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AUSTIN, Texas – An Indian national was sentenced in a federal court in Austin to 97 months in prison and was ordered to pay $2,515,780 in restitution for conspiracy to commit money laundering.
According to court documents, Dhruv Rajeshbhai Mangukiya, 21, participated in a scheme to defraud elderly individuals out of hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash and gold. On multiple occasions, Mangukiya, who was living in the United States on a student visa, received gold and cash from the fraud victims, and split the proceeds between himself and his coconspirators.
The fraud scheme identified vulnerable individuals, often elderly, through various online phishing methods, including falsely notifying the target victims of a possible fraudulent charge on a credit card or other typer of account. A member of the conspiracy would then contact the target victim by phone, falsely claim to be a U.S. Treasury Department or other government official and tell the victim that they would need to make a deposit of cash, gold, or other item of financial value, in order to resolve an investigation or prevent financial loss. A courier would coordinate the pickup of the deposits, either at the victim’s home or in the parking lot of a local business.
In one case, a conspirator told a victim in Granite Shoals to withdraw funds and provide them to the U.S. Treasury Department in order to avoid prosecution. The conspirator convinced the victim that his identity had been stolen, and multiple counterfeit bank accounts had been set up in the victim’s name, linking him to drug cartels and putting him at risk for money laundering charges. At the direction of the fraud conspirators, the victim made three separate cash withdrawals and transfers to the couriers, amounting to $180,000.
A second victim, an elderly Fort Worth woman, was contacted by a conspirator claiming to be with the Amazon fraud department, who told the woman her social security number had been stolen and multiple bank accounts opened in her name were tied to a money laundering scheme. She withdrew $30,000 and provided the money to a courier, coconspirator Kishan Rajeshkumar Patel.
Patel was arrested and his phones searched, revealing messages between Patel and Mangukiya, as well as two other individuals labeled as “Hunter” and “Master.” Mangukiya was arrested at his residence in New Jersey on Dec. 5, 2024. While executing a search warrant, agents found that Mangukiya possessed a printer used to print fake identification documents, along with $73,422.96 in cash. Mangukiya admitted that he would receive 2% of the fraud proceeds he received. He also admitted that he had recruited Patel to be a courier, and that they were working with “Hunter” and “Master.”
Mangukiya and Patel were charged in a two-count superseding indictment on Dec. 3, 2024. Patel pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud on March 18, while Mangukiya pleaded guilty on June 16 to one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering. On June 17, Patel was sentenced to 63 months in federal prison.
U.S. Attorney Justin R. Simmons for the Western District of Texas made the announcement.
The FBI investigated the case with assistance from the Granite Shoals Police Department and the Fort Worth Police Department.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Keith Henneke prosecuted the case.
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