Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
International

16 Indians Charged For Credit-Card Fraud In US

Darpan News Desk, 10 Mar, 2017 01:19 PM
  • 16 Indians Charged For Credit-Card Fraud In US
As many as 16 Indian-origin people, including a woman, in the US have been charged for their alleged role in a massive stolen credit card and identity theft operation resulting in losses of over US$ 3.5 million to individuals, financial institutions and retail businesses.
 
Muhammad Rana, 40, of Queens in New York, was the leader of the massive fraud scheme who was helped by his deputy Inderjeet Singh (24).
 
In all 30 individuals have been charged as authorities cracked down on the extensive stolen credit card and identity theft ring.
 
The ring was allegedly responsible for stealing the personal credit information of hundreds of consumers and costing the individuals, financial institutions and retail businesses more than US$ 3.5 million in losses over the course of the alleged scheme.
 
Others charged in the multiple-count indictment are Sonam Kukreja, 26, Balwinder Singh, 36, Ranjet Singh, 30, Ankit Chadha, 29, Kamaljot Singh, 24, Tanveer Sidhu, 25, Gauruv Chhabra, 33, Pradeep Grover, 46, and Gurbachan Singh, 55, Shingara Singh, 28, Sukhjinder Singh, 32, Tajinder Singh, 25, Vinny Maksudpuri (age not given), Varinder Singh, 27, of 118th Street in Richmond Hill, Queens.
 
Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said on Thursday many of the defendants charged are accused of going on shopping sprees, purchasing tens of thousands of dollars worth of high-end electronics and fashion merchandise with forged credit cards that contained the account information of unsuspecting consumers.
 
 
As part of their alleged scheme, the defendants ordered new credit cards for cardholders and stole them out of the cardholders' mailboxes when they were delivered, Brown added.
 
Brown said 24 search warrants were executed earlier this week throughout Queens and Nassau Counties and numerous items recovered – including US$ 400,000 in cash, numerous gold coins and gold bars valued at about US$ 1,300 dollars each - binders with the personal information of hundreds of thousands of individuals, firearms, card readers and various amounts of raw material, such as blank credit cards and fake identifications.
 
Authorities said the defendants have been charged in a 389-count indictment accusing them of being members and associates of an organised criminal enterprise that operated in Queens and between April 2015 and January 2017, systematically schemed to defraud scores of unsuspecting consumers and financial institutions such as Citibank, Bank of America, Chase, American Express.
 
The investigation leading to the indictments and arrests began in April 2015 when police officers assigned to the Police Department's Identity Theft Squad commenced the investigation into an identity theft ring.
 
The investigation involved physical surveillance, intelligence gathering and court-authorised electronic eavesdropping on dozens of different telephones in which thousands of conversations were intercepted, which required them to be translated from Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu and Spanish into English.
 
 
It is alleged that, in carrying out their scheme, the enterprise employed Ranvie Seepersad as a "profile supplier" who obtained the accounts to be compromised.
 
Seepersad obtained the "profiles" – information such as a victim's name, date of birth, current and past addresses, social security number, current and past employment information, phone numbers, bank and credit card account numbers by stealing the financial information himself.
 
According to the indictments, after the criminal enterprise receiving the profiles, the information was provided to an "account activator," who then compiled and organised the information, prepared the accounts to be taken over and, in some cases, actually took over the accounts by calling into banks and impersonating the true cardholders.
 
Rana provided accomplices in the crime with the stolen credit cards, along with the forged identification cards for them to shop. He directed them as to which electronics, high-end jewelry and gift cards to buy.

MORE International ARTICLES

Swiss Muslim Girls Must Take Swimming Classes With Boys: Europe Court

Swiss Muslim Girls Must Take Swimming Classes With Boys: Europe Court
The case was brought by a Turkish-Swiss couple who argued that forcing their pre-pubescent daughters to attend the classes violated their faith.

Swiss Muslim Girls Must Take Swimming Classes With Boys: Europe Court

10-Year-Old's Body Found In Suitcase In Mumbai

10-Year-Old's Body Found In Suitcase In Mumbai
The body of an unidentified boy was found in a suitcase on Sunday evening near Lokmanya Tilak Terminus, Kurla. The body was wrapped in a saree and the suitcase was open. It was noticed by a resident who alerted the cops.

10-Year-Old's Body Found In Suitcase In Mumbai

'We Don't Tip Black People': Waitress Gets Racist Message In US - Watch!

'We Don't Tip Black People': Waitress Gets Racist Message In US - Watch!
"Great service, don't tip black people" was the racist message a white couple left for a waitress at a restaurant in the US, the latest in growing incidents of hate targeting blacks and minorities following Donald Trump's win.

'We Don't Tip Black People': Waitress Gets Racist Message In US - Watch!

Indian-Origin Dentist To Pay $250,000 In Fraud Case In US

An Indian-origin dentist is to pay $250,000 to settle a fraud case involving treatment of children enrolled in a government insurance for the poor, according to a federal prosecutor in Texas.

Indian-Origin Dentist To Pay $250,000 In Fraud Case In US

Wasim Akram In Trouble As Arrest Warrant Against Him

Former Pakistan cricket captain Wasim Akram was involved in a road rage case in 2016 which has led to his arrest warrant.

Wasim Akram In Trouble As Arrest Warrant Against Him

Shooting Suspect's Mental Issues May Explain Little

Shooting Suspect's Mental Issues May Explain Little
"There is no one explanation that will fit this case or any case," says criminologist James Alan Fox of Northeastern University, an expert on violence.

Shooting Suspect's Mental Issues May Explain Little