Of concern is the source of the lead sheets for these criminals. Is your tax guy outsourcing to India?
From Accounting today.
"A scammer who organized a scheme in
which taxpayers were threatened with calls purporting to come from the
Internal Revenue Service and the FBI demanding payment has been
sentenced to 14 years in prison.
Sahil Patel was sentenced to 175
months in prison and $1 million in forfeiture for his role in
organizing the U.S. side of a massive fraud and extortion ring run
through various “call centers” located in India, through which Patel and
his co-conspirators impersonated American law enforcement officials and
threatened victims with arrest and financial penalties unless those
victims made payments to avoid purported charges.
In addition to the prison sentence, Patel, 36, of Tatamy, Pa., was sentenced to three years of supervised release.
Patel pleaded guilty in January 2015
before U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein, who imposed the sentence
Wednesday. “The nature of this crime robbed people of their identities
and their money in a way that causes people to feel they have been
almost destroyed,” said Hellerstein.
According to prosecutors,
from Dec. 2011 through the day of his arrest on Dec. 18, 2013, Patel
participated as a leader in a sophisticated scheme to intimidate and
defraud hundreds of innocent victims of hundreds of dollars apiece.
Throughout the course of the fraud, telephone call centers located in
India hired English-speaking employees to place telephone calls to
individuals living in the U.S.
Armed with long lists of potential
victims, referred to by Patel and his co-conspirators as “lead sheets,”
those India-based callers systematically placed thousands of calls to
individuals in the U.S. in the hopes of intimidating the call recipients
into providing a payment to the co-conspirators. To extort these
victims, the India-based callers impersonated law enforcement officials
of the FBI and IRS and threatened their victims with financial penalties
and arrest in connection with fabricated financial crimes.
“Sahil
Patel’s elaborate scheme involved impersonating law enforcement
officers and using intimidation and fear to bilk over a million dollars
from hundreds of unsuspecting victims,” said Manhattan U.S. Attorney
Preet Bharara in a statement.
In order to receive funds in a
manner that would mask the identity of Patel and his co-conspirators,
the ring undertook several measures to anonymize itself, including by
using anonymized voice-over-internet technology, which was subscribed
under fraudulent names in order to give the appearance of being related
to U.S. law enforcement agencies.
Patel and his co-conspirators
also used several layers of wire transactions in order to conceal the
destination and nature of the extorted payments, which totaled at least
$1.2 million."
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