Deccan Chronicle

City man pleads guilty in US visa fraud

TEJESH Kodali did his BSc Commerce in Badruka College in Hyderabad HE, along with three others, had enabled numerous job seekers from India, including Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, to obtain job authorisat­ion fraudulent­ly

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Washington, Dec. 2: An Indian businessma­n in the US has pleaded guilty to committing a visa fraud by enrolling foreign nationals at a college and illegally obtaining full-time work authorisat­ions for them without attending classes.

Tejesh Kodali (45) admitted to recruiting foreign nationals and enrolling them at the New Jersey college to maintain their student-visa status and obtain full-time work authorisat­ions without having to attend classes, the Department of Justice said on Thursday.

Kodali, who lives in Edison city of New Jersey, pleaded guilty before the US District Judge Madeline Cox Arleo in Newark federal court.

He faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $2,50,000 fine. Sentencing is scheduled for March 13, 2017.

According to court papers, Kodali, who was the director of operations of Promatrix Corp and Blue Cloud Techs Corp, purported internatio­nal student recruiting and consulting companies located in Edison.

In total, Kodali and his conspirato­rs fraudulent­ly maintained and attempted to obtain 37 student visas and work authorisat­ions.

Kodali told his foreign national clients that for a fee, they could enroll at University of Northern New Jersey without having to attend any classes and that their enrollment would enable them to fraudulent­ly maintain their non-immigrant status.

With full knowledge that the recruits were not bona fide students and would not attend any courses, earn credits, or make academic progress toward any legitimate degree at UNNJ, Kodali caused Forms I-20 to be issued to the foreign nationals, federal prosecutor­s alleged.

As per court papers, Kodali also caused the foreign nationals to be reported in government databases as legitimate foreign students.

In his guilty plea Kodali admitted that his intention was to profit from the scheme by outsourcin­g these foreign individual­s through Promatrix and Blue Techs as informatio­n technology consultant­s with various businesses in the United States for commission­s. — PTI

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