Civil Rights Division Settlement - Compunnel Software Citizenship Discrimination
Summary
DOJ Civil Rights Division secured a $313,420 settlement with Compunnel Software Group for citizenship status discrimination in violation of the Immigration and Nationality Act. The company's recruiters posted job advertisements excluding U.S. citizens and Permanent Residents while favoring H-1B and temporary visa holders. Compunnel will pay $58,000 in back pay to an excluded U.S. worker and $255,420 in civil penalties to Treasury, plus implement injunctive relief including training, monitoring, and compliance enhancements.
What changed
The DOJ Civil Rights Division obtained a settlement with Compunnel Software Group addressing violations of the Immigration and Nationality Act's prohibition on citizenship status discrimination. The company's recruiters posted job advertisements explicitly restricting consideration to H-1B and other temporary visa holders, excluding U.S. citizens and Permanent Residents from desirable employment opportunities.
Employers in professional services, staffing, and technology sectors must ensure job postings comply with INA anti-discrimination requirements and train recruiting staff accordingly. Failure to do so risks civil penalties up to $16,000 per violation, back pay awards, and mandatory injunctive relief including compliance system overhauls. The DOJ has signaled it will continue seeking maximum penalties for citizenship discrimination under its Protecting U.S. Workers Initiative.
What to do next
- Audit all job postings for citizenship status restrictions not authorized by law
- Train recruiters and hiring staff on INA anti-discrimination requirements
- Implement compliance monitoring systems to prevent future citizenship-based discrimination in hiring
Penalties
$313,420 total settlement ($58,000 back pay to Charging Party; $255,420 civil penalties to U.S. Treasury); injunctive relief including mandatory training, monitoring, and compliance system enhancements
Archived snapshot
Apr 8, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
News
Press Release
Civil Rights Division Obtains Settlement with Company that Discouraged U.S. Workers from Applying for Jobs
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Share For Immediate Release Office of Public Affairs The United States Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division announced that it has secured a $313,420 settlement agreement with Compunnel Software Group, Inc., a New Jersey based professional services provider. The settlement addresses allegations that the company violated the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) when some of its recruiters posted job advertisements for positions in the United States that included citizenship status restrictions not authorized by law. The explicitly discriminatory language in some of the ads excluded U.S. citizens and Permanent Residents from consideration for desirable employment opportunities while favoring those with H-1B or other temporary visas. Under the settlement agreement, Compunnel has agreed to pay $58,000 in back pay to the Charging Party, a U.S. Citizen who was excluded from consideration for a position as a Python Developer based on his citizenship status. It has also agreed to pay civil penalties to the United States Treasury in the amount of $255,420. Compunnel has agreed to other injunctive relief and has already taken steps to train and monitor its recruiters, as well as enhance compliance systems to prevent future discrimination.
“It’s illegal to discourage U.S. workers from applying for American jobs,” said Assistant Attorney General Harmeet K. Dhillon of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “Employers cannot exclude U.S. workers from the labor force by discriminating against them based on their citizenship status. Employers must design recruitment, training, and compliance practices to ensure adherence to federal civil rights laws.”
This settlement is the ninth settlement since the Department re-launched its Protecting U.S. Workers Initiative in 2025 to enforce the INA’s prohibition on citizenship status discrimination against companies that illegally discriminate against U.S. workers in favor of those with employment visas. Under these settlements, the Department obtains civil penalties for each violation and will continue to seek the maximum penalty permitted by law. The settlements also involve awards of back pay, when warranted, and require employers to conduct comprehensive training for relevant staff and recruiters and cease restricting consideration for job opportunities based on workers’ citizenship status without a lawful reason.
For information about additional settlements under the Protecting U.S. Workers Initiative, visit IER’s website.
For informal assistance, the public can call IER’s free hotline at 1-800-255-7688 for workers or at 1-800-255-8155 for employers (1-800-237-2515, TTY for hearing impaired between 9am and 5pm Eastern Time, Monday through Friday; sign up for a live webinar or watch an on-demand presentation; email IER@usdoj.gov; or visit www.justice.gov/ier.
Updated April 8, 2026 Component Civil Rights Division Press Release Number: 26-321
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