Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1
    Senior Member American-ized's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Monroe County, New York
    Posts
    3,530

    Global High-Tech Firm, InfoSys, Accused of Visa Fraud

    Global High-Tech Firm Accused of Visa Fraud


    NumbersUSA.com
    Thursday, April 12, 2012

    Information Technology firm and high-tech industry powerhouse, Infosys, is being accused of bringing low-paid foreign wokers to the U.S. illegally, CBS News reported.

    The allegations come from Jay Palmer, a principal consultant at Infosys. According to Palmer, Infosys engaged in systematic practice of visa fraud. Palmer's charges are the center of a federal probe.


    Palmer said the first thing to catch his attention was an employee that had been in the U.S. from India several times before.
    "He came up to me and he was literally in tears," Palmer told CBS News. "He told me he was over here illegally and he didn't wanna be here. He was worried that he would get caught."


    Palmer says he began digging into how and why Infosys seemed to be bringing in large numbers of workers from its corporate headquarters in Bangalore, India, into the U.S.


    Palmer says at first, most came over on H-1B visas. These visas are for people with specialized talents or a level of technical ability that can't be found among American workers.


    When asked if all the people had some special expertise that couldn't be found in the U.S., Palmer said, "Absolutely not. Not even close. Many of them is what we call freshers. People that would just come over, whoever they could get to come over. Whoever got accepted for a visa."


    "Many of the people brought in, in fact, didn't know what they were doing at all," Palmer said. "There was not a project or program that I was involved in that we did not remove somebody because they had no knowledge of what they were doing," he said.
    Palmer says that Infosys' motive to bring in foreign workers was purely for profit.


    Palmer says the Indian workers on his team were paid substantially less than an American would have made in the same job.


    When the U.S. State Department began to limit the number of H-1B visas, Palmer says Infosys began using another type of visa, the B-1. The B-1 is meant for employees who are traveling to consult with associates, attend training or a convention. But Palmer says the employees were brought in not for meetings, but for full time jobs.


    Federal officials say Infosys employees have 6,000 B-1 visas good for 10 years.


    And Palmer says the B-1 workers never paid U.S. taxes because they received their salaries from India.


    Palmer says top company executives not only knew of the alleged fraud, but wanted to expand on it to increase profits. Palmer says during a 2010 meeting at Infosys' corporate headquarters in Bangalore the practice was discussed with a group of executives, including a senior vice president.


    Palmer heard Infosys executives say "Americans are stupid" and according to Palmer, they were referring to the law and getting around the system. Palmer says it was totally easy to skirt the law.


    Palmer said others at Infosys discussed the matter with him. And one of those people was Palmer's friend and Infosys project manager, Marti Harrington.


    Harrington told CBS News, "I realize that there were a few times where they were really pushing me, they, Infosys, was really pushing me to get the client to agree to having more people onshore. They were still getting more money because they were paying these folks from India so little."


    When Harrington learned that the B-1 visa specifically prohibited employment here, she checked the visa status of some of her own team members.


    Harrington said, "And then I realize that we had people here, we being, you know, employees in Infosys - had people here that were in the States on B-1 visas that were working. You know, they weren't here to attend training or, you know, to attend a conference. They were here working on a project."


    According to Palmer, telling documents come from an internal Infosys website. One document appears to be a "do's and don'ts" list that gives instructions on how to get B-1 visa requests by the U.S. State Department, telling managers not to mention things like work or employment on their applications or in interviews with U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents.


    When CBS News senior correspondent John Miller asked Palmer what he thinks will happen to him and his future when this is all over. Palmer responded, "I don't know. You know, it's not about me. This story is about displaced American workers and about companies out for greed."


    Infosys is one of the biggest consulting firms in the world with more than $6 billion in revenues last year alone, and 145,000 employees in 32 countries. But the bulk of its business comes from the U.S., re-engineering the computer systems of some of the biggest names in corporate America.


    Palmer's civil suit against Infosys is scheduled to go to trial this summer in Alabama.


    According to CBS News senior correspondent John Miller, who has been working on this case for months, suspects that there are many other companies practicing visa fraud. Miller even referenced a recent lawsuit against a different company in New Jersey alleging similar practices of visa fraud and abuse.

    https://www.numbersusa.com/content/n...isa-fraud.html

  2. #2
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    PARADISE (San Diego)
    Posts
    99,040
    4/12/2012 @ 9:19AM |3,355 views

    Infosys Under Investigation For Visa Fraud

    Kenneth Rapoza, Contributor

    Former insider says Infosys brought in Indian workers illegally, often abused business visa rules requiring foreign workers to be paid U.S. market rate.

    Last week, a host of India computer consulting firms convinced the government to consider taking the U.S to the World Trade Organization for the added fines associated with H1-B visas that allow for them to bring Indian labor to the U.S. On Thursday morning, CBS This Morning’s senior correspondent John Miller added a dash of spice to that story, one that will have Infosys (INFY) fighting an image that it uses the foreign business visa program to depress wages.

    See: Infosys’ Illegal Labor Allegations–CBS News

    Infosys is one of India’s biggest IT firms, along with Tata Consultancy Services and Wipro. The U.S. is a major market for them. Late last year, Tata Consultancy’s local president Surya Kant said in a Forbes interview that the company was struggling to hire computer engineers. American engineers lacked some of the necessary experience. While Kant did not say TCS was bringing in foreigners to fill in the gaps, Infosys and other major computer companies, including Microsoft, are bringing in workers from India to do what they say American engineers cannot.

    On CBS, Miller spoke with Infosys whistleblower Jay Palmer, a consultant for the firm who said that the company could just have easily found local IT specialists to do what they were bringing foreigners in to do, at a fraction of the cost. Infosys said in a statement televised by CBS that Palmer’s “allegations make for an interesting story, but it is not the facts.” And added that a judge and jury will have the final say on Palmer’s accusations later this summer in an Alabama civil court case.

    The Times of India reported last week that visa restrictions were causing huge disruptions in the onsite activities of Indian IT companies, but quoted an unnamed source from one of the major IT firms in Bangalore that the program did keep labor costs down because temporary Indian labor was cheaper than temporary U.S. labor. Visa rejections are currently at an all-time high and companies are not able to send enough support and maintenance staff to their client locations overseas to complete projects on time.

    “We promised a client in the (San Francisco) Bay area that we would be sending 15 people from India to support it onsite. But we could send only three people, the rest were denied visas,” said the global sales head of an IT firm in Bangalore who did not want to be named. He said the client was very unhappy because it meant they had to depend on available alternatives, which were either “costlier or of poorer quality” the paper reported.

    Infosys Under Investigation For Visa Fraud - Forbes
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


    Sign in and post comments here.

    Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •