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  NRI CEO forced domestic worker to sleep with dogs

NRI CEO forced domestic worker to sleep with dogs

PTI | LALIT K. JHA
Published : Sep 8, 2016, 6:33 am IST
Updated : Sep 8, 2016, 6:33 am IST

An Indian-American CEO of an IT staffing and consulting firm has been charged in the US with callous treatment of a domestic worker who had come from India to work for her.

An Indian-American CEO of an IT staffing and consulting firm has been charged in the US with callous treatment of a domestic worker who had come from India to work for her.

The department of labour in its complaint alleges that Himanshu Bhatia, the CEO for Rose International and IT Staffing, paid her domestic service worker $400 a month plus food and housing for work being performed during 15 and half hours a day seven days a week at her home in San Juan Capistrano and other luxury residences in Miami, Las Vegas and Long Beach, California. According to the complaint filed by the US labour secretary Thomas E. Perez on August 22 in the US district court for the central district of California, the domestic service worker identified as Sheela Ningwal was subject to callous abuse and retaliation. She was forced to sleep in the garage on a piece of carpet alongside Ms Bhatia’s dogs when she was ill, and being left without food when Ms Bhatia leave her residence for days, the complaint alleged.

Additionally, Ms Bhatia confiscated Ningwal’s passport, restricting her free movement and only made available to the domestic service worker when she had to travel to perform domestic service duties at Ms Bhatia’s penthouse in Miami, it said.

Ms Bhatia terminated Ningwal in December 2014 after catching her researching the topic of “labour laws” on line and after the domestic service worker refused to sign a document Bhatia authored, stating that she was being paid an adequate salary and had no employment dispute with Ms Bhatia, the complaint said.

The department’s Wage and Hour Division found that Ms Bhatia violated the Fair Labour Standards Act’s minimum wage and record keeping provisions from July 2012 to December 2014.

Location: United States, Washington