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I-9 Audit & Compliance Lawyer

Quick Summary: I-9 Compliance & Audit Lawyer

  • ICE enforcement has intensified significantly. Workplace audits and inspections are rising sharply.
  • A March 2026 ICE update reclassified common I-9 errors as substantive violations. Employers can no longer correct these errors after an audit begins.
  • Fines range from $288 to $2,861 per I-9 form. A 200-employee company with a 50% error rate can face $200,000 or more in penalties.
  • Employers who act before receiving a Notice of Inspection are better positioned to demonstrate good faith and reduce fine exposure.

Need help? Contact John W. Lawit, LLC.

An I-9 audit & compliance lawyer works on a laptop placed on top of a table as they sit in front of a window inside a law officeICE enforcement against employers has changed sharply in 2026, and the pace of audits continues to climb across every major industry. A quiet rule update now strips protections that once let businesses fix small I-9 errors after an inspection began. Many employers are unaware of this shift, yet it can cost them hundreds of thousands of dollars per audit.

John W. Lawit, LLC helps companies face this new enforcement reality with steady, experienced counsel. As an I-9 compliance lawyer with more than 40 years of practice, John W. Lawit guides employers through audits, federal notices, and proactive compliance reviews. Our firm helps you spot exposure early, respond fast to government action, and protect your business from heavy fines.

What the March 2026 ICE Update Means for Employers

On March 16, 2026, ICE quietly revised its Form I-9 (Employment Eligibility Verification) inspection sheet without a press release or Federal Register notice. The Virtue Memorandum (1997), which let employers fix minor technical errors for nearly 30 years, no longer applies.

Many common errors are now substantive violations rather than technical violations, even when the missing data appears in retained documents.

  • Missing date of birth: Employers cannot fix this after an audit begins, even when the date appears in retained documents. The blank field alone now triggers a per-form penalty under the new sheet.
  • Failure to date signatures: Undated Section 1 or Section 2 signatures now trigger a per-form fine right away.
  • Missing date of hire: Forgetting the hire date is now a full violation from day one of any inspection.
  • Missing rehire date: Omitting a rehire date carries the same penalty risk as a missing hire date.
  • Missing employer rep name or title: Skipping the name, title, or address of the employer representative in Section 2 is now substantive. ICE treats these blank fields as full violations regardless of clerical intent.
  • Incomplete preparer or translator info: Blank fields in the preparer or translator block now count as fineable errors.
  • Spanish-language form outside Puerto Rico: Only employers in Puerto Rico may use the Spanish edition for compliance purposes.
  • Failure to record document info: Blank document entries are substantive even when photocopies of the documents are retained in the file. The form itself now controls the outcome of your audit.
  • Electronic system deficiencies: Audit trail, electronic signature, or security gaps in electronic I-9 systems are now your own violations with no cure path. Your software vendor’s compliance claims do not shield you.

Calculating Your I-9 Fine Exposure and Penalty Risk

ICE penalties under 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(e)(5) range from $288 to $2,861 per I-9 form. ICE sets each penalty by dividing your substantive violations by the total I-9s to find an overall error rate. That percentage then drives the per-form fine within the federal range.

A 200-employee company with a 50% error rate could face $200,000 or more in fines on a single audit. The math compounds fast across a mid-sized workforce, and many employers do not see the exposure until ICE puts a number on it. ICE no longer publishes a public penalty table, making the calculation less transparent for businesses under audit.

Five statutory factors set the final penalty under 8 C.F.R. § 274a.10(b)(2):

  • Business size
  • Good faith
  • Seriousness
  • Work authorization
  • Prior violations

Acting before a Notice of Inspection (NOI) arrives is the strongest path to penalty mitigation, since good faith depends on early self-correction. As an employer sanctions attorney, John W. Lawit pushes back on inflated penalties using each statutory factor that fits your case.

Proactive I-9 Audit and Compliance Services

Strong defense begins long before ICE knocks on the door. John W. Lawit has spent more than four decades helping employers stay ahead of federal enforcement. We deliver each service with care for your records, your team, and your daily operations.

Self-Audit and File Review Programs

As an I-9 self audit attorney, John W. Lawit leads file-by-file reviews of every active and recent I-9. Our internal I-9 audit process spots substantive issues, flags risky patterns, and produces a written correction plan. This I-9 audit approach can sharply lower your exposure before any federal notice lands at your door.

HR Training and Policy Development

We train your HR team on the new March 2026 standards in plain, practical language. We also build written policies for work authorization verification, document retention, and reverification timing. Even a single repeated mistake can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars across a midsized workforce.

E-Verify and Electronic System Compliance

As an E-Verify compliance attorney, we review your enrollment status and case workflows under E-Verify. We also examine your electronic systems for audit trail compliance, signature integrity, and security under 8 C.F.R. § 274a.2. If you need broader counsel on hiring foreign workers, our employer immigration attorneys can step in.

Pre-Acquisition I-9 Due Diligence

We review I-9 files at every target company before our clients close a deal or merger. This pre-acquisition work catches inherited liabilities before they become yours at closing. Buyers often discover six-figure exposures hiding inside an otherwise clean transaction.

Defending Your Company Against ICE Enforcement Actions

Federal inspections often begin with a quiet visit from Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) under the priorities published on the ICE worksite enforcement page. The first 72 hours after a Notice of Inspection shape the rest of your case, your records, and your fine exposure.

As an ICE Notice of Inspection attorney, John W. Lawit applies 40+ years of federal enforcement experience to every defense.

  • Notice of Inspection response: We act fast in the first 72 hours after the NOI arrives. We advise on what to produce, what to hold back, and how to preserve privileged materials.
  • Notice of Intent to Fine defense: We respond to the Notice of Intent to Fine (NIF) and contest every line item that does not hold up. We push back on inflated counts and disputed substantive findings.
  • Fine negotiation: We use the five statutory mitigating factors under 8 C.F.R. § 274a.10(b)(2) to lower per-form penalties. Each factor needs evidence, and we build that case file in full detail.
  • Workplace raid response: We provide on-site and remote crisis support during ICE raids, search warrants, and worker detentions. We protect employee rights, employer records, and ongoing business operations.
  • Federal court representation: Our work as a worksite enforcement attorney and ICE audit lawyer covers I-9 audit appeals and follow-on disputes in federal court.
  • Texas and Dallas-area support: John W. Lawit’s Texas bar admission backs our Dallas employer immigration lawyer team in federal I-9 matters.

Remote I-9 Verification and E-Verify Rules in 2026

Electronic systems do not eliminate compliance risk under the new federal standard. Gaps in your electronic I-9 systems are now your own substantive violations with no cure period and no vendor defense. Audit trail, electronic signature, and security deficiencies count fully against your business.

Remote document examination carries strict new conditions in 2026 that every hiring manager must understand. Employers must check the alternative procedure box in Section 2 or Supplement B and keep active E-Verify enrollment. Missing either step turns a routine check into a fineable substantive violation.

A DHS pilot program for non-E-Verify employers has been referenced in agency materials but is not yet active. Employers should not lean on it for current hires or treat it as a safe harbor. Our I-9 compliance attorney team reviews your systems and verification process before federal auditors do.

FAQ About I-9 Compliance

What changed with I-9 compliance in 2026, and how does it affect my business?

ICE updated its inspection sheet on March 16, 2026, and removed cure rights for many common errors. Mistakes that used to be technical are now substantive and fineable from day one of an audit. Your business now faces greater exposure and far less room to correct errors once an inspection begins.

How much can ICE fine my company for I-9 violations?

Federal fines range from $288 to $2,861 per I-9 form under current law. ICE uses your error rate to set the per-form amount within that range. A 200-employee company with a 50% error rate can face $200,000 or more in total penalties.

What should I do if my business receives an ICE Notice of Inspection?

Contact an experienced I-9 compliance lawyer within the first 72 hours of receiving the notice. Do not turn over original records without legal review of the demand and its scope. Early counsel often shapes the entire outcome of the audit and the final penalty.

Speak With an Experienced I-9 Compliance Attorney

The 2026 enforcement climate leaves little room for delay or guesswork. Employers who act before a Notice of Inspection arrives are better positioned to demonstrate good faith and reduce their exposure to fines.

John W. Lawit, LLC is ready to review your situation, audit your I-9 files, and defend your business. Call our office at (214) 609-2242 to discuss your compliance needs and protect your company.