Applications Containing Fabricated Claims of Persecution were Allegedly Submitted by at Least 10 New York City Law Firms
Preet Bharara, the United States
Attorney for the Southern District of New York; George Venizelos, the Assistant
Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI); Raymond W. Kelly, the Commissioner of the Police
Department for the City of New York (NYPD); and Patricia A. Menges, the
Director of the New York Asylum Office of the United States Citizenship and Immigration
Services (USCIS), announced today the unsealing of nine indictments charging a
total of 26 defendants with allegedly participating in separate but overlapping
immigration fraud schemes related to the submission of hundreds of asylum
applications containing fabricated claims of persecution. As alleged in the
indictments, at least 10 New York City area law firms created and submitted
these fraudulent applications on behalf of alien applicants and coached them on
how to lie to immigration authorities. Of the 26 defendants charged, 21 work at
the various law firms, six as attorneys. Also charged are four translators who
work at an asylum office in Queens, New York; and an employee at a church in
Queens where she allegedly provides training in basic Christianity to asylum
applicants falsely claiming to have been persecuted in China for their
religious beliefs. Twenty-one defendants were taken into custody late this
morning and will be presented and arraigned this afternoon and tomorrow before
United States Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn. Of the remaining defendants, two
will be surrendering tomorrow and three are at large. U.S. District Judges
Ronnie Abrams, Robert P. Patterson, Sidney H. Stein, Victor Marrero, John G.
Koeltl, and William H. Pauley, III have been assigned to these cases.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet
Bharara stated, “Our asylum laws exist to provide a safe haven in the United
States to immigrants subject to persecution in their own countries for
exercising freedoms fundamental to a democracy. As alleged, these defendants,
including six attorneys and a church employee, exploited those laws by weaving
elaborate fictions on behalf of hundreds of would-be asylum seekers, coaching
them on how to lie on their applications, stepping in when they went off
script, and lying to immigration judges at court hearings. Asylum fraud imposes
a tremendous burden on the system and it also makes it more difficult for those
who are legitimately seeking refuge in this country.”
FBI Assistant Director in Charge George
Venizelos said, “The defendants allegedly conspired criminally to exploit the
safe haven our nation provides for asylum-seekers. They aided and abetted
immigrants in falsely claiming to be victims of persecution. Some of the
defendants are officers of the court who have violated the canons of their
profession as well as the law. Others, including a church employee, used
religion like a fake passport or phony ID—a perversion of religious freedom.
The FBI is committed to policing unscrupulous exploitation of the asylum
process.”
NYPD Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly
said, “Those who allegedly exploit the government’s asylum process for profit
potentially put the country at risk by enabling the immigration of people with
false identities and unknown histories. While the NYPD is not investigating
individual applicants for asylum, detectives will work with their federal
partners to arrest anyone who exploits the system at others’ expense and
potentially blocks legitimate asylum seekers from access to better lives in the
process.”
USCIS New York Asylum Office
Director Patricia A. Menges stated, “I want to thank the FBI and the NYPD for
helping us protect the asylum program against exploitation and fraud so that we
may again concentrate on those in need of protection.”
According to the allegations in the
nine indictments unsealed today in Manhattan federal court:
Pursuant to federal immigration law,
in order to obtain asylum in the U.S., aliens are required to show that they
have suffered persecution in their country of origin on account of race,
religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social
group, or have a well-founded fear of persecution if they were to return to
that country. The process requires an application that is reviewed by an asylum
officer with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, who makes an
initial determination whether to grant asylum. If asylum is denied, the case is
referred to an Immigration Judge, who receives testimony from the applicant and
hears argument from the applicant’s attorney.
The schemes alleged in today’s
Indictments involved the submission of hundreds of fraudulent asylum
applications on behalf of Chinese aliens by law firms in the Chinatown area of
Manhattan and Queens. The defendants—lawyers and employees at 10 different law
firms and their co-conspirators—including translators who work at an asylum
office, profited by creating and submitting asylum applications containing
false stories of persecution purportedly suffered by alien applicants. The
defendants who worked at the law firms also provided the asylum applicants with
educational materials related to their fabricated claims and coached the
applicants to lie in their interviews with immigration authorities.
To perpetuate these schemes, the law
firms made up stories of persecution that often followed one of three fact
patterns: (a) forced abortions performed pursuant to China’s family planning
policy; (b) persecution based on the client’s belief in Christianity; or (c)
political or ideological persecution, typically for membership in China’s
Democratic Party or against followers of Falun Gong.
Typically, non-lawyer employees at
the law firms, acting at the direction of the attorneys, prepared the false
asylum applications and coached the clients on how to lie in their interviews
with immigration authorities. A translator provided by the law firms usually
accompanied the client to the interview and falsely translated any answers
provided by the applicant that did not conform to the fabricated story
presented to the asylum officer. In some cases where the client was not
actually a Christian but was claiming persecution based on religious
affiliation, an employee at one of the law firms referred the client to a
church in Queens to receive training in the basic tenets of Christianity and to
obtain certificates proving that he or she belonged to the church.
If an application was denied by the
asylum officer, an attorney from the law firm assumed representation of the
client before an Immigration Judge. In advance of the hearing, the attorney
would typically meet with the client to prepare him or her for the hearing. At
these preparation sessions, the attorney frequently instructed the client on
what to say to ensure that nothing was said that contradicted the story that
the law firm had fabricated. At the hearing, the client would falsely testify
under oath in response to the attorney’s questioning about the fictitious story
of persecution.
*
* *
All 26 defendants are charged with
conspiring to commit immigration fraud. Five defendants are also charged with
substantive counts of immigration fraud and two defendants are charged with
identity fraud in connection with the sale of fake Chinese birth certificates.
A chart containing the names, ages, and residence information of the defendants
charged in each of the nine indictments is attached.
In United States v. Ken Giles, et
al., both defendants face a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison. In United
States v. Freddy Jacobs et al., both defendants face a maximum penalty of
25 years in prison. In United States v. Liying Lin, a/k/a “the Deacon,”
the defendant faces a maximum penalty of 35 years in prison. In United
States v. John Wang, et al., two of the four defendants face a maximum
penalty of 20 years in prison. The remaining 19 defendants face a maximum
penalty of five years in prison.
Mr. Bharara praised the
investigative work of the FBI, the NYPD, and USCIS.
This investigation was initiated
upon a referral by the New York Asylum Office, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services, Department of Homeland Security.
The prosecution is being handled by
the Office’s Organized Crime Unit. Assistant United States Attorneys Harris
Fischman and Robert Boone are in charge of the prosecution.
The Charges contained in the
indictments are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent
unless and until proven guilty.
United
States v. Feng Ling Liu, et al.
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Feng Ling Liu, Esq.
|
Lawyer
|
46
|
Manhattan
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Vanessa Bandrich, Esq.
|
Lawyer
|
33
|
Manhattan
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Feng Li, Esq.
|
Lawyer
|
31
|
Brooklyn
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Yuchang Miao, a/k/a “David”
|
Office Manager
|
47
|
Manhattan
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Shuran Liu, a/k/a “Harry”
|
Office Manager
|
35
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Kevin LNU
|
Paralegal
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Wen Ting Zheng
|
Paralegal
|
26
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Guo Qin Miao, a/k/a “Lillian”
|
Office Manager
|
45
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Sunny Yang
|
Paralegal
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
United States v. Ken Giles, et al.
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Ken Giles
|
Lawyer
|
53
|
Brooklyn
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count); immigration fraud (One Count)
|
Hong Che, a/k/a “Julie Chen,”
|
Office
Manager
|
49
|
Bronx
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count); immigration fraud (one count)
|
United States v. Freddy Jacobs, et al.
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Freddy Jacobs
|
Lawyer
|
63
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count); immigration fraud (two counts)
|
FNU Yang, a/k/a “Daisy,”
|
Office
Manager
|
Unknown
|
Unknown
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count); immigration fraud (two counts)
|
United States v. John Wang, et al.
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
John Wang
|
Lawyer
|
32
|
Manhattan
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Dejin Huang, a/k/a “Uncle Huang,”
a/k/a Old Man Huang”
|
Paralegal
|
60
|
Brooklyn
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count); Identity fraud (one count)
|
Jian En Wang, a/k/a “Gao,” a/k/a
“Big Glasses
|
Office
Manager
|
46
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Lianna Chen
|
Translator
|
24
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count); Identity fraud (one count)
|
United States v. Yong Zhang, a/k/a “Tom,”, et al.
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Yong Zhang, a/k/a “Tom”
|
Translator
|
38
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Song Luo, a/k/a “Marshal”
|
Translator
|
34
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Xian Jun Yang
|
Translator
|
58
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Zeyuan Wang, a/k/a “Steve”
|
Paralegal
|
32
|
Connecticut
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
United States v. Xu Lu, et al.
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Xu Lu
|
Office
Manager
|
42
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
Huan Wang
|
Paralegal
|
40
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
United States v. Liying Lin, a/k/a the “Deacon”
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Liying Lin, a/k/a the “Deacon”
|
Religious Trainer
|
29
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count); Immigration fraud (three counts)
|
United States v. Xiao Feng Xu
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Xiao Feng Xu
|
Office Manager
|
57
|
Queens
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
United States v. Xia Ping Wen, a/k/a “Wendy”
Name
|
Role
|
Age
|
Residence
|
Charges
|
Xia Ping Wen, a/k/a “Wendy,”
|
Office Manager
|
49
|
Manhattan
|
Conspiracy to commit immigration
fraud (one count)
|
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