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Fed indictments tell how H-1B visas were used to undercut wages

U.S. announces arrests in several states alleging visa fraud

Patrick Thibodeau

February 13, 2009 (Computerworld) Federal agents on Thursday said they arrested 11 people in six states in a crackdown on H-1B visa fraud and unsealed documents that detail how the visa process was used to undercut the salaries of U.S. workers.

Federal authorities allege that in some cases, H-1B workers were paid the prevailing wages of low-cost regions and not necessarily the higher salaries paid in the locations where they worked. By doing this, the companies were "displacing qualified American workers and violating prevailing wage laws," said federal authorities in a statement announcing the indictments.

Employers are required to pay H-1B workers prevailing wages, but those wage rates can vary significantly -- by tens of thousands of dollars, depending on the region. How many U.S. workers may have been displaced was not detailed by federal authorities.

The arrests were carried out by federal, state and local agents working in Iowa, California, Massachusetts, Texas, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and New Jersey. The government's action "is the result of an extensive, ongoing investigation into suspected H-1B visa fraud, mail fraud and conspiracy," said Matthew Whitaker, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa, in a statement. The investigation was dubbed Operation Pacific Vision.

The H-1B workers were also victims, according to the federal indictments. Some were hired for jobs that didn't exist. One worker from Pakistan who arrived in the U.S. for a programming job, for instance, ended up with a job pumping gas.

The Iowa focus and connections raised in the indictments are notable in one regard: It's the home state of the U.S. Senate's leading critic of the H-1B program, Republican Chuck Grassley, who released in October a study on visa fraud by the U.S. Immigration and Citizenship Service (USCIS) that found that one in five H-1B applications were either fraudulent or had violated a law or regulation in some way.

The company that seemed to get the most attention from federal authorities is Vision Systems Group Inc., which authorities said had its principal places of business in Somerset and South Plainfield, N.J., and an office in Coon Rapids, Iowa. The company was cited in a 10-count indictment. Calls to the company seeking comment were not returned by press time.

The indictment, in part, alleges that Vision Systems submitted a Labor Condition Application that detailed prevailing wage data for a location in Iowa "rather than the prevailing wage where the worker would actually be employed."

The indictment does not say where the H-1B employee would be employed, but from a prevailing wage perspective, location is important.

For instance, using data from the Foreign Labor Certification Data Center Online Wage Library, the prevailing wage of a computer programmer in Des Moines, for instance, ranges from $42,800 a year for an entry-level worker to more than $71,000 a year for an experienced one. But in the Newark, N.J., area, a computer programmer's pay would range from $55,000 to $108,100, according to the wage calculator.

Michael Aytes, acting director of the USCIS, said the action "is a prime example of how the Department of Homeland Security identifies fraud."

"Our adjudication officers can spot inconsistencies during the application process that ultimately lead to the successful outcome we're seeing today," said Aytes in a statement. "Visa fraud undermines the integrity of the immigration system, and I'm proud that our officers have helped to ensure that the American people and our customers can continue to depend on a reliable system."

The government arrested on conspiracy and mail fraud Shiva Neeli in Boston, Ramakrishna Maguluri in Atlanta, Villiappan Subbaiah in Dallas, Suresh Pola in Pennsylvania, Karambir Yadav in Louisville, Ky., Amit Justa and Venkata Guduru, both in New Jersey, and Vijay Myneni in San Jose.

Charged with conspiracy, mail fraud and wire fraud was Vishnu Reddy in Los Angeles and Chockalingam Palaniappan in San Jose, who operated a company named Pacific West Corp. in Santa Clara, Calif.

Praveen Andapally, in New Jersey, was charged with conspiracy, mail and wire fraud, and making a false statement in an immigration matter.

The government can charge mail and wire fraud if it believes the mail was used to send a false statement in support of a visa application.


Fed indictments tell how H-1B visas were used to undercut wages
 
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Bangladesh telegram fraud


With the advent of email, fax machines and mobile telephones, hardly anyone uses telegrams these days.
However, the investigators say they have discovered that millions of dollars have been spent employing hundreds of staff in telegraph offices.
They have advised the government to close the offices down.
State-owned focus
Most Bangladeshis stopped sending telegrams a long time ago.
But investigators, who are auditing the state-owned Bangladesh Telecommunications Company, say it continues to operate 460 telegraph offices, employing 883 members of staff, even though do they virtually no work.
The investigators say this has cost the government approximately $4m since 2001, much of which, they believe, has been stolen.
Other employees of the Bangladesh Telecommunications Company are also being investigated.
The Anti-Corruption Commission says it will file charges against 38 individuals, who between them are accused of pocketing more than $5m.
Bangladesh's new government, which was elected in December, has promised to support the work of the commission, which was empowered by the previous, army-backed government, to clean up a country often described as the world's most corrupt.
It appears now to be concentrating on state-owned firms and utilities.
Charges which had been brought against many leading politicians, including new Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, have been dropped, after they complained that the accusations were politically driven.
 
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UK education fraud, bogus-college managed by a Bangladeshi


Following a BBC London investigation, a private college in Shadwell has to pay £12,500 for selling bogus qualifications
Mortgage broker and businessman, Polash Rahman, the director of LBT College in Shadwell, has been ordered to pay £12,500 in fines and costs for misleading students to believe they were getting British degrees.
Mr Rahman was sentenced at Snaresbrook Crown Court by Judge John Lafferty, who said: "These qualifications weren't worth the paper they were written on. The institution could not provide the facilities or the courses you were offering."
The prosecution was brought by the Trading Standards team at Tower Hamlets Council, following a complaint by Sounak Halder, a young student from India, who started a Master’s course at the college in 2006 and dropped out when he found the facilities were not what he expected.


A BBC London investigation in 2008 revealed that, despite claims on the LBT college prospectus to have a well-stocked library, the college had only a bookcase, a few classrooms and less than 20 students.
The costs to be paid by Mr Rahman include a £4,500 refund to Sounak Halder.
Tower Hamlets Councillor Abdal Ullah said: "The council is at the forefront of tackling these so-called bogus colleges. We are working really hard to crack down on places which offer fake accreditations and which do not deliver what they promise.
"Students have lost money in good faith and we will not stand for it here. I am pleased with this result at court."
Paul Greeno, Senior Prosecutor with the Legal team at Tower Hamlets Council told BBC London that, although the fine was relatively small, it may be enough to deter similar scams in the future. LBT College has now closed.
 
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Six Gujaratis plead guilty to criminal charges in US

New Jersey: Six Gujaratis have pleaded guilty to conspiring with the owner of an Edison-based consulting firm, who was also a township board of adjustment member at the time, to defraud the United State's government by receiving temporary visas and green cards for unqualified Indians.

The business owner, Nilesh Dasondi, who waged an unsuccessful bid for a Democratic nomination for Edison Township Council in the June 2007 primary, was arrested in June 2008 on charges that orchestrated the alleged conspiracy.

He was released from custody on a bond secured by three homes following his arrest, and he resigned from the zoning board shortly after. His case is pending.

Four people pleaded guilty before US district Judge Newark: Ajit Vyas, 40, of Hoffman Estates, Illinois, Vimal Patel, 36, of Maricopa, Arizona, and Kishor Parikh, 42, and Chetan Trivedi, 40, both of Ronkonkoma, New York.

Two others pleaded guilty to the same charge a day later: Hetal Shah, 38, of Ringwood, New Jersey and Devang Patel, 31, of Ronkonkoma, New York. All face a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000, according to Sandra L Moser, the assistant US attorney who is handling the prosecutions. Sentencing for the six defendants is scheduled for May 27 and May 28.

Authorities said the immigration scam went on between January 2002 and June 2008 through Dasondi's company, Cygate Software and Consulting of Edison.

Dasondi applied for visas reserved for 'specialty occupations' - like information-technology jobs, authorities said. The visas, issued by the department of momeland security US citizenship and immigration services, are highly competitive and often the first step toward citizenship. They require applicants to possess specialised skills and work for the company that petitions on their behalf - in this case Cygate, authorities said.

But in US district court in Newark, the men said they lacked the technical skills listed on their applications. They also said they were not employed by Cygate.

"Did you ever perform actual work for Cygate?" assistant US attorney Sandra Moser asked. "No," said one of the defendants, Kishor Parikh of Ronkonkoma, New York. Instead, the men said they found under-the-table jobs. They said they gave Dasondi money and he, in exchange, gave them paychecks, which they used to comply with the terms of the visa. Five of the men who were charged did not even live in New Jersey.

According to court papers, Dasondi was charged with providing H-1B visas to the six people by submitting fraudulent paperwork to the US government, claiming that they worked for his company, when they did not. They worked elsewhere around the country.

Authorities said he received payments from the six people on a monthly basis, which he rolled back to them as paychecks after keeping a small profit for himself. The visas allow qualified alien workers into the United States to work in a 'specialty occupation,' such as information technology, but the applicants must be academically and professionally qualified.

Dasondi also agreed with the six people to petition immigration authorities for green cards on their behalf in exchange for fees of between $10,000 and $15,000 per card, authorities said.


Six Gujaratis plead guilty to criminal charges in US - dnaindia.com
 
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Bangladeshi credit card fraud


Eight Bangladeshis have been arrested on charges of credit card fraud. The New York Police Department and United States Postal Service (USPS) inspection team jointly conducted the sweep, dubbed “Operation Stars and Swipes.”

Those arrested were: Salam Bhuiyan, Naim Chowdhury, Anwar Haque, Shamshul haque, Abul Fazal Islam, Quiyum Shah, Mohammad Uddin nad sardar Uddin. The police have filed separate cases against all of them.

Five more people were also arrested. Two were released, but three undocumented workers were handed over to the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).

The shops where the operation was conducted were the Rose International, located at 37th Avenue in Jackson Heights, Totas Halal Meat and Mela Video at 5th Avenue and 71st Street, Bangladesh Fish Market and Bangladesh Supermarket, Dolphin Travel Agency, Dollar Express and Dollar Connection.

The Queens district attorney’s office told Bangla Patrika that the accused adopted fraudulent means to collect money from credit card companies. Among the most important were American Express, Chase, Citibank, Discover, First Data resources, First USA and Household Service. Police said that the accused stole five million dollars by abusing the credit cards issued by those companies.
 
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UK education fraud, bogus-college managed by a Bangladeshi


Following a BBC London investigation, a private college in Shadwell has to pay £12,500 for selling bogus qualifications
Mortgage broker and businessman, Polash Rahman, the director of LBT College in Shadwell, has been ordered to pay £12,500 in fines and costs for misleading students to believe they were getting British degrees.
Mr Rahman was sentenced at Snaresbrook Crown Court by Judge John Lafferty, who said: "These qualifications weren't worth the paper they were written on. The institution could not provide the facilities or the courses you were offering."
The prosecution was brought by the Trading Standards team at Tower Hamlets Council, following a complaint by Sounak Halder, a young student from India, who started a Master’s course at the college in 2006 and dropped out when he found the facilities were not what he expected.


A BBC London investigation in 2008 revealed that, despite claims on the LBT college prospectus to have a well-stocked library, the college had only a bookcase, a few classrooms and less than 20 students.
The costs to be paid by Mr Rahman include a £4,500 refund to Sounak Halder.
Tower Hamlets Councillor Abdal Ullah said: "The council is at the forefront of tackling these so-called bogus colleges. We are working really hard to crack down on places which offer fake accreditations and which do not deliver what they promise.
"Students have lost money in good faith and we will not stand for it here. I am pleased with this result at court."
Paul Greeno, Senior Prosecutor with the Legal team at Tower Hamlets Council told BBC London that, although the fine was relatively small, it may be enough to deter similar scams in the future. LBT College has now closed.
Where are the links of your articles, Bharati boy? Hope you aren't cutting and pasting articles from RSS's archives just to counter Idune, are you?
 
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What a perfect mudslinging thread.

@mods: Can you please close this useless thread?
 
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HSBC hit by Indian fraud scam

28 June 2006

POLICE in India have arrested an HSBC employee in connection with a scam believed to have taken more than £200,000 from the accounts of UK bank customers.

TARGETED: HSBC customers have been hit by an Indian call centre scam that took £233,000 from accounts


The data worker has been accused of hacking the computer system and accessing 'personal, security and debit card information', which was passed on to associates involved in the fraud. Officers in Bangalore said the employee, Nadeem Kashmiri, had been involved in the theft of £233,000 from the accounts of 20 customers.

The fraud comes amid increased concerns that criminals offering cash in return for personal data are targeting employees at outsourced overseas financial offices.

HSBC said it was assisting the Indian police with their investigation. The bank said all customers affected had been contacted and it would refund the funds removed. A spokesman said: 'We intend to pursue a conviction as aggressively as possible.'

The breach of security was reported to have been brought to light by UK customers who complained that money had been transferred from their accounts without their knowledge.

Internal fraud from call centres is made possible by employees copying customers' personal details and passwords. Cash can then be removed from their accounts or dummy accounts can be set up and money siphoned off.

With increased use of internet and telephone banking, information can be used to steal money from customers and also commit ID fraud. In many instances fraudsters siphon off small amounts of cash from large numbers of people unlikely to notice it missing.

HSBC hit by Indian fraud scam | This is Money
 
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What a perfect mudslinging thread.

@mods: Can you please close this useless thread?

When anything wrong comitted by indians and exposed,

First indians try to pollute the thread.
Then they scream for closing it.

I hope mod see the indian tricks that been used here for some time.
 
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Bangladeshi credit card fraud


Eight Bangladeshis have been arrested on charges of credit card fraud. The New York Police Department and United States Postal Service (USPS) inspection team jointly conducted the sweep, dubbed “Operation Stars and Swipes.”

Those arrested were: Salam Bhuiyan, Naim Chowdhury, Anwar Haque, Shamshul haque, Abul Fazal Islam, Quiyum Shah, Mohammad Uddin nad sardar Uddin. The police have filed separate cases against all of them.

Five more people were also arrested. Two were released, but three undocumented workers were handed over to the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).

The shops where the operation was conducted were the Rose International, located at 37th Avenue in Jackson Heights, Totas Halal Meat and Mela Video at 5th Avenue and 71st Street, Bangladesh Fish Market and Bangladesh Supermarket, Dolphin Travel Agency, Dollar Express and Dollar Connection.

The Queens district attorney’s office told Bangla Patrika that the accused adopted fraudulent means to collect money from credit card companies. Among the most important were American Express, Chase, Citibank, Discover, First Data resources, First USA and Household Service. Police said that the accused stole five million dollars by abusing the credit cards issued by those companies.
Entire BJP/RSS/VHP/Indian's empire's has been made out of fraud called Chanakya Hindutavya, in which fukcin population of certain color, creed and demographic are allowed to commit heinous crimes and if other try to follow them; those Hindutavya criminals cry out loud as fraud, fraud.
 
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India Misleads on Inflation Figures

A very big fraud has been happening right under our nose in India and we were all taking False Claims of Indian authorities all this while.

Almost every Friday Since last 7 months we are cheering up that Indian inflation is coming down. Is it really true? Prices are going up like anything.

India calculates its official inflation based on Wholesale Price Index (WPI) rather than Consumer Price Index (CPI) based inflation. WPI is never an indication of the inflation simply because the consumers do not buy from wholesale markets. They buy at retail level. Most economies like US, UK, Japan, France, Singapore, and China etc. have selected CPI as its official barometer to weigh its inflation. And hold your breath even Pakistan follows CPI. (And all that while you laughed at high inflation in that country).

But our country, India, is amongst rare countries of the world, which uses WPI as its official scale to measure the inflation in the economy. Simply because WPI is always lower than CPI, thereby painting a false picture to the electorate that prices have fallen. So figures of 2.63% as claimed by Indian authorities are untrue. As per CPI our inflation figures stand at 10.5% in January up from 9.7% in December. Now you can make out the huge difference between WPI and CPI, 6.5%!

If that is the reason why CPI is being used by Indian authorities? I see two main reasons.

Since WPI figures are always lower than CPI, the innocent public of India is fooled into believing that prices are coming down and hide the actual price rise on the pocket of consumer.
WPI index tells us about commodity producers, manufacturers, bulk sellers and market owners. A low WPI is an indication to them that their selling prices rate is decreasing and gives them all good reasons to raise the wholesale prices. After all money for elections come from these rich people.
If we see Academically also the WPI calculation in India is flawed.

1st Flaw - At least 1,918 quotations should be received for assessing changes in WPI but Indian authorities invite not more than 1200 quotations. So price information is not even.

2nd Flaw – From 435 commodities in WPI , more than 100 are no more important from consumer point of view so the price fall in these 100 commodities does not really affect the Indian consumers.

3rd Flaw - There is a huge difference between the provisional and final index figure!! Once in April 12, 2008, the provisional figure of inflation was 7.33, which were revised as final inflation figure of 7.95 what a healthy error!!

4th Flaw - WPI measures the general level of price changes at the level of either the wholesaler or at the producer and does not take into account retail margins. WPI does not reflect the actual price hike, which the consumer is paying.

5th Flaw - Service sectors are not duly accounted in WPI. Service sector like health and education are important as consumers are increasingly spending more money on these items. So if education fee goes up or Doctor fees goes up, it doesn’t matter to Indian government.

6th Flaw - WPI measures the price changes from the production side and never from the consumption side It is surely a lop sided viewpoint of consumers.

Indian Frauds: India Misleads on Inflation Figures
 
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Pretty low level guys do not understand what is defense section ?.
OK, here is defence 101:-

By committing fraud, you guys earn money then you use it to buy weapons to use against PAK, Bangladeshis. Do you see how it relates to your defence acquisition now?
 
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In today's world finance, economy, media and some of these indian frauds has clear defense implication. Specially when indians use fraud to gain position in US and then try to influence US policy against other countries. It is only fair to see how some of these indians used fraud to gain and abuesed their power position.
 
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