Las Vegas Vivint Recruits Say ‘Dream Jobs’ Became Trafficking Nightmare

A Clark County lawsuit accuses Vivint and related parties of luring young foreign workers to Las Vegas with big promises of steady pay, overtime and housing, then putting them to work under what their attorneys call coerced servitude. The complaint, filed in September 2025, centers on Mexican national Christian Giles‑Gomez. Lawyers say he and other recruits were brought to Nevada in January 2025 under H‑2B job orders and were sent straight into the field. According to the filing, wages were converted into supposed debts, workers were moved more than 400 miles away from Las Vegas, and at least one plaintiff was evicted in July 2025 after raising concerns.

Attorneys for Giles‑Gomez, Lawrence Hill, Thomas Beckom and Mitchell Bisson, say recruiters dangled $20 an hour,…..

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