preet Bharara Was Probing Trump Cabinet Member When Sacked

    Fired US Attorney Preet Bharara was investigating a key member of President Donald Trumps cabinet, a new report has revealed.

    Preet Bharara Was Probing Trump Cabinet Member When Sacked

    Indian-American Karun Sreerama To Lead PWE Department in Houston

    Indian-American Karun Sreerama To Lead PWE Department in Houston
    If confirmed, the 53-year-old Hyderabad native would start work from April 3 and would become the city's first Asian department director in the process

    Indian-American Karun Sreerama To Lead PWE Department in Houston

    Donald Trump Not Safe In White House, Says Former Secret Service Agent

    Donald Trump Not Safe In White House, Says Former Secret Service Agent
    US President Donald Trump is not safe inside the White House and even the Secret Service would not be able to protect him during a terror attack, a former Secret Service agent who had guarded previous presidents have warned.

    Donald Trump Not Safe In White House, Says Former Secret Service Agent

    Two Indian Clerics Traced In Pakistan

    Two Indian Clerics Traced In Pakistan
    The two clerics of Delhi's Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargah were found in a remote village of Sindh province with no mobile connectivity. 

    Two Indian Clerics Traced In Pakistan