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Are you paying the intern you just sent out to grab your morning cup of coffee? If not, you may have a wage and hour violation on your hands. Private employers have increasingly come under attack over their use of unpaid interns by the Department of Labor and private litigants. This is especially the case where an unpaid intern performs tasks more akin to an administrative assistant than an on-the-job student/trainee.
Sometimes the hunter becomes the hunted. That’s a lesson the U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”) recently learned. In an opinion dated July 2, 2015, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reprimanded the DOL for pursuing “poorly documented” and “legally dubious” claims. The Fifth Circuit found that the DOL had engaged in “uncivil and costly litigation tactics,” attempting to prevail by oppressively pursuing a very weak case. Ultimately, the court held that the DOL had “acted in bad faith” and ordered the district court to enter an award against the DOL for hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorneys’ fees.