Sunnyvale Man Ordered To Federal Prison, Pay $533K In H-1B Visa Fraud Scheme
SUNNYVALE (CBS SF) – A Sunnyvale man has been sentenced to federal prison and ordered to pay more than $500,000 after admitting to a H-1B visa fraud scam.
According to acting U.S. Attorney Stephanie Hinds' office, 49-year-old Kishore Kumar Kavuru received a 15 month sentence after pleading guilty to one count of visa fraud.
Prosecutors said that Kavuru was the owner, operator and CEO of four different staffing companies that claimed to specialize in obtaining H-1B visas for skilled foreign workers and placing them in tech companies. The H-1B program allows employers to temporarily hire skilled foreign workers on a nonimmigrant basis.
In his plea agreement, Kavuru admitted to submitting more than 100 H-1B visa applications that falsely described available job positions and falsely stated the workers were to be placed at those companies. He also admitted that he required workers seeking visas to pay him thousands of dollars to prepare and submit their applications, which is against Department of Labor regulations.
Prosecutors said Kavuru also violated labor regulations by telling H-1B visa recipients to go unpaid for months while he looked for legitimate H-1B positions for them.
The government determined that Kavuru fraudulently obtained more than $1.5 million from the scheme.
Along with prison time, a judge ordered Kavuru to forfeit more than $533,000. Prosecutors said he would also be subject to three years of supervised release after leaving prison.
Kavuru is scheduled to begin his sentence on February 10.