Sestak admits to
pocketing $3 mln, faces 20 years
Tuoitrenews
Michael T. Sestak, former head of the
non-immigrant visa department of the US Consulate General in
US
Consulate General in
Michael T. Sestak, the US Foreign Service officer
accused of selling visas to Vietnamese people while earning several million
dollars, made his first appearance in a Washington D.C. court Tuesday, and he
has not been released on bail. He has admitted that he earned up to US$5,000
per visa.
Sestak, 41, faces up to 20 years in prison on charges of
conspiracy to commit visa fraud and bribery while he was head of the
non-immigrant visa department at the US Consulate General in
In a court session on Tuesday afternoon, federal prosecutors said that Sestak worked with a 27-year-old Sestak and his co-conspirators also encouraged people to enter the U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah A. Robinson said she declined to release Sestak from jail as he had petitioned, and held him without bond. Sestak served at the consulate from August 2010 until last September, when he left in preparation for active-duty service with the Navy. Sestak’s visa fraud scam lasted from March to September 2012. Sestak charged US$50,000-70,000 per visa in bribes from Vietnamese people who could not get visas on their own or had been rejected, according to the US State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service (DSS). From May 1 to September 6, 2012, the consulate received 31,386 non-immigrant visa applications and rejected 35.1 percent of them, investigators say. During the same period, Sestak handled 5,489 visa applications and rejected only 8.2 percent of them. Prosecutors said on May 22 that “a conservative estimate” of the proceeds from the alleged conspiracy was “at least $10 million” paid from about 500 applicants. Of the amount, $6 million was held in a bank in the US, $2.3 million was transferred to a bank in One more co-conspirator held, account blocked On Tuesday, Huynh, who is one of Hong Vo’s cousins, is considered to be Co-conspirator No. 5, according to investigators. Huynh is also a relative of Vo Tang Binh, a 39-year-old Vietnamese-American businessman who holds the post of general director at Santa Freight Forwarding Joint Stock Company. Binh is regarded as Co-conspirator No.1.Meanwhile, Vo, who was arrested on May 8 in In court documents, federal investigators say Vo “earned a minimum of $45,000” last year for her alleged participation in the visa scam. In another development, investigators confirmed that Sestak had not been arrested in southern In a related development, DSS has reportedly filed a warrant to seize money in an account at Scottrade Bank held by another alleged co-conspirator, Nguyen Thuy Anh Dao, also known as Alice Nguyen, who is Binh’s wife. DSS claims the money in this account came from the visa scam. Sestak admits to pocketing $3 mln According to investigators, during the first questioning session by DSS, Sestak pleaded guilty to visa fraud, bribery and transnational money laundering. Sestak said he and Binh planned their visa fraud scam, and explained that he would approve visas for people whose names had been provided to him by Binh. Binh was also responsible for receiving bribes from visa applicants, and then handed a part of the money to him. Sestak said he did not know how much the applicants had actually paid, but he received US$1,000-5,000 per visa from Binh. The former visa chief estimated that from May to September 2012, he approved about 10 visas per day and received about $3 million in total. He also confessed that Binh had relied on a person in HCMC to move Sestak’s money from the scam out of All of the money sent to accounts held by Sestak and Binh’s wife (Nguyen Thuy Anh Dao) were transferred from an account at the China Bank in |
Thứ Năm, 6 tháng 6, 2013
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