This story is from February 12, 2021
Indian-American engineer pleads guilty to charges of over $10 million Covid-relief fraud
WASHINGTON
: An Indian-American engineer in the US has pleadedguilty
to the charge of seeking more than $10 million in loans under a coronavirus relief programme set up to help small businesses, the Department of Justice has said.false statements
to a bank.He was charged on May 13, 2020, with violations of wire fraud, bank fraud, false statements to a financial institution, and false statements to the Small Business Administration (SBA).
As part of his guilty plea, Rai admitted that he sought millions of dollars in forgivable loans guaranteed by the SBA from two different banks by claiming to have 250
employees
earning wages when, in fact, no employees worked for his purported business.Rai made two fraudulent claims to two different lenders to seek loans guaranteed by the SBA for Covid-19 relief through the
Paycheck Protection Program
(PPP).In the application submitted to the first lender, Rai sought $10 million in PPP loan proceeds by fraudulently claiming to have 250 employees with an average monthly payroll of $4 million.
In the second application, Rai sought approximately $3 million in PPP loan proceeds by fraudulently claiming to have 250 employees with an average monthly payroll of approximately $ 1.2 million.
In addition, the Texas Comptroller's Office of Public Accounts reported to investigators that Rai Family LLC reported no revenues for the fourth quarter of 2019 or the first quarter of 2020.
As per court documents, materials recovered from the trash outside of Rai's residence included handwritten notes that appear to reflect an investment strategy for the $3 million, which is the amount of money that Rai allegedly sought from the second lender.
“The Payroll Protection Programme was designed to help struggling businesses and hard working Americans, not individuals who concoct imaginary businesses and employees,” said Acting US Attorney Nicholas J Ganjei.
“We will continue to work diligently with our law enforcement partners to investigate and prosecute those who exploit this critical, taxpayer-funded programme,” he said.
Top Comment
Trouble Shooter
1368 days ago
I always say that Indians are inherently dishonest and this attitude spreads far and wide even with whatever degrees these people may lay their claim upon.Read allPost comment
Popular from Business
- Aadhaar card update: Deadline to update your Aadhaar details for free is approaching - here’s what you need to know
- PAN 2.0 Project approved by Cabinet - top points for taxpayers to know
- French energy giant Total puts Adani Group investments on hold
- Cabinet's Rs 30,000 crore bank guarantee relief for telecom industry
- Stock market today: BSE Sensex rises over 200 points; Nifty50 near 24,300
end of article
Trending Stories
- Will banks open only for 5 days a week? Here’s what you should know about IBA’s proposal
- India set to be third largest economy, says S&P Global
- Dalal Street bull run continues! BSE Sensex crosses 69,000 for the first time; Nifty above 20,800
- Byju’s reduces notice period for employees as troubles mount
03:08 Sensex surges over 900 points, Nifty above 20,550 as BJP state election wins bolster Modi's Lok Sabha 2024 prospects- UltraTech to buy building materials business of Kesoram in 7,600 crore deal
- Tata Technologies stock debuts at a bumper 140% premium; share price at Rs 1200 on BSE
Visual Stories
- NEET UG 2024 result awaited: Top 10 NIRF-ranked medical colleges of India
- 7 New Expected Bullet Train Routes in India
- 10 Upcoming High-Speed Expressways That Will Change Highway Travel In India
- 8 Transformational Indian Railways Projects You Shouldn’t Miss
- Why Sensex, Nifty50 Hit New Highs, M-Cap At $5 Trillion: Top Reasons
TOP TRENDS
UP NEXT