A photo posted by Alexia Palmer (@alexiapalmermodel) on Dec 18, 2013 at 8:16pm PST

The closer we inch toward Trumpocalypse, the more dirt comes out, like soil tossed on a coffin, about America's Last President—from dodged city fees to hypocritical construction financing and alleged wage theft. The latest: Trump's SoHo-based modeling agency is being sued by Jamaican model Alexia Palmer, who says that the company lied in its work-visa application when it said she would be paid a $75,000-a-year salary. A Manhattan judge will decide whether the suit merits class action status by the end of this month, Reuters reports.

Palmer signed with Trump Model Management when she was 17, after finishing second place in a talent contest in Jamaica. In the application for her H1-B visa, a non-immigrant visa that lets companies employ foreign workers in specialty occupations, her employers said that she would be paid $75,000 a year, according to the lawsuit. But once she came to New York at the age of 17 and began modeling, the agency saddled her with myriad expenses: dermatologist appointments, runway walking lessons, makeup kits, and limousine rides, among others. For her work on 21 projects between 2011 and 2013, the agency paid her $3,880.75, total.

"That's what slavery people do: you work and don't get no money," Palmer told ABC.

Ironically, the H1-B visa in question is one that The Donald says he'd like to effectively eliminate. According to his campaign website, he'd like to raise the required wage paid to workers on H1-Bs to make it infeasible for most companies to sponsor them.

Though Trump is the owner of Trump Model Management, he's not actually named in the suit—rather, it names the company's president, Corinne Nicolas. Lawyers for the defense have called the suit "frivolous" and "without merit," and say that "at the end of the day, this model just didn’t have a successful career." In March, they unsuccessfully motioned to dismiss the case, calling it a "garden variety breach of contract claim." A Trump campaign spokesperson called Palmer's treatment "standard practice in the modeling industry."

Reuters notes that Trump's companies have applied for 1,100 visas for foreign workers since 2000, and 250 of those have been for models. Palmer's lawyers are seeking class action status for the lawsuit, to allow them all to receive unpaid wages—Palmer, for her part, says she's owed $225,000 in back pay. If the judge does decide to grant class action status, Trump Model Management could be sued for upwards of $56 million, assuming the hundreds of models the agency has reportedly employed join the suit.