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Edison, NJ, resident sentenced to 30 months for role in visa fraud scheme

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Sandipkumar Patel, 42, of Edison, New Jersey, was sentenced to 30 months in prison for orchestrating an eight-year scheme to falsify employment certifications to facilitate the illegal entry of Indians into the United States and for filing a false tax return.

Patel ran for Edison town council on then-mayor Antonia Ricigliano’s ticket in November 2013

Patel, 42 was sentenced by US District Court Judge William H Walls of the District of New Jersey.  The court also ordered Patel to pay a fine of $50,000, and restitution in the amount of $423,452 to the IRS.

On Sept. 4, 2014, Patel pleaded guilty to a two-count information charging him with conspiring to defraud the United States and subscribing to a false federal income tax return.

According to court documents filed in connection with his plea, from 2001 until 2009, Patel sponsored the visa applications of Indians by falsely claiming that he would provide employment for them in the United States. He falsely certified on the visa applications that he would employ them in various technical fields at several New Jersey companies, thereby facilitating their illegal entry into the United States. 

They paid Patel tens of thousands of dollars for the false certifications. To disguise the scheme, he issued payroll checks and other payroll forms.  Patel required the people to return the proceeds of the payroll checks to him and to further reimburse him for the payroll tax expenses he incurred.  Patel used the fraudulent pay stubs and payroll checks to support false applications to extend the visas, and charged the people fees for the visa extensions.

As a result of falsely carrying the migrant employees on his payrolls, Patel overstated his payroll expenses on his federal income tax returns by more than $1.4 million over four years, and thereby underreported his tax obligation by over $400,000 for those years. 

This case was investigated by the IRS-CI and DSS.  The case is being prosecuted by Senior Trial Attorney Hope S. Olds of the Criminal Division’s Human Rights and Special Prosecutions Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Robertson of the District of New Jersey, with assistance from the Criminal Division’s Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section.