61-Year-Old Indian Origin Man Jailed for 5 Years for Smuggling Foreigners Including Indians into America
April 24, 2019 07:17(Image source from: newsfirst.lk)
The 61-year-old Indian man has been jailed in the United States for five years for smuggling foreigners, including a majority of Indians, into America, after pleading guilty last year, the Department of Justice has said.
Yadvinder Singh Sandhu personally assisted around 400 aliens to illegally enter the U.S. between 2013 and 2015, according to the Department of Justice statement.
The human smuggling carried out by him resulted in at least one death and endangered the lives of many, it said.
Sandhu, charged in an indictment returned by a federal grand jury in the District of Puerto Rico on March 15, 2017, used multiple names including Yadvinder Singh Bhamba, Bhupinder Kumar, Rajinder Singh, Robert Howard Scott, and Atkins Lawson Howard.
According to admissions in Sandhu's plea agreement, since 2013, he had a leadership role in a human smuggling conspiracy operating out of the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Puerto Rico, India and elsewhere.
He also oversaw and directed co-conspirators operating out of the Caribbean.
Sandhu and other members of the conspiracy made flight arrangements for foreign nationals to travel from India through other countries including Thailand, the United Arab Emirates, Argentina, Iran, Panama, Venezuela, Belize, and Haiti - to the Dominican Republic.
The Dominican Republic was used as a staging area, where foreigners were housed before being transported to the United States.
The organization brought groups of foreigners from the Dominican Republic to Puerto Rico or Florida by boat. They were then picked up by co-conspirators and taken to stash houses until flights could be arranged to California, New York, or elsewhere. Sandhu and others arranged for fraudulent identifications for some aliens to use in the U.S., prosecutors alleged.
The boat trips organized by Sandhu and his co-conspirators to transport foreigners from the Dominican Republic to the U.S. were perilous as old, damaged, cracked, unlicensed, overcrowded and unsafe boats were used to make the journey, they said. In at least one instance, a foreign national died in a boat on his way to the U.S., the Department of Justice alleged.
Now and then, the smugglers would take passports from the foreigners during their journeys, physically assault them and threaten their families to collect money.
Foreigners paid between USD 30,000 and USD 85,000 to be smuggled from India to the U.S.
From at least 2013 to 2016, human smuggling was Sandhu's primary source of income, the federal prosecutors alleged.
By Sowmya Sangam