Business & Tech

Chipotle Lawsuit: Nearly 10,000 Employees Say Chain Cheats Workers

Employees say they the popular chain has engaged in wage theft but Chipotle officials say the lawsuit has no merit.

Chipotle is making headlines again as nearly 10,000 current and former employees are suing the chain for wage theft, claiming that the company made them work extra hours without pay, according to numerous media reports including CNN Money.

The class action lawsuit claims, "Chipotle routinely requires hourly-paid restaurant employees to punch out, and then continue working until they are given permission to leave."

Felipe Ricardo told CNN Money that he worked at a Chipotle in Danbury, Conn., in the summer of 2016. He said although the schedule said his shift ended at 11:30 p.m., it was "almost impossible" to get out on time and he worked until 1 a.m. without extra pay.

Find out what's happening in Danburyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

This is the first class action lawsuit against the company for wage theft, according to lawyer Kent Williams of Williams Law Firm, who is representing the employees in the suit, Turner v. Chipotle, which was first filed two years ago and has since been joined by the thousands of workers.

In a statement to Fortune, Chris Arnold, Chipotle's communications director, dismissed the lawsuit saying, “A lawsuit is nothing more than allegations and is proof of nothing. Since this suit was originally filed in 2014, we have maintained that it has no merit, and we will reserve our discussion of details for the legal proceedings.”

Find out what's happening in Danburyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Chipotle made headlines last year and closed dozens of locations after a multi-state E. coli outbreak. The company said it conducted food and environmental testing in affected restaurants and tested food in its distribution center to correct the problem after dozens became ill after eating the restaurant's Mexican food.

Read the full CNN Money story here.

Read the full Fortune story here.

Image by Mike Mozart via Flickr Creative Commons

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