US: Indian sentenced to eight years in jail in call centre scam

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

An Indian national Tuesday was sentenced to eight years and nine months in prison for his involvement in an India-based call centre scam, the said.

According to court documents, Patel connived with the US-based co-conspirators and the India-based call centres to extort money from American residents by impersonating (IRS) officers between 2014 and 2016.

The IRS is the revenue service of the federal government.

During this period, they mislead the victims in believing that they owed money to the IRS and would be arrested and fined if they did not pay their alleged taxes back immediately, as per the documents.

The conspirators collected the proceeds by withdrawing cash from prepaid cards purchased and funded by victims; hiring other conspirators (runners) to retrieve money wired by the victims to those runners; and/or hiring runners to open into which victims deposited proceeds, revealed the documents.

The defendants collected the proceeds by providing the runners with the victims' names, locations, and amounts paid.

The runners were directed to retrieve the proceeds in cash and turn the funds over to the defendants, often less a payment to the for opening the account or conducting the transaction, according to the documents.

Four others have already pleaded guilty for their roles in the scheme.

On March 25, was sentenced to 15 months in federal prison. Hemalkumar Shah, and are currently awaiting sentencing.

"We here at IRS CI recognise the heartache and concern these crooks cause innocent people. This is why we are eager to team up with our to track down these impersonators in whatever corner of the globe they may be hiding in," said in-charge of IRS Criminal Investigations,

J Russell George, for Tax Administration, said, "Over the last several years, American taxpayers have been subjected to unprecedented attempts to fraudulently obtain money by individuals impersonating employees."

"Victimising taxpayers by impersonating IRS employees is a serious crime," he said.

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

First Published: Tue, April 02 2019. 06:55 IST