A social media comedian’s unconventional business model has landed him in federal court after allegedly impersonating government officials while confronting workplace managers on camera. Kalamar White, known online as “Agent Ratliff,” faces serious legal consequences for what he claims is legitimate complaint resolution work.
According to sources, White operates OCDA (Occupational Care Diversity Affairs), a registered LLC that allows disgruntled employees to anonymously report workplace grievances.
For a fee, White dons an official-looking uniform, grabs a clipboard, and storms into businesses with a camera crew to confront managers about complaints—ranging from harassment allegations to workplace misconduct. His confrontational videos have attracted over a million TikTok followers, with individual videos regularly garnering millions of views.
The operation’s similarity to OSHA, the legitimate federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration, has become White’s biggest legal problem. In August 2024, Department of Labor agents raided his Georgia home after receiving complaints about federal impersonation. White claims approximately 30 officers arrived with drawn weapons, treating him like a criminal enterprise. He spent a month in county jail and faced an additional weapons charge due to a firearm found during the raid—problematic given his convicted felon status.
Following his release, White made cosmetic adjustments to his operation, removing OSHA references from uniforms and adding disclaimers to his social media accounts stating he’s not affiliated with the federal agency. However, these changes apparently weren’t enough.
In August 2025, White visited Holmes Building Materials in Baton Rouge, where he confronted supervisor Derek Jones about allegations including racial harassment and nepotism.
Holmes Building Materials and Jones have now filed a federal lawsuit alleging that White and his associates told employees they were connected to OSHA, deliberately creating confusion about their authority. The lawsuit goes beyond impersonation claims, accusing White of false imprisonment for allegedly preventing Jones from leaving the room, assault for blocking doorways, and battery for blowing cigarette smoke in Jones’s face.
The company also claims defamation, arguing that White’s video—which surpassed 100,000 YouTube views—seriously damaged their reputation in Baton Rouge. Despite receiving a formal demand to remove the content in September, White refused. Now, the plaintiffs want a federal judge to force deletion of not just the Holmes Building Materials video, but White’s entire catalog of workplace confrontation content.
White maintains his innocence, insisting he never claimed to be OSHA or any federal agency, only that OCDA is a registered company delivering real employee complaints. He’s seeking legal representation in Louisiana and continues posting workplace confrontation videos, apparently viewing the lawsuit as just another obstacle in his controversial operation.