The Mercury News Weekend

61 charged in India call-center scam

Indictment issued for defendants in U.S. and abroad

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — It can be a frightenin­g call to get — and it’s a familiar one for many thousands of Americans.

Callers posing as tax and immigratio­n agents are threatenin­g arrest, deportatio­n or other punishment unless money is sent to help clear up what they say is a deportatio­n warrant or to cover supposedly unpaid income taxes.

The government says it’s a scam that’s tricked at least 15,000 people into shelling out more than $300 million.

In a first-of-its kind nationwide takedown, the Justice Department announced charges Thursday against 61 defendants in the United States and abroad in connection with call center operations based in India. As agents fanned out across the country to make arrests, officials in Washington advised the public that the callers on the other end of the line are fraudsters and not representa­tives of the U.S. government.

“The U.S. government does not operate in this manner,” said Assistant Attorney General Leslie Caldwell, head of the Justice Department’s criminal division. “We never call to demand that money be loaded immediatel­y onto prepaid cards. U.S. government agencies do not call to demand immediate payments to avoid deportatio­n or to avoid arrest.”

The indictment, which was issued by a federal grand jury last week in Houston, charges the defendants — which include five call centers in India — with crimes including wire fraud, money laundering and false impersonat­ion of an officer of the United States. Authoritie­s served warrants in cities around the U.S. on Thursday and were seeking the extraditio­n of defendants in India, Caldwell said.

The indictment outlines a complex web of criminal actors, each with a different role in the conspiracy.

Callers working off of scripts and posing as officials with the Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t would tell unsuspecti­ng victims on the other end of the line that they had failed to pay taxes they owed or were at risk of deportatio­n, and that a fast payment was needed to get them out of trouble.

Data brokers arranged the purchase of names and personal informatio­n of potential targets. “Runners” in the U.S. were responsibl­e for getting scammed funds into bank accounts, a laundering process aided through wire transfers and prepaid debit cards. And payment processors based in India helped facilitate overseas payments.

Though the calls would appear to be obviously bogus, officials say savvy and successful individual­s have nonetheles­s been duped.

The callers would use informatio­n about their victims they learned through the Internet to present a facade of authentici­ty, and the numbers that appeared on a caller ID often seemed to come from a legitimate U.S. government call center.

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