66 verifiable claims checked across the federal kickback framework (29 CFR §§531.32 and 531.35), the IRS standard mileage rate framework (Notice 2026-10, IR-2025-128, the 2026 FAVR cap, prior-year notices), the federal accountable-plan and substantiation rules (26 CFR §§1.62-2 and 1.274-5), the One Big Beautiful Bill Act's permanent extension of IRC §67(g), California Labor Code §2802(a)/(b)/(c) with its supporting limitations statutes (CCP §338(a), CCP §685.010, Bus. & Prof. Code §17208), the anchor California case law (Gattuso v. Harte-Hanks Shoppers, Inc., Cochran v. Schwan's Home Service, Inc., Thai v. International Business Machines Corp., Williams v. Amazon.com Services LLC, Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court, Morillion v. Royal Packing Co.), the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act expense-reimbursement amendment (820 ILCS 115/9.5, enforcement at 820 ILCS 115/14), the Massachusetts DLS regulation (454 CMR 27.04(4)) and Wage Act enforcement (MGL c.149 §§148, 150), the Field Code lineage statutes (MCA §39-2-701, NDCC §34-02-01, SDCL §60-2-1), New Hampshire RSA 275:57, Iowa Code §91A.3(6), Minnesota Statutes §177.24, NY Labor Law §198-c, the Pennsylvania WPCL, 7 DCMR §§908 and 910, Seattle Municipal Code 14.20 and 14.34, and the multi-state work-location compliance principle.
61 claims ship ✓ Verified, 5 ⚠ Partial, 0 ✗ Issue, 0 🕐 Outdated, 0 ⓘ Unverifiable. The five Partial findings flag (i) the cell-phone "reasonable percentage" practitioner range that is settlement-derived rather than judicially fixed, (ii) the lump-sum / monthly stipend dollar ranges ($30–$100 cell phone, $30–$75 internet, $500–$1,500 equipment) that are industry-practice patterns rather than statutory or judicial figures, (iii) the FOH 30c11 substantive content (verified at chapter-level only; per-section content depends on the legacy WHD PDF), (iv) Williams v. Amazon class size and exact period (not confirmed beyond the docket number and the $950,000 final-approval amount), and (v) the EPLI-exclusion industry pattern (no Tier-1 source enumerates it; it is broker-and-counsel practitioner consensus). Each Partial is disclosed in the research body itself, satisfying the ⚠-acceptable test under the source-anchored methodology.
The source spread runs heaviest at Cornell LII for federal statute and CFR text (the consolidated piece references 8 distinct LII sections across 26 USC, 29 USC, 26 CFR, and 29 CFR), with anchors at irs.gov for the 2026 rate notice and the OBBBA provisions page, dol.gov for the Field Operations Handbook and opinion letter, FindLaw and Justia for case opinions, and the state-legislature / state-municipal-code domains for the state-by-state coverage. Coverage: federal floor + 50 states + DC + Seattle + 6 named California / federal cases + 23 distinct statute / regulation / IRS-notice citations.