IN Indian Crimes Megathread - Rapes, Scams and General Jeetry

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We need a dedicated news post for sharing the near constant crimes committed by Indian's that are invading the west. Please post your semi-recent news article about pajeets that have been caught doing the needful.

Indian man arrested for possessing a forged alien resident card


BUFFALO, N.Y. - U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that Swapnil Ramesh Tejale, 34, a citizen of India, was arrested and charged by criminal complaint with possession of a forged alien resident card, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael J. Smith, who is handling the case, stated that according to the complaint, on July 10, 2025, the Niagara Falls Border Patrol Station received a request from the Niagara Falls Police Department to help identify three individuals that they had encountered during a traffic stop. Agents arrived at the scene and questioned the three individuals as to their citizenship. Tejale presented a Lawful Permanent Resident Card but voluntarily admitted that the card was fictitious. It was determined that Tejale was illegally present in the United States without any immigration documents that would allow him to remain in the country lawfully. After Tejale was taken into custody, agents located a Social Security Card in his name. Record checks verified that the Social Security Card was also fictitious.

This case is part of Operation Take Back America, a nationwide initiative that marshals the full resources of the Department of Justice to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime.

The complaint is the result of an investigation by the U.S. Border Patrol Niagara Falls Station, under the direction of Patrol Agent in Charge Brady Waikal.
 

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Saar, please feel sympathy for me I was robbed at gunpoint by men I hired to rob me so I could qualify for special sympathy visa.


Rambhai Patel.webp

Indian national convicted and sentenced for U visa fraud conspiracy in the USA

The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced Rambhai Patel, 37, was sentenced to 20 months and eight days in prison, to be followed by two years of supervised release, and forfeiture of $850,000.

Patel is subject to deportation upon completion of the imposed sentence. In May 2025, Patel pleaded guilty to on one count of conspiracy to commit visa fraud. In December 2023, Patel was charged along with co-conspirator Balwinder Singh.

Beginning in March 2023, Patel and Singh set up and carried out staged armed robberies of at least 18 convenience or liquor stores and fast-food restaurants across the United States, including at least five in Massachusetts.

The purpose of the staged robberies was to allow the store clerks to claim that they were victims of a violent crime on an application for a U non-immigrant status (U visa).

A U visa is available to victims of certain crimes who have suffered mental or physical abuse and who have been helpful to law enforcement in the investigation or prosecution of criminal activity.

During the staged robberies, the “robber” would threaten store clerks or owners with an apparent firearm before taking cash from the register and fleeing, while the interaction was captured on store surveillance video.

The clerks and owners would then wait five or more minutes until the “robber” had escaped before calling police to report the “crime.”

The “victims” paid Patel to participate in the scheme. One purported victim paid $20,000 to participate as a victim in one of the staged armed robberies.

In turn, Patel paid the store owners for the use of their stores for the staged robbery. Patel earned approximately $850,000 in the scheme, all of which he is required to forfeit as part of his sentence.

At least two purported victim co-conspirators submitted U Visa applications based on being victims of the staged armed robberies. Singh pleaded guilty in May 2025, and is scheduled to be sentenced on September 24, 2025.
 
Another home invasion by Pajeets, this time with a kidnapping of a vagene!!!


Parkaran Panglia and Shakir Bhatti.webp

Woman 'kidnapped,' family member shot during yet another Ontario home invasion​

Four people, two of them teenagers, have been charged after a violent home invasion and kidnapping that began as a staged car crash in the GTA on Monday morning.

One of the accused is a 16-year-old Caledon boy on a previous release order, while another, 21-year-old Shakir Bhatti from Ajax, has already been released on bail.

York Regional Police officers were called to a home near McCowan Road and 14th Avenue on reports of multiple men forcing their way inside and informing the occupants that a family member had been kidnapped.

One of the residents, a 54-year-old man, was shot during the home invasion.

Police later determined that, about an hour earlier, suspects intentionally rammed the vehicle of a 29-year-old woman from the same residence as she was driving near McCowan and Highway 407. According to police, when the woman exited her vehicle to assess the damage, a second vehicle — described as an older model grey Dodge Caravan — rolled up and people within forced her inside, where she was restrained before departing the scene.

Responding officers intercepted the suspects as they tried to flee the house, arresting four people and seizing a loaded firearm. A fifth male suspect, estimated to be between 18 to 25 years old, evaded arrest. A stolen vehicle was also found at the home invasion scene and police say they have reason to believe additional suspects connected to both crimes “remain outstanding.”

Officers were quick to arrive at the residence as the suspects attempted to flee. Four of the suspects were arrested while a fifth suspect remains outstanding. He is described as male, 18 to 25 years of age, wearing dark clothing, a mask and gloves. A loaded firearm was recovered.
 
Vivek, the perpetual attention whore scammer, spoke out about beheading annoying Indian's after an annoying Indian hotel owner got beheaded for being a stinky poo.

t.indiat.com/world/us/horrific-vivek-ramaswamy-speaks-out-on-beheading-of-indian-origin-chandra-nagamallaiah-after-backlash/articleshow/123870820.cms

Vivek took his shoes off in interview.webp

'Horrific': Vivek Ramaswamy speaks out on beheading of Chandra Nagamallaiah in Dallas, doesn't mention he was of In Dallas, doesn't mention he was of Indian origin

Republican leader Vivek Ramaswamy finally spoke out on the gruesome killing of Indian-origin Chandra Nagamallaiah, a hotel manager in Dallas and condemned the lawlessness. "An innocent Dallas hotel manager was brutally beheaded..." Ramaswamy posted after his silence was questioned and he was trolled for not condemning the incident.

Yordanis Cobos-Martinez, the killer, took a machette and chased the Indian-origin businessman, his boss, after he was upset that the boss told him to not use the broken washing machine, but did not tell him directly, asked another employee to translate it for him.

After Vivek Ramaswamy condemned the Dallas incident, social media users pointed out that he did not even mention that the victim was Indian. "Vivek You can say that the hotel manager was of Indian origin. You’re trying too hard not to show yourself as someone from Indian origin." One user wrote.
 

Suspect accused of attempting to defraud an elderly man out of his life savings by posing as a federal officer

JAY, Okla. – An Indian national living in the United States on a student visa is accused of trying to bilk an elderly Delaware County man out of half a million dollars.

Venkateswara Chagamreddy.webp
Venkateswara Chagamreddy

Venkateswara Chagamreddy, 27, of Austin, Texas, is charged in Delaware County District Court in Jay with conspiracy, extortion by means not amounting to robbery, and second-degree forgery, all felonies.

Online court records show he is held in the Delaware County jail on a $200,000 bond.

The elderly man who lives in rural Afton told investigators he was contacted by what he believed to be someone from Microsoft on Aug. 11, saying his computer was being used for criminal activity, according to an arrest warrant.

The caller told the alleged victim he needed to surrender to the federal government.

Later, the elderly man was contacted by telephone from a person who identified himself as “Federal Officer David J Morgan,” saying the Delaware County man was a victim of identity theft and he was being investigated because his personal computer was used for child porn, weapons dealings, drugs, and the “dark web.”

The elderly man was warned that he would face additional charges if he spoke to anyone about being under investigation, the affidavit states. After being “sworn to secrecy,” he was told to transfer $64,331.58 from his bank account to gold. The affidavit states that an “officer” would come by his residence the following day to pick up the gold.

The Delaware County man told investigators that after liquidating his bank account and purchasing the gold, he was required to validate his possession of the gold through text messages and photographs.

On Aug. 22, a “medium-colored” African American man arrived at his residence in a dark-colored Tundra truck arrived at his residence. The man partially rolled down his window and provided the elderly man with a passcode, prompting the man to turn over the package containing the gold pieces.

Over the next several days, the “officer” contacted the Delaware County man and eventually learned he had approximately $1 million in his retirement accounts. The elderly man was allegedly instructed to speak to his financial advisor and ask for $200,000 to $300,000 for hotels in Hong Kong. The demand was later raised to $500,000, the affidavit states.

The elderly man told investigators he was afraid and eventually contacted his financial advisor and son, who contacted law enforcement.

Delaware County investigators set up a “sting” operation to intercept the pickup of a package intended to contain $177,500 at the man’s residence. On Aug. 27, a silver car pulled into the alleged victim’s driveway, past the porch to the side of the house, and was met by investigators. They surrounded the suspect’s vehicle and took Chagamreddy into custody, the affidavit states.

Investigators seized 23 one-ounce gold pieces, a marijuana grinder, rolling papers, ground marijuana, five $100 bills, two cell phones, multiple documents containing air flights, travel patterns, and interstate travel, and “multiple items of Dominion and Control,” the affidavit states.

Chagamreddy told investigators he was at risk of deportation due to a recent suspension from college. He had flown to North Carolina to enroll in a college, but he had left his vehicle parked at the Austin airport. When he returned from his flight, he had just “found” the gold in his car and didn’t know where it came from.

He told investigators he was taking the gold pieces to his friend’s house in Kansas because “Rio” knew what to do with them. He made a wrong turn and ended up at the elderly man’s residence by accident, and he “was not there for any reason, and was just using the driveway to turn around” because “Rio” was helping him find his way, the affidavit states.

Chagamreddy’s cell phone showed photographs of the alleged victim, his property, county road signs, and the “dummy package.” Videos showed Chagamreddy opening and audibly inventorying packages of gold, including the package he advised “showed up” in his vehicle.

The elderly man’s residential address was the last destination searched and was visible on the vehicle’s navigation screen.
 
Heres a good one complete with bodycam footage:

Source

Man Inappropriately Touched Child At Movie Theater: Prosecutor​


Nishith Koreka .png

A 47-year-old South Brunswick man has been charged with endangering the welfare of a child after he inappropriately touched a minor at a local movie theater, County prosecutor Yolanda Ciccone said.

Nishith Koreka was arrested without incident on Sept. 7, and charged with third-degree endangering the welfare of a child and fourth-degree criminal sexual contact of a juvenile.

According to investigators, Koreka inappropriately touched a juvenile multiple times while attending a movie screening at Regal Cinemas in North Brunswick, Ciccone said.

The investigation was conducted by Detective Christopher Van Eerde of the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office Special Victims Unit and Detective Sean Gaither of the North Brunswick Police Department.

Bodycam footage:
 
A Jeet was caught peeping on women using a peep hole, but since this is Leafland, he only received less than 6 months in jail for the offense. / Archive

Indian man avoids ‘immigration consequences’ after spying on women using bathroom at his Ontario home

His ‘appropriate’ sentence was reduced to 5.5 months in jail, while a sentence of more than six months would have made him ‘inadmissible on grounds of serious criminality’

An Ontario judge weighed the “immigration consequences” for a former international student who spied on his female housemates through a peep hole as they used the bathroom and made video recordings of four of them “in various stages of undress” over a period of six months.

The Ontario Court of Justice heard Aswin V. Sajeevan, an Indian citizen here on a student visa, lived with 11 other people at a home in Barrie. The 20-year-old pleaded guilty to four counts of voyeurism, which the judge considered a mitigating factor in his case.

“I accept, and have considered, that there may be serious collateral immigration consequences for Mr. Sajeevan because of his criminal conduct,” said Justice Craig A. Brannagan.

The judge found “that the fit and appropriate range of sentence for this offender on the facts of this case for the four offences pleaded to would be between” six months and a year in custody.

But Brannagan sentenced Sajeevan recently to 5.5 months in jail after considering what both the Crown and Sajeevan’s lawyer termed “the potential for immigration consequences.”

According to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, a “permanent resident or a foreign national is inadmissible on grounds of serious criminality” if they are sentenced to more than six months in jail.

Brannagan found that “Mr. Sajeevan is sincerely remorseful for his crimes and is genuine in that he wishes to take responsibility for them,” said the judge’s decision, dated Oct. 2.

“While collateral consequences, including immigration consequences, are not mitigating per se, Canadian criminal law recognizes that they may nevertheless speak to the personal circumstances of the offender.”

Considering “collateral consequences is mandatory, not optional,” Brannagan said, noting the weight assigned to them “is an exercise in discretion by the sentencing judge.”

The court heard Sajeevan’s basement bedroom was next to a laundry room that was beside a bathroom used primarily by the women who lived in the house.

“Soon after the group moved in, in August of 2024, they discovered a ‘peep hole’ between the laundry room and the bathroom,” said the judge’s decision, which notes it had been patched up more than once, “only to have been uncovered each time.”

One of the male tenants and the four women who were spied on went to Barrie Police this past March to report the voyeurism case.

They told investigators that, on March 11, 2025, one of them found Sajeevan “crouched down in the laundry room, with the light off, peering through a ‘peep hole’ in the wall into the bathroom,” said the decision, which notes one of the women “was naked using the facilities” at the time.

When confronted, Sajeevan “adamantly denied any wrongdoing,” instead claiming “that he was searching for his earbuds.”

Sajeevan “was unable to provide an explanation” for why he was doing that in the dark.

Sajeevan “eventually admitted to his housemates that he had been watching them use the facilities in various states of undress at different times through the hole in the laundry room.”

The peep hole patching had “raised suspicions in the house” about Sajeevan, “who had been seen on numerous occasions entering the laundry room shortly after any of the females had entered the bathroom.”

Sajeevan works as a line cook in a restaurant, said the decision, which notes “that he attended college in Canada for computer programming but was suspended due to a low GPA.”

Sajeevan, who is from Kerala, India, told the author of his pre-sentence report that when he looked through the peep hole, “he was excited to see the female roommates and his curiosity fuelled his excitement leading him to feel guilty.”

Sajeevan’s father — a police constable — confirmed that voyeurism exists as a criminal charge in India, “and a person would be held accountable for it” there as well.

One of Sajeevan’s former female roommates reported the incident has left her “with intense fear and anxiety. She avoids using public washrooms. She has lost trust in friends. She ‘felt like (she) was living in a nightmare, and it truly felt like hell.’ She described that she had to take time off work, and that the fear and emotional distress arising from her victimization has made it difficult to function normally. She noted the significant breach of trust, in that Mr. Sajeevan ‘was capable of doing this to his own housemate, someone he lived with for two years.’”

Another female roommate reported “that she does not feel emotionally safe around men, and that these crimes have made it ‘very hard to trust people now, even (her) loved ones.’ She fears using public washrooms and those in her workplace, and she actively looks for hidden cameras in them.”

A third female roommate told the court she “has lost trust in people close to her. Her ability to sleep has suffered from the emotional distress that she has experienced.”

It’s clear, said the judge, “that Mr. Sajeevan’s offending has had a ‘chilling effect’ on his victims, causing them to modify their behaviour due to fear of the consequences that may befall them should their behaviour be covertly observed by someone like him. The emotional and psychological harm caused is palpable. I find that Mr. Sajeevan’s offending has had a significant and enduring impact on his victims.”

The Crown and Sajeevan’s defence lawyer both recommended he get a 12-month conditional sentence.

"The emotional and psychological harm caused is palpable. I find that Mr. Sajeevan’s offending has had a significant and enduring impact on his victims"

But the judge rejected their joint submission calling for house arrest, saying that “would cause an informed and reasonable member of the public to lose confidence” in the courts.

“The Crown’s submission that segregation of Mr. Sajeevan from the public through home confinement will protect society glosses over the fact that these offences were committed inside of his home, in the most private of places within his home (the bathroom), against the very people with whom he was residing,” Brannagan said.

“To suggest that home confinement is a fit and appropriate sentence is not just a tenuous proposition but, in my view, is one that is markedly detached from the realities of these offences and this offender. It stretches the bounds of credulity to imagine an optional condition to a (conditional sentence order) that is reasonably capable of preventing the commission of further offences of this sort, not to mention the logistical obstacles of actually enforcing them.”

The judge called voyeurism a “sinister” offence.

“It is a crime where the offender violates the personal integrity, safety, security, and privacy of their victim, without the victim knowing that they are being watched, in what are otherwise expected to be ‘safe places,’” Brannagan said.

The judge found that, “on the facts of this case, only a truly custodial jail sentence can meet the requirements.”

Brannagan also sentenced Sajeevan to 18 months of probation.

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