Tree trimming firm pays biggest fine in US immigration case

Asplundh Tree Expert employees prepare equipment for a winter storm at a staging area on the Mississippi State Fairgrounds in this 2011 photo. (Greg Jenson/The Clarion-Ledger via AP)

MILWAUKEE: A tree trimming company has been handed the largest penalty imposed in a US immigration case, totaling $95 million, after pleading guilty to employing illegal immigrants, the US Attorney’s Office said.
Immigration reform is a major political issue in the US, with President Donald Trump saying he will crack down on illegal immigrants and build a wall between the US and Mexico in order to reduce illegal border crossings.
Asplundh Tree Experts, which trims trees and clears brush for power and gas lines across the country, hired employees who provided fake identification documents from 2010 to 2014, the US Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia said.
The prosecutor said on Thursday that Asplundh’s management were “willfully blind”, while supervisors and general foremen hired illegal immigrants through word of mouth referrals.
“This decentralized model tacitly perpetuated fraudulent hiring practices that, in turn, maximized productivity and profit,” it said.
The company’s chairman and CEO Scott Asplundh said in a statement that it has taken steps to improve its hiring practices, including reviewing the identification of all employees.
“We accept responsibility for the charges as outlined, and we apologize to our customers, associates and all other stakeholders for what has occurred,” he said.