Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
International

4 Charged In $3.5 Mn-Fraud 'Likely' Linked To India

IANS, 01 Dec, 2017 09:59 PM
    Four men of Indian descent have been charged in a $3.5 million-fraud in which they pretended to be tax officials and collected money by allegedly threatening over 7,300 people, a federal prosecutor has announced.
     
     
    Gregory J Haanstad, the Wisconsin Eastern District prosecutor, on Thursday said the scheme was “likely originating from India”.
     
     
    Moin Gohil, 22, was picked up by law enforcement authorities in Georgia on November 24, and Pratik Patel, 26, Parvez Jiwani, 39, and Nakul Chetiwal, 27, were arrested on Tuesday by federal authorities, Haanstad said.
     
     
    According to the prosecutor, their fraud is known as an “IRS impersonation scheme”.
     
     
    Participants in the scheme based “likely in India” call victims in the US pretending to be officials of the federal tax agency, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and typically claim they owe taxes. They then threaten and intimidate the victims saying they would face arrest or legal action if they did not send money through services like MoneyGram and Western Union or provide gift cards with cash value.
     
     
    Members based in the US, who are known as “runners” use fake identification to pick up the money or the cards.
     
     
    Haanstad said that Gohil, Chetiwal and Jiwani, who were allegedly “runners” picked up $666,537 sent from 784 victims between January 25, 2016 and August 8, 2017.
     
     
    In addition, the false IDs used by them are linked to 6,530 other fraudulent transactions totalling $2.83 million, he added.
     
     
    Patel “aided and abetted” at least one of the runners, he said.
     
     
    They have been charged with three offences--wire fraud (which is using electronic communication to commit fraud), conspiracy and aiding and abetting crimes.
     
     
    They could face a maximum prison term of 20 years and $250,000 fine for each of the crimes if found guilty.
     
     
    Frauds like these are widely prevalent and have tarnished the reputation of India and Indians through their calls.
     
     
    In November, US authorities busted an Ahmedabad-based operation which defrauded residents of at least $25 million.
     
     
    Five men, who were arrested in the US, admitted their guilt in federal courts in Texas and Arizona and were awaiting sentencing.
     
     
    In that case, 53 people in India were also charged. The alleged mastermind of the call centre used in the operation, Sagar “Shaggy” Thakkar, had been arrested in Mumbai in April.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Donald Trump Declares Himself Friend Of Hindus And Indians

    Donald Trump Declares Himself Friend Of Hindus And Indians
    Declaring he will be a "true friend of the Indian and Hindu community", Republican Party's presidential candidate Donald Trump contrasted the growth rates of India and the US and praised Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a "pro-growth leader" with whom he will like to work.

    Donald Trump Declares Himself Friend Of Hindus And Indians

    British PM Theresa May May Pins Hopes On India To Heal Brexit Wounds

    British PM Theresa May May Pins Hopes On India To Heal Brexit Wounds
    Seeking to create jobs at home and stabilise the economy following the Brexit vote, British Prime Minister Theresa May will be leading a trade mission to India next month in her first major official visit outside Europe.

    British PM Theresa May May Pins Hopes On India To Heal Brexit Wounds

    Doctors Hail China's Pledge To Stop Harvesting Inmate Organs

    Doctors Hail China's Pledge To Stop Harvesting Inmate Organs
    BEIJING — Surgeons from around the world gathered at a conference in Beijing on Monday in China's latest effort to fight persistent skepticism about whether its hospitals have stopped performing transplants with the organs of executed prisoners.

    Doctors Hail China's Pledge To Stop Harvesting Inmate Organs

    Hate Crime Charges Laid Against Attackers Of Sikh-American Maan Singh Khalsa

    Hate Crime Charges Laid Against Attackers Of Sikh-American Maan Singh Khalsa
    Hate crime charges have been filed by authorities against a group of men who brutally attacked a 41-year-old Sikh-American man, knocking off his turban and cutting his unshorn hair with a knife.

    Hate Crime Charges Laid Against Attackers Of Sikh-American Maan Singh Khalsa

    Watch: After War Of Words, Shahid Afridi, Javed Miandad End Bitter Public Feud

    Watch: After War Of Words, Shahid Afridi, Javed Miandad End Bitter Public Feud
    Veteran Pakistan all-rounder Shahid Afridi and legendary batsman Javed Miandad have resolved their differences after an ugly spat which even saw underworld don Dawood Ibrahim getting involved.

    Watch: After War Of Words, Shahid Afridi, Javed Miandad End Bitter Public Feud

    Sex Assault Allegations: Donald Trump Plays 'Victim' Now

    Sex Assault Allegations: Donald Trump Plays 'Victim' Now
    "As you have seen, I am a victim of one of the great political smear campaigns in the history of our country," CNN quoted Trump as saying on Friday at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina.

    Sex Assault Allegations: Donald Trump Plays 'Victim' Now