You are here: Home » PTI Stories » National » News
Business Standard

Indian-origin former McKinsey partner in US gets 2-year jail in fraud case

Press Trust of India  |  New York 

An Indian-origin former partner in global consulting firm has been sentenced to two years in prison by a for scheming to defraud companies out of hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Navdeep Arora, a former partner in the office of McKinsey & Company, plotted with a former at Mutual Automobile Insurance Company to defraud both companies out of fraudulent consulting fees.

US imposed the two-year sentence in federal court in yesterday.

Arora, 53, also fraudulently obtained money from McKinsey, and other McKinsey clients in the form of purported work-related for expenses that were actually incurred on his personal trips.

He falsely expensed personal trips to the cities in the US, England, Czech Republic, and elsewhere. He also took the employee, Matthew Sorensen, on two personal vacations and expensed them to as expenses.

The costs included flights, hotels, meals, and other items, a Justice Department statement said.

Arora of London, England, and formerly of Chicago, was arrested in 2016 at the city's after arriving on an overseas flight. He pleaded guilty last year to one count of wire fraud.

Sorensen, a resident of Illinois, also pleaded guilty to a wire fraud charge. He was sentenced to one year and a day in prison last year.

Arora and "concocted a fraudulent scheme to benefit themselves during their employment, argued in the government's sentencing memorandum.

The defendants' actions have caused both companies to undertake time and expense uncovering this fraud, destroyed a longstanding relationship between these two companies, and caused reputational harm.

Arora and had a longstanding relationship through Arora's work overseeing the consulting services McKinsey provided to

According to the charges, their fraud scheme began in 2007. Arora and used two corporate entities and Andy's BCB to defraud their employers out of the phony fees.

billed McKinsey for the bogus work purportedly performed by the companies, while Arora allocated the fees to the projects to which he was assigned.

As a result, McKinsey and paid USD 38,265 for consulting services purportedly performed by Andy's BCB and USD 452,710 in fees billed by

pocketed a large majority of the money, while Arora received a substantial salary and benefits from McKinsey for maintaining its relationship with State Farm, the Justice Department statement said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 16 2018. 09:10 IST
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU