For nearly a decade, four Louisiana lawmen and a Subway shop owner manufactured phony crime reports to help foreign nationals stay in the U.S., prosecutors say
By Joe Barrett of The WSJ. Excerpts:
"In a case still winding through court, federal officials allege the men spent nearly 10 years manufacturing false crime reports as part of a visa-fraud scheme. The operation netted the officers $5,000 per “victim” and helped hundreds of foreign nationals secure U visas—a status that allows certain crime victims to remain in the U.S., Van Hook said."
"The center of the scheme, authorities said, was Chandrakant “Lala” Patel, the friendly owner of a Subway and other small businesses. Patel, himself a U visa recipient, would allegedly connect with crime “victims” looking to stay in the U.S."
"He would then turn to one of the law-enforcement officials to draw up paperwork for crimes that never happened"
"The officers would generate false reports and swear in writing that the people named were legitimate crime victims"
"For years, it worked, authorities said. Investigators with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services spurred the multiagency probe in July 2024 after uncovering a pattern of inconsistencies in U-visa applications."
"Hundreds reportedly obtained U visas through the scheme, and Louisiana isn’t alone."
"Earlier this month, a federal grand jury in Boston indicted 10 Indian nationals for allegedly staging convenience-store holdups in Massachusetts and elsewhere to secure U visas. A bogus robber and getaway driver would appear to rob the clerk or owner at gunpoint, then flee, authorities said. Minutes later, the clerk would call police and present security-camera footage as evidence."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.