There are many miscellaneous commands in Leviticus 19 about everything from honoring one's father and mother (19:3) to not taking advantage of the disabled (19:14) to not eating meat with blood (19:26). Amidst these are a handful of commands that restate or are related to the Ten Commandments. The Ten Commandments do not prohibit all lying, only the giving of false testimony (Exodus 20:16, Deuteronomy 5:20); it is only Leviticus 19:11 that outright condemns general lying, despite how it is permissible and even righteous to lie in order to prevent someone else from succeeding in an even more wicked act like murder (see Exodus 2 and Joshua 2 with James 2:25). Some Biblical commands that might appear like sheer gratuitous repetition in the text, which itself would not logically necessitate anything more than that there is repetition (such as that they are the product of multiple scribes across centuries with no divine prompting/inspiration), are actually not.
However, when Leviticus 19:11 says not to steal, this is indeed a direct restatement of something Yahweh has already prescribed against in Exodus in Exodus 20, with a great part of Exodus 22 detailing the just response to various forms of theft or destruction of another's property due to negligence (see also Leviticus 6:1-5 and Numbers 5:5-8). Why would God, if the Torah is indeed an account of divine revelation to the Israelites, randomly emphasize this again? It is shortly after Leviticus 19:11 that a verse condemns defrauding and robbing people in particular, subcategories of theft having to do with deception and threats of violence respectively, along with another kind of mistreatment:
Leviticus 19:13—"'"Do not defraud or rob your neighbor. Do not hold back the wages of a hired worker overnight."'"
Though they could be presented as similar but distinct forms of injustice, Leviticus 19:13 does suggest that to pay a worker as late as after the next night is theft. Deuteronomy 24:14-15 later clarifies that the wages must be paid before sunset in particular. Holding back the payment until half the night has passed would not be withholding compensation overnight, but it would still be waiting until after sunset. Yes, paying them three days or two weeks later does not entail permanently withholding wages from them. The workers affected nevertheless have already labored to earn their pay and might need money immediately. There is no ultimate reason other than egoistic whim to make anything but quick payment an ordinary business practice, perhaps to foster greater dependence of the employee on the employer and thus induce desperation or submission.
It is still depriving others of what is rightfully theirs if one does not pay workers their wages before the next sunset. Do not even wait until night has fallen altogether, Deuteronomy says. As the "Second Law", Deuteronomy oftentimes repeats earlier laws from Yahweh with additional details. The last book of the Torah does not need to strictly say that withholding wages even a few minutes past sunset is a loose form of theft, and at worst an egregious, classist sin against those in dire need. This was already said! What Deuteronomy adds, although this would still be true by logical necessity if the obligations of Leviticus 19:13 exist one way or another, is that foreigners and the poor must not be excluded from this treatment because the poor rely on quick payment in order to live. As if to mock the asinine idea in Rabbinic Judaism that there are only an alleged seven moral obligations that Gentiles have, the text calls delaying the payment of wages past sunset an intrinsic sin people of any descent can cry out to God for.
The form of theft in question might not be as easily recognized as such. It does not, after all, involve one person illicitly taking a physical belonging from another person that was already in the latter's possession. This makes no difference as to whether it is sinful in itself no matter who the victim or the perpetrator is. Perhaps few forms of theft would be as vehemently denied as having this nature by the sort of evangelical who pretends to honor the Biblical God, all while dismissing what the Bible commands as universally obligatory (much of the Torah's laws!) and opposing entirely innocent activities (showing physical affection to opposite gender friends, using profanity, and so on). Such a widespread practice is not made morally valid because it would disrupt the comfort of oppressive employers or deviate from established national convention. As the Bible puts it without using the exact words, holding back the wages of a laborer until after the next sunset is a less direct type of theft, and habitually unrepentant thieves are said to not inherit the kingdom of God after the resurrection (1 Corinthians 6:9-11).
