Washington: Four Indian-American executives of two IT staffing companies have been arrested in the US on charges of fraudulently using the H-1B visa program to gain an ‘unfair advantage’ over their competitors, the justice department has announced, amidst a crackdown on the popular visa program by the Trump administration.
The H-1B visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows US companies to employ foreign workers in specialty occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise.
The accused — Vijay Mane, 39, Venkataramana Mannam, 47, and Fernando Silva, 53 — are from New Jersey while Sateesh Vemuri, 52, is from California. They were charged for their involvement in a conspiracy to commit visa fraud, the Department of Justice said Tuesday.
Vemuri made his initial appearance July 1 before the US Magistrate Judge Steven C Mannion in Newark federal court while Mannam and Silva appeared before the US Magistrate Judge Leda Dunn Wettre in Newark federal court June 25. Mane appeared before Judge Wettre on June 27.
The conspiracy charge carries a maximum potential penalty of five years in prison and a USD 250,000 fine. According to the Department of Justice, the accused were released on USD 250,000 bond.
Mane, Mannam, and Vemuri controlled two IT staffing companies– Procure Professionals Inc and Krypto IT Solutions Inc– located in Middlesex County, New Jersey. Silva and Mannam were in charge of another New Jersey staffing company, referred to in the complaint as ‘Client A’.
They used Procure and Krypto to recruit foreign nationals and sponsor them for H-1B visas, which allow recipients to live and work temporarily in the US in positions requiring specialised skills.
To expedite their visa applications, the defendants caused Procure and Krypto to file H-1B applications falsely asserting that the foreign worker/beneficiaries had already secured positions at Client A, when, in reality, no such positions existed, federal prosecutors alleged.
Instead, they used these fraudulent applications to build a ‘bench’ of job candidates already admitted to the United States, who could then be hired out immediately to client companies without the need to wait through the visa application process, giving the defendants an advantage over their competitors in the staffing industry.
The charges against the four comes amid a crackdown on the H-1B program by the administration of President Donald Trump, which has taken aim at outsourcers and IT staffing companies, and dramatically increased the rate of rejection for H-1B visas.
PTI