Former Apple Employee Charged With $10 Million Fraud

<p><strong>SAN JOSE<&sol;strong> – A federal criminal case filed Friday in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California charges Dhirendra Prasad with defrauding his former employer Apple&comma; Inc&period; in an amount over &dollar;10 million dollars and with money laundering and tax evasion&period; The filing was announced by United States Attorney Stephanie M&period; Hinds and Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation &lpar;IRS-CI&rpar; Special Agent in Charge Mark H&period; Pearson&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The federal government charges Prasad&comma; 52&comma; from Mountain House in San Joaquin County&comma; with five crimes&period;  In the first count&comma; Prasad is charged with engaging in a conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud from 2013 through January 2019&period;  In the second and third counts&comma; Prasad is charged with separate conspiracies to launder fraud proceeds&period;  The fourth count charges Prasad with conspiring to evade a co-conspirator’s tax liabilities for several years&comma; and the fifth count charges Prasad with evading his own income tax liabilities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In a related case filing&comma; the government alleges that Prasad was employed by Apple from December of 2008 through December of 2018&period;  For most of that time&comma; Prasad was a &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;buyer” in Apple’s Global Service Supply Chain and responsible for purchasing parts and services from vendors on Apple’s behalf&period;  Prasad is alleged to have exploited his position by engaging in multiple different schemes to defraud Apple&comma; including taking kickbacks&comma; stealing parts&comma; and causing Apple to pay for items and services it never received&comma; resulting in a loss of more than &dollar;10&comma;000&comma;000&period; Prasad is also described as evading tax on the schemes’ proceeds&comma; which he also laundered&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Prasad’s alleged co-conspirators are Robert Gary Hansen and Don M&period; Baker&comma; both of whom reside in the Central District of California&period;  Hansen and Baker both owned vendor companies that did business with Apple&comma; and the charges allege they each conspired with Prasad to commit fraud and money laundering&period;  Neither Hansen nor Baker were charged with Prasad&comma; but they were each earlier charged in separate federal criminal cases and they have both admitted their involvement&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In addition&comma; the United States filed a civil forfeiture action related to the criminal charges against Prasad in federal court on September 24&comma; 2021&period;  In that suit&comma; the United States seeks to forfeit five pieces of real property and a dozen financial accounts traced to Prasad’s crimes&period;  Those assets – which have an estimated aggregate value of &dollar;5&comma;000&comma;000 – have been frozen or otherwise encumbered pursuant to a court-authorized seizure warrant&period;  The civil forfeiture action remains pending&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Prasad is scheduled to make his initial appearance on the criminal charges in San Jose federal court before United States Magistrate Judge Susan van Keulen on March 24&comma; 2022&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Information charges Prasad with conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud in violation of 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 1349&period;  The maximum statutory sentence of imprisonment for a violation of 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 1349 is 20 years&period;  Prasad is also charged with two counts of conspiracy to engage in money laundering in violation of 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 1956&lpar;h&rpar;&comma; and the maximum statutory sentence of imprisonment for each violation of 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 1956&lpar;h&rpar; is 20 years&period;  The fourth count against Prasad charges a conspiracy to defraud the United States in violation of 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 371&period;  The maximum statutory sentence of imprisonment for a violation of 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 371 is five years&period;  Lastly&comma; Prasad is charged with one count of tax evasion in violation of 26 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 7201&comma; which carries a maximum statutory sentence of imprisonment of five years&period;  Any sentence following a conviction would be imposed by a court only after consideration of the U&period;S&period; Sentencing Guidelines and the federal statute governing the imposition of a sentence&comma; 18 U&period;S&period;C&period; § 3553&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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