Staged Robbery For Visa Backfires: Man Pleads Guilty In Elaborate US Immigration Fraud Scam
Mitul Patel, 40, has pleaded guilty in Boston to visa fraud after prosecutors said he paid to pose as the victim of a staged armed robbery in Massachusetts. The fake crime was allegedly arranged to support an application for a U visa, a US immigration benefit meant for genuine victims who assist law enforcement,
Patel admitted his role in federal court in Massachusetts. His sentencing is scheduled for July 29. The case is part of a wider investigation into an alleged scheme in which staged robberies were recorded on surveillance cameras so participants could later claim they had been victims of qualifying crimes.
AI-generated summary, reviewed by editors

How the alleged U visa fraud scheme worked
Prosecutors have linked the operation to Rambhai Patel, who was convicted in May 2025. According to court documents, Mitul Patel paid Rambhai Patel to take part as a “victim” in a staged armed robbery at a store in Worcester in October 2023.
The alleged method was simple but carefully planned. A person acting as the robber would enter a convenience store, liquor store or fast-food outlet and threaten clerks or owners with what appeared to be a firearm. The act had to take place clearly before a surveillance camera, prosecutors said.
The footage was central to the alleged fraud. After the staged robber fled with cash from the register, the store staff would wait several minutes before contacting police. The delay was allegedly built into the plan so the fake robber could escape before officers arrived.
Investigators said the people posing as victims knew the robberies were staged. They allegedly paid Rambhai Patel for a role in the setup. In turn, Rambhai Patel allegedly paid store owners for allowing their premises to be used in the false crime reports.
Why a fake robbery could help a visa application
The alleged scheme targeted the U visa system. A U visa is a non-immigrant status available to victims of certain crimes who have suffered physical or mental abuse and are helpful to law enforcement in investigating or prosecuting criminal activity.
The visa category was created to encourage victims, including undocumented migrants, to report serious crimes without fear of immediate immigration consequences. It can offer lawful status and, in some cases, a route to permanent residence after eligibility conditions are met.
Because applicants must show they were victims of qualifying criminal activity and cooperated with authorities, a police report and investigative record can become important evidence. Prosecutors allege the staged robberies were designed to manufacture that paper trail.
Such cases are treated seriously because they can undermine both immigration processes and local policing. False crime reports consume police resources, create misleading public safety records and may weaken trust in relief programmes intended for vulnerable victims.
Ten others were charged in related case
Federal authorities previously charged ten other people by criminal complaint in March 2026 in connection with the alleged scheme. Prosecutors said they had been living in the United States illegally and were accused of using the staged robbery operation to support U visa claims.
The people named in the related proceedings include Jitendrakumar Patel, 39; Maheshkumar Patel, 36; Sanjaykumar Patel; Dipikaben Patel, 40; Rameshbhai Patel, 52; Amitabahen Patel, 43; Ronakkumar Patel, 28; Sangitaben Patel, 36; Minkesh Patel, 42; and Sonal Patel, 42.
Dipikaben Patel has been deported to India, according to the case details. The status of each related case can differ depending on court proceedings, immigration custody, plea decisions and sentencing. A criminal complaint is an allegation, and defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty.
Court documents said Rambhai Patel and co-conspirators staged armed robberies at least six stores and restaurants in Massachusetts and elsewhere. The businesses allegedly included convenience stores, liquor stores and fast-food restaurants. Store owners and purported victims were allegedly aware of the plan.
What Mitul Patel’s guilty plea means
A guilty plea does not end the court process. Mitul Patel will return for sentencing on July 29, when the judge will consider federal sentencing guidelines, the facts admitted in court, any criminal history and arguments from prosecutors and defence counsel.
Visa fraud cases can carry immigration consequences beyond any criminal sentence. A conviction may affect a person’s ability to remain in the United States, seek immigration benefits or avoid removal proceedings. Those outcomes are usually handled separately from the criminal sentencing process.
The case also highlights the scrutiny around humanitarian visa categories. The U visa programme remains an important protection for real victims of crime. Prosecutors, however, say fraud schemes built around false police reports can divert attention from people the programme was designed to help.
Mitul Patel’s plea places him among the admitted participants in a wider alleged operation built around fake violence, staged evidence and immigration filings. The next major step is his July 29 sentencing, while related proceedings against other accused participants continue through the federal court system.















Click it and Unblock the Notifications