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Agency spokesman Mark Lassiter said that from 2003-2006 an employer had to have more than 10 employees whose Social Security numbers and names did not match to receive a warning letter. It was not immediately clear how many domestic employees Whitman had during that time. "An employer with one or two employees in 2003 to 2006 would not have gotten an employer ... letter," Lassiter said. Whitman's campaign said in a statement that Diaz Santillan came to Whitman and her husband in June 2009 and confessed that she had used her sister's documents to gain employment in the U.S. That was five months after Whitman formed an exploratory committee to run for governor. In an interview Wednesday on Fox Business Network, Whitman called the accusation that she knew Diaz Santillan was an illegal immigrant "a lie." In 2000, when Diaz Santillan was hired through an agency, "we specified with the agent we wanted to make sure we had someone who was here legally to work in the United States. No one was more surprised when she came to (me) in June 2009 and admitted she was here illegally and had forged the documents." The Whitman campaign would not provide the name of the employment agency. Allred also said Diaz Santillan was mistreated, and said she will file a claim against Whitman for back pay and mileage. She provided no proof to document those allegations. Brown's spokesman, Sterling Clifford, said in a statement that Whitman apparently thinks the rules don't apply to her. "After more than a year of Whitman demanding immigration policy that
'holds employers accountable,' we learn that accountability doesn't extend to her own actions," he said. Clifford said the Browns use a well-known national housekeeping service that comes twice a month to their home in the Oakland Hills. He said Brown has never knowingly employed an illegal immigrant.
Allred is known for savvy -- some say manipulative -- media skills that get her clients in the public eye. She's represented Jodie Fisher, whose sexual harassment allegations led to the ouster of former Hewlett-Packard Co. CEO Mark Hurd and a stuntwoman who claimed Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's campaign defamed her after she alleged the former bodybuilder groped her. Her decision to withhold "evidence" related to the Diaz Santillan case until Thursday guaranteed her case another day of headlines.
[Associated
Press;
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