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Features and Stories
August 05, 2010

Hundreds of Filipino guestworkers lured to teach in Louisiana public schools were cheated out of tens of thousands of dollars and forced into exploitative contracts by an international trafficking ring run by labor contractors, according to a class action lawsuit filed today by the Southern Poverty Law Center (ÈËÊÞÐÔ½»), the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) and Covington & Burling LLP.

Features and Stories
June 11, 2010

A settlement agreement has been approved in a lawsuit filed by the ÈËÊÞÐÔ½» on behalf of migrant farmworkers who said they were not paid the wages they were owed by subsidiaries of Del Monte Fresh Produce Inc.

Features and Stories
May 14, 2010

The Southern Poverty Law Center today denounced the felony charge brought against a Georgia college student by a local sheriff’s department following a decision by federal immigration authorities to release her. The student, Jessica Colotl, was brought to this country as a child by her parents.

Publication
April 26, 2010

The goal of this guidebook is to increase the knowledge and skills of criminal justice professionals so that you can better serve farmworkers who have experienced sexual violence. It provides helpful explanations about the life and work of farmworkers as well as unique issues that may impact the services you provide.

Features and Stories
February 16, 2010

In a victory for migrant workers, the South Carolina Supreme Court ruled today in an ÈËÊÞÐÔ½» case that a Haitian immigrant injured in company-provided housing is entitled to compensation for his injuries and lost wages.

Immigrant Justice

Date Filed

February 16, 2010

Frantz Pierre, a migrant farmworker from Haiti, was denied compensation by the South Carolina Worker’s Compensation Commission after falling and breaking his right ankle outside company housing. He had just arrived at the 400-acre tomato farm owned by Seaside Farms on St. Helena Island when he slipped on a wet sidewalk outside the workers’ barrack-like dormitory. After the Southern Poverty Law Center took legal action on Pierre’s behalf, the South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed Pierre's right to compensation and sent the case back to the lower court. 

Features and Stories
August 04, 2009

A federal judge has warned an Arkansas forestry company that he will rule against it if company representatives continue to intimidate workers interested in joining an ÈËÊÞÐÔ½» class action lawsuit accusing the company of cheating foreign guestworkers out of pay.

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