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  • Report:  #414462

Complaint Review: SMEI INDIA Sales And Marketing Executives International In India S Rao Sam Subhakar Surapaneni - Bangalore Nationwide

Reported By:
- Houston, Texas,
Submitted:
Updated:

SMEI INDIA Sales And Marketing Executives International In India S Rao Sam Subhakar Surapaneni
No. 10 Venkat Reddy Layout Bangalore, 560 095 Nationwide, India
Phone:
080-4110 5853
Web:
N/A
Categories:
Tell us has your experience with this business or person been good? What's this?
An arrest warrant has been issued by U.S. District Court for the owner of a Southfield company who has fled to India. The court issued the warrant Oct. 8 after learning that Subhakar ''Sam'' Surapaneni, owner of Zaconta Inc. and 12 companies under its umbrella, had left the country Sept. 30. The warrant alleges that Surapaneni formed many of the companies to hide financial information from a court-ordered monitor. Not that Surapaneni has dropped completely out of sight.

On Nov. 8, Surapaneni sent a fictitious court order to U.S. District Court, customers and bankers from a made-up court called the District Appeals Court Eastern Division, according to Joseph Whall, president of Auburn Hills-based Whall Group. Whall Group is a turnaround and fraud-investigation company appointed in 2000 to monitor Zaconta's finances.

The government began investigating Quality last year when a wrongful-discharge lawsuit claimed immigration abuses by the company. The firm, founded in 1995 by the Wayne State University computer science graduate, has 350 employees and 1998 revenues of about $25 million, according to court documents. An immigration agent said 68 of the firm's workers from India had false information on their visas, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court. None of the workers were performing the jobs specified in their visas and were not receiving the salaries listed. Some were unemployed, agents said.

Federal investigators found 18 people living in a three-bedroom Southfield town house rented by the firm. Each paid the company $600 a month in rent, according to the agents. "Sleeping arrangements consisted of mattresses on the floor or a type of bed mat made up of blankets and sheets," said agent Bernadette Cundiff of the Immigration and Naturalization Service. In a plea agreement, the firm last week accepted a fine of $450,000 for the 68 fraudulent visas.

http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-2229311/Biz-owner-flees-to-India.html

Good to see Spamhaus ROKSO section listed spammer SalesBrowser advertisement in SMEI website front page

http://www.spamhaus.org/rokso/evidence.lasso?rokso_id=ROK7868

Bob

Houston, Texas

U.S.A.


1 Updates & Rebuttals

Bob rich

Houston,
Texas,
U.S.A.
SMEI INDIA, S Rao, Sam Shubhakar Rao is FBI wanted and Fled from US

#2Author of original report

Wed, January 21, 2009

An arrest warrant has been issued by U.S. District Court for the owner of a Southfield company who has fled to India. The court issued the warrant Oct. 8 after learning that Subhakar ''Sam'' Surapaneni, owner of Zaconta Inc. and 12 companies under its umbrella, had left the country Sept. 30. The warrant alleges that Surapaneni formed many of the companies to hide financial information from a court-ordered monitor. Not that Surapaneni has dropped completely out of sight. On Nov. 8, Surapaneni sent a fictitious court order to U.S. District Court, customers and bankers from a made-up court called the District Appeals Court Eastern Division, according to Joseph Whall, president of Auburn Hills-based Whall Group. Whall Group is a turnaround and fraud-investigation company appointed in 2000 to monitor Zaconta's finances. The government began investigating Quality last year when a wrongful-discharge lawsuit claimed immigration abuses by the company. The firm, founded in 1995 by the Wayne State University computer science graduate, has 350 employees and 1998 revenues of about $25 million, according to court documents. An immigration agent said 68 of the firm's workers from India had false information on their visas, according to documents filed in U.S. District Court. None of the workers were performing the jobs specified in their visas and were not receiving the salaries listed. Some were unemployed, agents said. Federal investigators found 18 people living in a three-bedroom Southfield town house rented by the firm. Each paid the company $600 a month in rent, according to the agents. "Sleeping arrangements consisted of mattresses on the floor or a type of bed mat made up of blankets and sheets," said agent Bernadette Cundiff of the Immigration and Naturalization Service. In a plea agreement, the firm last week accepted a fine of $450,000 for the 68 fraudulent visas. (((Redacted))). Lot of articles are available in internet regarding this fraud Good to see Spamhaus ROKSO section listed spammer SalesBrowser advertisement in SMEI website front page (((Redacted))) Bob rich Houston, Texas CLICK here to see why Rip-off Report, as a matter of policy, deleted either a phone number, link or e-mail address from this Report. U.S.A.

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