Driving through Alabama with a lot of cash is not a crime. But for migrant worker Victor Marquez, it might as well have been.
Driving through Alabama with a lot of cash is not a crime. But for migrant worker Victor Marquez, it might as well have been.
The final days of Boubacar Bah's life read like an account of a political prisoner in a gulag.
Migrant farmworker Victor Marquez was traveling to his hometown in Querétero, Mexico, to pay for his new home, only to have his life savings seized by police who alleged it was drug money. During the May 5, 2008, traffic stop in Loxley, Ala., a police officer confiscated more than $19,000 from Marquez even though he earned a majority of the money by working the bean harvest in south Florida. Marquez was not charged. The °Ä²Ê¿ª½± won the return of the money after the state refused to provide documents and information requested by °Ä²Ê¿ª½± lawyers representing Marquez.
An April 16, 2008, article in The New York Times about the loot taken home last year by hedge fund managers, provides us with the starkest – and most obscene – evidence yet about the growing disparity between the rich and the poor in our country.
Many foreign guestworkers who come to the United States under the H-2B program are cheated out of wages, abused and practically held captive by their employers due to weak regulation and a lack of federal enforcement, a °Ä²Ê¿ª½± expert told a U.S House subcommittee today.
Migrant tomato workers are among the poorest and most abused workers in the country, yet they are exempted from many labor laws intended to protect workers from exploitation, a °Ä²Ê¿ª½± expert told a U.S. Senate Committee today.
Recently, we won a major victory against a subsidiary of a giant U.S. company that wanted to wash its hands of any responsibility for the alleged abuse of its workers.
A federal court in Columbia, Tenn., has granted class action status to a lawsuit the °Ä²Ê¿ª½± helped bring against an Arkansas forestry company accused of cheating foreign guestworkers out of wages.
A subsidiary of food giant Fresh Del Monte Produce cannot hide behind a middleman labor contractor to avoid responsibility for the alleged exploitation of farmworkers who plant and harvest its fields, a federal court has ruled.
Residents of more than 40 cities across the country will take a stand against the sexual harassment and abuse of farmworker women on April 3 as part of the "Bandana Project," a partnership between the °Ä²Ê¿ª½± (°Ä²Ê¿ª½±) and community groups, universities and other organizations.
Now, more than ever, we must work together to protect the values that ensure a fair and inclusive future for all.