Chapter 92: Leaf's Internship Program
Zhang Cheng was still looking forward to the arrival of summer vacation at the end of May. Ye Zi ended one year of study at the Foreign Language School at the end of April and ushered in the summer vacation in advance. After the summer vacation, Ye Zi would go to a nearby middle school to attend the third year of high school. In addition, Ye Zi's internship was also put on the agenda.
American primary and secondary school students can write to files when participating in social activities and doing odd jobs, and finally they have to read when they go to college and join the company. Both universities and companies want to know what their people will order.
Many girls work in fast food restaurants - using child labor is also a public secret to making money by foreign garbage chain stores, because using child labor is cheap and you don’t need to provide them with unemployment insurance, pension insurance, etc., even the union cannot control this.
There are more places for boys to go, usually sending newspapers, helping people walk their dogs, mowing lawns, etc. Unless the boss who hires students wants to do death, there is no heavy physical labor or long-term labor in the assembly line.
The good news for Chinese Americans is that although American boys here are tall and big, they work a lot and fast, but when they finally get their salary, they are paid according to the hourly salary system. If anyone dares to pay a quantitative piece-based salary, you will not discuss the fine.
Zhang Chengye Zi and his three aunts ordered three drinks in a fast food restaurant and sat down to drink. Their eyes were staring at the students working in the fast food restaurant. After a few minutes, the aunt asked, "How is it? What do you think you can do?"
Ye Zi pouted: "It's not impossible, but it seems to be meaningless."
Auntie: "Then what do you want to do?"
Ye Zi: "If an office clerk is an assistant, I think it's much better to have a computer to play with."
Aunt: "No. It's too dangerous for girls to go to the office, and they are easily promoted and reused by their boss in the future. The unspoken rules are still the girls who suffer from it."
Zhang Cheng remembered that the team's general manager Weier was promoted and reused in the future. He decided not to participate in this discussion.
Ye Zi turned his head and shouted to Zhang Cheng: "Cousin."
Zhang Cheng remembered the team. Of course, my cousin must not be able to make the team's internship, otherwise even if my cousin doesn't say anything, my aunt will get angry.
But when registering a team, Zhang Cheng discovered one thing, that is, it is actually easy to start a company, not as my father said, and it has to run dozens of units and stamp hundreds of stamps: "In fact, it is easy to start a company in Nevada, and it is exempt from many state taxes. Can we open a small company by ourselves? Or acquire a small company, which can't cost a lot of money."
Aunt: "Yezi is your person, you can just make a decision. It is said that whether you and Yezi go to college or not, they will have no worries about food and clothing all their lives, but learning more is always nothing bad."
Ye Zi and Zhang Cheng said obediently: "Yes."
Things become simple if you have a purpose and don’t have money. Zhang Cheng and Ye Zi searched the company that is being sold online and chose the price from low to high. Zhang Cheng and Ye Zi are most interested in is a St. Peter’s bail company.
The company's offer is 15,000 US dollars, which is lower than the 20,000 US dollars rewarded by the Carson police after Zhang Cheng caught the kidnapper Zhongmo last time - 20,000 US dollars Zhang Cheng gave his cousin two thousand US dollars pocket money, and 500 US dollars pocket money to Nancy. If Nancy is not as good as asking for cigarettes from strangers, there will be no kidnapping case.
I went to a soy sauce baby and had a delicious turkey banquet made of two turkeys. In short, everyone was very happy, except for Uncle Zhongmo. Uncle Zhongmo was suspected of illegal drug trafficking, drug-hiding, and kidnapping children with fatal weapons. In addition, the stuttering lawyer appointed by the government, I would have to live to be over 100 years old if I wanted to be released from prison alive.
Except for a few states in the United States, most states implement a commercial bail company system, that is, hiring a bail broker and paying 10% of the bail as the remuneration of the bail broker to guarantee that they leave the police station’s detention center before the trial begins.
If the suspect finally runs away while on bail or is arrested for committing other crimes during bail, the former bail broker will pay the bail himself. The latter will file a new bail based on the new charges.
In this way, the job of a bail broker is to ensure that the prisoner appears in court when the court is held, and his job is to constantly contact the guaranteed suspect and ensure that the suspect will not leave before the court is held.
What if the suspect runs away? Of course, the bail broker company hires someone to catch him back. Because the bail broker will have to contact the suspect once a few hours, and the suspect's passport must be temporarily detained by the court. How far can you drive in a few hours?
Of course, if you successfully go to a port or border (limited to the US-Mexico border) to smuggle other countries, the bail brokerage company can only honestly pay the suspect's bail. After all, this is a business, and there is a profit and there is a compensation.
In addition to bail suspects, bail brokerage companies also have a business, which is to arrest suspects. Whether they run away without court hearings or are not caught by police after committing crimes, the US Police Department will give the suspect a reward to attract people to inform the police of the fugitive suspect or directly send the suspect back to the police.
Those who work in this industry are called bounty hunters. Many fugitive suspects are rebellious and dangerous people, but such bounties are often higher, and the extremely dangerous suspects will indicate that they are alive and dead when offering rewards.
In short, high risks are accompanied by high returns. Catching a suspect ranges from hundreds of dollars to tens of thousands of dollars, which does not include the victim's family's additional reward. Such additional rewards sometimes far exceed the police's rewards to reach millions of dollars. If you do such a business, you can buy a ranch for retirement.
Because the suspect who was arrested in the last Amber alarm received a reward from the police, Zhang Cheng and Ye Zi were interested in the bounty hunter business. It doesn’t matter if they caught a few suspects. If you say that, we just caught the bounty hunter who wanted suspects by the police, it’s enough to be more respectful than those students who worked as hourly workers in the Fortune 500 fast food restaurants in the world.
Moreover, after Ye Zi found the university a year later, this company worth $15,000 can be operated as a side business, closed down or transferred to the bank.
After taking the lawyer and check to the notary office to repay the St. Peter's bail company, all I bought was two roadside rental rooms with air-conditioned bathrooms and a few desks, water dispensers, telephones, fax machines, etc., which were nowhere near the size of the national dental defense team.
Zhang Cheng told Ye Zi in the empty St. Peter's bail company (too lazy to change its name) office: "Now the company has one boss and one part-time hourly assistant, we need at least a secretary and a copywriting to help us collect and organize the information of fugitive criminals wanted by the police and handle daily affairs."
Ye Zi: "Recruiting?"
Zhang Cheng: "Recruiting."
It is still relatively easy to recruit workers in the United States now. The unemployment rate is so high. Whether it is online recruitment, TV advertising recruitment or traditional newspaper recruitment advertisements, there will be a large number of people applying for jobs.
So Zhang Cheng chose a local newspaper in Reno and published a small advertisement, which seemed more formal. The content was that St. Peter's bail company recruited a female copywriter with a weekly salary of 800 US dollars. He recruited a female secretary with a weekly salary of 900 US dollars. He attached the address and application time. (To be continued, please search Piaotianwen, the novel is better and faster!
Chapter completed!