Millennium Post

Indian CEO of two tech firms arrested in US for visa fraud

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NEW YORK: An Indian citizen, who was the CEO of two informatio­n technology companies in the US, has been arrested in connection with a multi-year visa-fraud scheme involving forged and fraudulent documents to get visas such as H1B for over 200 foreign workers.

Pradyumna Kumar Samal, 49, was taken into custody as he arrived from an internatio­nal flight at Seattle airport.

The criminal complaint describing the visa-fraud scheme was filed under seal in April 2018, soon after Samal fled the United States while the investigat­ion was ongoing. He remained out of the country until this week when he was arrested by law enforcemen­t.

The criminal complaint describes how two companies incorporat­ed by Samal in 2010 and 2011 in Washington state engaged in a scheme sometimes referred to as a “bench-and-switch” scheme, to exploit foreign-national workers, compete unlawfully in the market, and defraud the US government.

According to the investigat­ion that began in 2015, Samal served as the Chief Executive Officer of ‘Divensi' and ‘Azimetry' in Bellevue, near Seattle.

Both companies were in the business of providing informatio­n-technology workers, such as Software Developmen­t Engineers, to major corporate clients. The complaint alleges that Samal submitted, and directed his employees to submit, forged and false applicatio­n materials to the United States government, making it appear as if two corporate clients already had agreed to use several foreignnat­ional employees named in the applicatio­ns. However, neither client had agreed to do so.

The forged documents included forged letters and fraudulent statements of work, which appeared as if they had been signed by senior executives at the two clients. After the US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services relied on the false representa­tions and approved the work visa applicatio­ns, Samal's companies benched the foreign nationals, leaving those foreign nationals unpaid unless they were able to place those employees at actual end clients.

Nearly 200 workers may have been brought in under the phony applicatio­ns. The employees were forced to pay Samal's companies a partially-refundable “security deposit” of as much as USD 5,000 for the visa filings, regardless of whether they were assigned to any projects that provided them with income.

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