Garavi Gujarat USA

Texas man pleads guilty to $24m Covid-19 relief scheme fraud

-

A TEXAS based man has pleaded guilty to the charges of $24m Covid-19 relief scheme fraud, the US Department of Justice has said.

According to court documents, Dinesh Sah, 55, admitted that he submitted 15 fraudulent applicatio­ns, filed under the names of various purported businesses that he owned or controlled, to eight different lenders seeking approximat­ely $24.8m in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans.

Sah claimed that these businesses had numerous employees and hundreds of thousands of dollars in payroll expenses when, in fact, no business had employees or paid wages consistent with the amounts claimed in the PPP applicatio­ns, they stated.

According to the court documents, Sah further admitted that he submitted fraudulent documentat­ion in support of his applicatio­ns, including fabricated federal tax filings and bank statements for the purported businesses, and falsely listed other persons as authorized representa­tives of certain of these businesses without the authority to use their identifyin­g informatio­n on the applicatio­ns.

As the nation was crippled by a global pandemic, Sah fraudulent­ly obtained over $17m in PPP funds intended to help legitimate small businesses and spent that money on luxury cars and multiple homes, said Acting Assistant Attorney General Nicholas L McQuaid of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division on Thursday.

‘As our nation continues to fight this unpreceden­ted virus, the Department of Justice and its law enforcemen­t partners remain committed to aggressive­ly pursuing individual­s who exploit COVID-relief programs and to ensuring that these ill-gotten gains are returned,’ he said.

In his guilty plea, Sah admitted that, based on his false statements and fabricated documents, he received over $17m in PPP loan funds and diverted the proceeds for his personal benefit, using them to purchase multiple homes in Texas, pay off the mortgages on other homes in California, and buy a fleet of luxury cars, including a Bentley convertibl­e, Corvette Stingray, and Porsche Macan, as per the documents.

Sah also sent millions of dollars in PPP proceeds in internatio­nal money transfers. As part of his guilty plea, Sah agreed to forfeit, among other property, eight homes, numerous luxury vehicles, and more than $7.2m in fraudulent proceeds that the government has seized to date, they said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States