Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian-American Businessman Jailed For 15 Months For Fraud

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Jul, 2016 03:12 PM
    A 61-year-old Indian-American businessman has been jailed for 15 months and fined for conspiring to commit fraud in the US by illegally obtaining over $6 million in contracts meant for small and disadvantaged businesses in the country.
     
    Tarsem Singh, a businessman from Fairfax in Virginia, pled guilty to the charge in last December in the US District Court for the District of Columbia.
     
    He was sentenced by Judge B Walton who also fined Mr Singh $25,000 and ordered him to pay $119,165 in restitution.
     
    After his prison term, Mr Singh will be placed on three years of supervised release and required to perform community service.
     
    He was sentenced on Tuesday to 15 months in prison for conspiring to commit fraud on the US by illegally obtaining over $6 million in contracts that were meant for small, disadvantaged businesses, According to the US Attorney's office district of Columbia.
     
    The fraudulent activities involved the US Small Business Administration's program which was created to help small, disadvantaged businesses compete in the American economy and access the federal procurement market.
     
    According to the government's evidence, from January 12, 2000 through January 12, 2009, Mr Singh and his wife, through a firm described in court documents as "Company A" which specialised in construction and renovating and altering buildings, obtained millions in federal contracts.
     
    Shortly after "Company B" was certified, Mr Singh caused himself to be named its vice president. As the vice president of "Company B", Mr Singh was contacted by government personnel about federal contracts and, in some circumstances, made the decision on whether the company would bid on these projects.
     
     
    Throughout the life of the contracts obtained through this scheme, "Company B" had only one employee who performed work on the projects it was awarded. Singh used a combination of "Company A" personnel and sub-contractors to staff projects awarded to "Company B".
     
    From August 2009 through December 2010, "Company B" obtained a total of $6,808,552 in more than 25 federal contracts in this manner from the General Services Administration. The scheme generated at least USD 90,397 in profits for "Company A". In addition, Mr Singh received at least $28,768 in compensation attributable to the contracts. To disguise the activities, Mr Singh took a variety of steps, including obtaining magnetic logos.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan Bans Tube Ads That Promote Unhealthy Body Image

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan Bans Tube Ads That Promote Unhealthy Body Image
    LONDON — Advertising that promotes an unhealthy body image will be banned on London's subway network, in a move that signals a backlash against suggestive marketing in public places.

    London Mayor Sadiq Khan Bans Tube Ads That Promote Unhealthy Body Image

    Obama: Anti-Muslim Rhetoric From Trump 'Not America We Want'

    WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama says anti-Muslim rhetoric from presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is "not the America we want."

    Obama: Anti-Muslim Rhetoric From Trump 'Not America We Want'

    Raw, Painful Words From Abusive Men Featured In New Domestic Violence Campaign

    Raw, Painful Words From Abusive Men Featured In New Domestic Violence Campaign
    Halifax police have thrown their support behind a new, hard-hitting campaign that uses raw, unsettling statements from abusive men to spread a powerful message about how to stop domestic violence.

    Raw, Painful Words From Abusive Men Featured In New Domestic Violence Campaign

    Beheading Of Canadian Hostage Draws Outrage But No End In Sight For Abu Sayyaf

    Beheading Of Canadian Hostage Draws Outrage But No End In Sight For Abu Sayyaf
    With a black Islamic State group-style flag as a backdrop, Abu Sayyaf fighters beheaded Canadian hostage Robert Hall on southern Jolo island on Monday after a ransom deadline passed. 

    Beheading Of Canadian Hostage Draws Outrage But No End In Sight For Abu Sayyaf

    Donald Trump Says He Is Revoking Washington Post Credentials

    Donald Trump Says He Is Revoking Washington Post Credentials
    Trump wrote on his Facebook page, "Based on the incredibly inaccurate coverage and reporting of the record setting Trump campaign, we are hereby revoking the press credentials of the phoney and dishonest Washington Post."

    Donald Trump Says He Is Revoking Washington Post Credentials

    EU To Target Internet As Part Of Counter-Radicalization Plan

    EU To Target Internet As Part Of Counter-Radicalization Plan
    Interior Affairs Commissioner Dmitris Avramopoulos said Tuesday that the internet is "our most important battleground" against radicalization.

    EU To Target Internet As Part Of Counter-Radicalization Plan