Nuñag-Tanedo v. East Baton Rouge Parish School Board

790 F. Supp. 2d 1134, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 50754, 2011 WL 1811029
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedMay 11, 2011
DocketCase SACV 10-1172-AG (MLGx)
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 790 F. Supp. 2d 1134 (Nuñag-Tanedo v. East Baton Rouge Parish School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nuñag-Tanedo v. East Baton Rouge Parish School Board, 790 F. Supp. 2d 1134, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 50754, 2011 WL 1811029 (C.D. Cal. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART MOTION TO DISMISS OF DEFENDANTS LOURDES NAVARRO AND UNIVERSAL PLACEMENT INTERNATIONAL, INC.

ANDREW J. GUILFORD, District Judge.

Enticed by promises of lucrative and exciting employment through a work program, a foreign worker speaks with recruiters about working in the United States. The recruiters explain the terms and costs of the work program, and the worker gets a large loan and voluntarily uses it to join the program.

After the worker joins the program and begins employment, the worker becomes unhappy. But if the worker quits, awaiting is a trip home with a massive amount of debt that will be impossible to repay. Working in the program is the only way to repay the loan. Is this forced labor? Fraud? No. It is a bargained-for exchange. Despite the worker’s unhappiness, the terms and costs of the program were known, and the worker voluntarily obtained the loan to join the program. The worker’s eventual discontent does not transform the valid contract with the recruiters into something illegal.

But what if after the worker made the payment, the recruiters alter the program terms and costs? The recruiters demand an additional payment of double what the worker has already paid. They threaten to kick the worker out of the program if additional payments aren’t made, and they keep the initial payment even if the worker decides to leave to program. The worker is therefore faced with a choice of forfeiting the first payment, knowing that repayment of the debt may be impossible, or paying the additional money the recruiters now demand. Knowing that working in this program is the only way to repay the initial debt, the worker pays the additional sum and continues working in the program.

Once the worker begins employment, complaints about the payments and working conditions are met with continued threats of termination and deportation. Knowing that this job is the only way to repay the debt, the worker remains silent and continues working. Is this forced labor? Fraud?

These are the questions now before this Court. This putative class action involves allegations of fraud, human trafficking, and racketeering. Defendants Lourdes Navarro (“Navarro”) and Universal Placement International, Inc. (“UPI”) (collectively, “Defendants”) now bring a Motion to Dismiss (“Motion”) multiple claims filed by Plaintiffs Mairi Nuñag-Tanedo, et al. (“Plaintiffs”) for failure to state a claim. The Court GRANTS the Motion as to the predicate acts of mail and wire fraud under Plaintiffs’ Racketeer Influenced and Corruption Organization Act (“RICO”) *1138 claims and DENIES the Motion as to Plaintiffs’ remaining claims.

BACKGROUND

The following factual allegations are taken from Plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint (“FAC”), and as it must for this Motion, the Court assumes them to be true.

Plaintiffs are teachers and Filipino nationals who came from the Philippines to work in the United States. Plaintiffs were holders of H-1B visas that permit foreign nationals with special skills to work in the United States for a specified employer for up to six years.

Defendant UPI recruits teachers from the Philippines for employment in the United States. Defendant Navarro is the owner and President of UPI. Defendants worked closely with another company, PARS International Placement Agency (“PARS”), and PARS’s Official Representative, Emilio Villarba (“Villarba”) (Defendants, PARS, and Villarba collectively, the “Recruiter Defendants”) during recruiting operations. Navarro and UPI were under investigation by the U.S. embassy in Manila when recruiting operations were taking place, and Navarro was previously convicted for defrauding the government and money laundering.

Beginning in 2006, Recruiter Defendants advertised their teacher recruiting services to school districts throughout the United States. These services included the “recruitment of highly qualified teachers from the Philippines, and placement of these teachers within school districts in the United States.” Plaintiffs learned of the opportunity to teach in the United States through Recruiter Defendants’ advertisements in Philippine newspapers and through word of mouth.

After interviewing Plaintiffs for possible teaching positions, Recruiter Defendants informed Plaintiffs that they had been selected to teach in the United States. Recruiter Defendants then told Plaintiffs about some, but not all, of the next steps in the recruitment process. Specifically, Recruiter Defendants disclosed that Plaintiffs would need to collect and submit certain documents to support their H 1-B visa application and that Plaintiffs would have to pay a recruitment fee of approximately $5,000 (the “First Recruitment Fee”). But Recruiter Defendants did not disclose that Plaintiffs would be required to pay a second, much larger recruitment fee before Plaintiffs would be permitted to leave for the United States. Recruiter Defendants also did not inform Plaintiffs that various other expenses paid by Plaintiffs were actually the responsibility of other parties, Plaintiffs’ future employers.

Plaintiffs paid the non-refundable First Recruitment Fee and received job offers to teach in the United States. Plaintiffs then interviewed at a U.S. Embassy to obtain their H-1B visas. Recruiter Defendants required Plaintiffs to instruct the U.S. Embassy to have Plaintiffs’ passports delivered directly to Recruiter Defendants’ office following the Embassy interviews, and Plaintiffs’ passports and visas were both sent to Recruiter Defendants’ office in the Philippines.

After Recruiter Defendants had the visas and passports, Recruiter Defendants told Plaintiffs for the first time that Plaintiffs would have to pay a second, larger recruitment fee (the “Second Recruitment Fee”) as well as the cost of their airfare to the United States. Recruiter Defendants explained that a second payment was required before Recruiter Defendants would return Plaintiffs’ visas and passports and before Plaintiffs would be permitted to depart for the United States. Recruiter Defendants told Plaintiffs that if they did not pay the additional fees, Plaintiffs would forfeit fees already paid, would not be permitted to travel to the United *1139 States, and would not be given their visas. Plaintiffs felt that they had to comply with Recruiter Defendants’ demands since they needed to work in the United States to repay their debts.

Plaintiffs complied with Recruiter Defendants’ demands and began working in Louisiana. But the situation did not improve. Defendant Navarro “threatened abuse of legal process in an effort to intimidate and control Plaintiffs and other Class Members by, inter alia, threatening that she could have teachers deported.” For example, when certain teachers stated that they planned to change their housing arrangements due to high costs, Navarro became upset, told the teachers that they could not move, and threatened to deport them. Navarro also threatened to deport a teacher for “complaining to a reporter at a Baton Rouge television station about abuses she suffered at the hands of Recruiter Defendants.”

Plaintiffs allege that Defendant Navarro also threatened Plaintiffs who voiced criticisms about Recruiter Defendants’ alleged trafficking scheme.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
790 F. Supp. 2d 1134, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 50754, 2011 WL 1811029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nunag-tanedo-v-east-baton-rouge-parish-school-board-cacd-2011.