California initiated legal actions against Infosys after a compliant was filed by whistleblower Jack 'Jay' Palmer, a former Infosys employee.
Market
News : Infosys, India's top IT major, has agreed to pay
$800,000 to settle allegations of misclassification of foreign
workers and tax fraud, officials announced Tuesday.
Infosys
will pay California $800,000 (nearly Rs 56 crore) to resolve
allegations that between 2006 and 2017, approximately 500 Infosys
employees were working in the State on Infosys-sponsored B-1 visas
rather than H-1B visas, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra
said.
This
misclassification resulted in Infosys
avoiding California payroll taxes such as the unemployment insurance,
disability insurance, and employment training taxes.
H-1B
visas also require employers to pay workers at the local prevailing
wage, an official statement said.
"Today's
settlement shows that attempting to evade California law doesn't pay.
Infosys brought in workers on the wrong visas in order to underpay
them and avoid paying taxes. With this settlement, California has
been made whole," Becca said.
In
the settlement, Infosys, however, denied the allegations and asserted
of no wrongdoings.
In
2017, Infosys had agreed to pay the State of New York $1 million to
settle allegations of submitting wrong documents to federal
authorities.
The
Californian settlement that was carried out in November was released
to the media on Tuesday.
California
initiated legal actions against Infosys after a compliant was filed
by whistleblower Jack "Jay" Palmer, a former Infosys
employee.
Palmer
had sued the Indian company in 2017.
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