Conroe man charged with funneling money to India

According to the allegations, the fraud ring operated out of Conroe and other locations in the US and India.

Share 


Caller Content category interest

A 48-year-old local man has been taken into custody on charges of obtaining over $600,000 from elderly victims throughout the country, announced U.S. Attorney Jennifer Lowery.

Authorities arrested Anthony Munigety, 48, today. He is expected to make his initial appearance before U.S. Magistrate Judge Edison at 2 p.m. Also charged is Ravi Kumar of Noida, India. He is believed to be in India and considered a fugitive. A warrant remains outstanding for his arrest.  

A federal grand jury returned a 20-count indictment Dec. 15, 2021.

According to the allegations, the fraud ring operated out of the Conroe area and other locations in the United States and India. Munigety, Kumar and others allegedly committed various fraud schemes targeting primarily elderly victims throughout the United States.

The primary objective, according to the indictment, was to deceive victims by telling them a technical support company or other entities were purportedly helping them with their computers. They would allegedly trick victims into believing they had been erroneously refunded or overpaid and needed to return the overpayment.

The indictment alleges they were able to gain access to a victim’s computer. This enabled Munigety, Kumar and others to move funds between or wire transfer monies out of their accounts, according to the charges. Once that occurred, Munigety and others would keep a portion of the money and wire the remainder to Kumar in India, according to the charges. 

As a result of their scheme, Munigety and others allegedly received over $600,000 from elderly victims.

Munigety and Kumar are charged conspiracy to commit money laundering, 13 counts of wire fraud and six counts of money laundering.

If convicted, they face up to 20 years on each count as well as a possible $250,000 maximum fine.

IRS – Criminal Investigation and FBI conducted the investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Quincy L. Ollison is prosecuting the case.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas is a member of the Department of Justice’s Elder Justice Initiative which combats elder abuse, neglect and financial fraud and scams that target our nation’s seniors.

November 17, 2024
Michael MK

Michael MK
Senior Editor & Writer

Share 

More from Caller Content

METRO Lifts Mask Requirement
Caller Content

METRO Lifts Mask Requirement

Masks will be optional throughout the METRO system

Mayor Turner announces approval of largest urban solar farm in the country
Caller Content

Mayor Turner announces approval of largest urban solar farm in the country

It will be the largest urban solar farm in the nation built on a landfill
 

Texas Cou­ple Con­vict­ed of $1 Mil­lion Medicare Fraud Scheme
Caller Content

Texas Cou­ple Con­vict­ed of $1 Mil­lion Medicare Fraud Scheme

The husband and wife owned and operated group homes in which Medicare beneficiaries lived
 

$2M worth of meth found in mobile home near Scenic River Drive in east Harris County
Caller Content

$2M worth of meth found in mobile home near Scenic River Drive in east Harris County

Police discover $2 million worth of crystal meth inside of a home in Harris County

Houston Zoo Prepares as Avian Influenza Detected in North Texas
Caller Content

Houston Zoo Prepares as Avian Influenza Detected in North Texas

Avian influenza can cause severe illness and death in many bird species
 

Reliant and Houston Astros team up to power baseball fans across Houston
Caller Content

Reliant and Houston Astros team up to power baseball fans across Houston

Reliant named the Official Energy Provider of the Houston Astros

Sign up for Houston Caller Newsletters

Keep in touch with everything on Houston Caller. Sign up for our newsletter!
 


Stats
Elapsed time: 0.4583 seconds
Memory useage: 2.77MB
V2.geronimo