United States v. Hasmukh C. Patel

400 F. App'x 426
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 2010
Docket09-14985
StatusUnpublished

This text of 400 F. App'x 426 (United States v. Hasmukh C. Patel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hasmukh C. Patel, 400 F. App'x 426 (11th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

HULL, Circuit Judge:

Defendant Hasmukh Patel appeals his convictions on various immigration fraud-related charges and his 40-month imprisonment sentence. After review and oral argument, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The jury convicted Defendant Patel on 12 counts relating to his helping an Indian couple, Jayesh and Darshana Patel (“Jay-esh” and “Darshana,” respectively) obtain fraudulent visas to come to the United States. Although Patel represented that Darshana would work at his home, Patel in fact did not provide her employment. 1 Twenty witnesses testified for the government, including Jayesh and Darshana. We recount the trial evidence.

*429 A. Visa Fraud

Defendant Patel was employed as an adjudications officer for the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (“CIS”) in Atlanta, Georgia. Patel processed applications for permanent residency and U.S. citizenship.

Kamlesh Patel (“Kamlesh”) was a friend of Defendant Patel’s wife. In mid-2005 Kamlesh told Defendant Patel he wanted to bring his brother, Jayesh, from India to the United States. 2 Defendant Patel responded that he knew someone who could do the paperwork for a visa application for $100,000. Kamlesh agreed and paid Defendant Patel the $100,000 in cash in three installments.

For the first step in the H-2B work visa application process, Defendant Patel and his wife applied to the U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”) for a labor certificate on behalf of Darshana. 3 Patel’s application (1) listed Darshana as the employee; (2) stated that Patel and his wife needed an unskilled worker to live and work in their home in McDonough, Georgia to assist his medically handicapped wife in caring for their children and running the household; and (3) stated Patel and his wife had tried to find a qualified U.S. worker by advertising in a local newspaper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, but were unable to recruit a suitable candidate. 4 DOL issued the labor certificate.

For the next step in the H-2B visa process, Defendant Patel and his wife, as the employers, filed a petition for a notice of approval with CIS. They also paid a $1,000 fee for accelerated processing. The petition stated that Darshana would live and work in Defendant Patel’s household and that the employment time frame would be from December 22, 2005 to August 30, 2006. CIS approved Darshana for an H-2B visa as an unskilled, temporary worker.

For the final step in the visa process, Jayesh and Darshana applied for their visas at the U.S. consulate in Mumbai, India. Before they applied, Defendant Patel advised Jayesh by e-mail that Darshana was supposed to work at his home as a housekeeper. Defendant Patel also told Jayesh that, in their visa interviews, he and Dar-shana should discuss how they found the job, where they planned to live, and to state that in India Darshana was employed as a housekeeper and therapist, which was *430 not true. 5

At first, Jayesh and Darshana’s visa applications were denied because they failed to show sufficient ties to India and their intent to return there when their visas expired. When Defendant Patel learned the applications were denied, he called the U.S. consulate in Mumbai and spoke with Angela Kerwin, a foreign service officer in charge of nonimmigrant visas. Patel identified himself to Kerwin as a Department of Homeland Securities (“DHS”) employee and explained that he was the employer who filed the visa petition. Patel assured Kerwin the petition was based on his legitimate need for a caregiver because of his wife’s health and that he would ensure Darshana would return to India after her visa expired. Kerwin told Patel that, if Darshana and Jayesh reapplied for their visas, she would personally review their applications. Kerwin directed one of her employees to notify her when Jayesh and Darshana reapplied for their visas. Patel then sent Jayesh an e-mail, advising Jay-esh and Darshana that when they reapply for their visas, they should take property records and other documents with them to show their ties to India and intent to return there.

Jayesh and Darshana reapplied for their visas, and this time they were approved. Kerwin, the same foreign service officer with whom Defendant Patel personally spoke, issued the visas.

After getting their visas, Jayesh and Darshana traveled from India to Atlanta. Kamlesh picked them up at the Atlanta airport. They drove directly to Camilla, Georgia, which is approximately 220 miles south of Atlanta. On the way, Jayesh called Defendant Patel to say he and Dar-shana had arrived in Atlanta and were on their way to Camilla. Patel said nothing about Darshana’s coming to work in his home in McDonough.

About a week later, Jayesh and Darsha-na moved from Camilla to Brunswick, Georgia, where they worked at Kamlesh’s convenience store and lived in a motel owned by Jayesh’s uncle. Shortly after arrival in Brunswick, Jayesh and Darshana went to Defendant Patel’s home in McDon-ough “[j]ust to say hello.” They stayed for a few hours, and no one discussed whether Darshana would work for Defendant Patel.

Sometime later, Jayesh met with Defendant Patel at Patel’s home. During that meeting, Patel told Jayesh that, in order to keep their visas, Darshana had to show she was getting paid for her work and that they could do this by keeping records of her paychecks. Patel wrote several sequentially numbered checks made payable to Darshana, dated from April 15 to June 30, 2006, and sent them to Jayesh. Although Patel wrote the checks in August, he backdated them from April to June. The check numbered as coming immediately before the April 15 check was dated after it — on May 22, 2006. Defendant Patel also gave Jayesh false paycheck stubs to show that Darshana was working for Patel. Darshana never did any work for Defendant Patel. 6

At a later meeting, Defendant Patel gave Jayesh another series of backdated checks that purported to be paychecks to Darshana. Those checks were dated from July 15 to August 31, 2006. The checks were sequentially numbered. The three *431 checks numbered as coming immediately before the July 15 check were all dated after it — in September 2006. Because neither Jayesh nor Darshana ever worked for Defendant Patel or his wife, Jayesh returned the amount of the purported paychecks to Patel in cash.

Sometime before Jayesh and Darshana came to the United States, Defendant Patel had asked Kamlesh to pay him an additional $4,000 as a fee for the visa application paperwork. Kamlesh gave Patel a $4,000 check, on which he left the date and payee lines blank. The $4,000 check eventually was dated March 6, 2006 and made payable to “Paranjay,” Defendant Patel’s friend and former business partner Paranjay Joshi. The check was deposited into Joshi’s checking account without his knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
400 F. App'x 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hasmukh-c-patel-ca11-2010.