The owner of a Utah game studio is going to jail for not paying his employees. Criminal prosecution for nonpayment of wages is rare. Incarceration is even more rare, but it is deserved for a guy like Dave Rushton, considering the lives he upended four years ago at Sensory Sweep Studios in suburban Salt Lake City.
An actual criminal prosecution for unpaid wages had not happened in Utah for 10 years when the state began investigating Rushtonâs studio in 2009. On Oct. 10, Rushton, 57, began serving a one-year sentence, and still owes his workers $1.2 million, according to Utahâs attorney general.
When a major client folded in 2008, Sensory Sweep didnât lay off workers or close its doors, it kept on chugging. That sounds great, until you realize that no one was getting paidâexcept for Rushton, some of his family members, and favored friends. Rushton was accused of selectively paying some employees, justifying it by saying the licensing companies were slow to pay and holding him to confidentiality agreements that forbade giving a real explanation.
Employees noticed in 2008 that contributions to their 401(k) plans had stopped. Then their health plans lapsedâan unpaid dental claim of $4,400 forced one worker to bankruptcy. To add insult to injury, Social Security taxes had not been paid since 2007âand the employees themselves were liable for that. Thatâs taxes on work for which they were not paid.
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All of this for a job making games like Jackass: The Game and Alvin and the Chipmunks. Sensory Sweep was mostly known for fast work on handheld ports of movie adaptations. As to why someone would continue to work for such a company, a Sensory Sweep employee said it best to Kotaku in 2009
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It helps that Utah is a backwater in games development, and that designers who have bought homes, have spouses in work and children in school are not exactly mobile. Rushton exploited this labor market.
âWe thought that Mr. Rushton was trying to continue his business on the backs of his employees,â said a wage-claim manager at the Utah Labor Commission.
Utah Game Developer Jailed for Not Paying Wages
(Top photo | Shutterstock)