Dhirendra Prasad Former
Apple Employee Defrauded
Apple For $17M
November 21, 2022
Dhirendra Prasad pleaded
guilty in federal court
today to conspiracy to
commit fraud and
conspiracy to defraud
the United States in
connection with multiple
schemes defrauding his
then employer Apple,
Inc., announced United
States Attorney
Stephanie M. Hinds and
Internal Revenue
Service-Criminal
Investigation (IRS-CI)
Special Agent in Charge
Mark H. Pearson.
In a written plea
agreement entered today,
Prasad, 52, of Mountain
House, California,
described that he was
employed by Apple from
2008 through 2018 and
acted for most of that
time as a buyer in
Apple’s Global Service
Supply Chain. Prasad’s
responsibilities
involved purchasing
parts and services for
Apple from vendors.
Prasad admitted he began
to defraud Apple as
early as 2011 by taking
kickbacks, inflating
invoices, stealing
parts, and causing Apple
to pay for items and
services never received.
Prasad admitted these
schemes continued
through 2018 and
ultimately resulted in a
loss to Apple of more
than $17 million.
Prasad admitted his
co-conspirators in the
fraud schemes were
Robert Gary Hansen and
Don M. Baker, who reside
in the Central District
of California. Hansen
and Baker each owned
vendor companies, and
their companies engaged
in business with Apple.
Hansen and Baker were
earlier charged in
separate federal
criminal cases, and they
have admitted their
involvement in the
schemes.
In one of several fraud
schemes admitted by
Prasad, in 2013 he had
motherboards shipped
from Apple’s inventory
to Baker’s company,
CTrends. Baker arranged
to have the
motherboards’ components
harvested, and Prasad
arranged for Apple to
issue purchase orders
for those harvested
components. Baker
shipped the harvested
components back to
Apple, and CTrends
submitted invoices to
Apple, thus billing
Apple for its own
components. Prasad
caused Apple to pay the
fraudulent invoices, and
Baker and Prasad
thereafter split the
proceeds of the fraud.
In another example, in
approximately 2016
Prasad arranged to have
components shipped from
Apple’s inventory
located in a Nevada
warehouse to Hansen’s
business, Quality
Electronics
Distributors, Inc.
Hansen intercepted the
components, removed them
from their packaging,
placed them in new
packaging, and shipped
them back to Apple’s
warehouse. Prasad
created purchase orders
for the components, and
Hansen submitted
invoices to Apple for
them, thus billing Apple
for its own components.
Prasad caused Apple to
pay the fraudulent
invoices, and Hansen and
Prasad split the
proceeds of the fraud.
In addition to the many
fraud schemes, Prasad
admitted he engaged in
tax fraud by funneling
illicit payments from
Hansen directly to
Prasad’s creditors.
Prasad also caused a
shell company to issue
sham invoices to CTrends
in order to conceal
Baker’s illicit payments
to Prasad and to allow
Baker to claim hundreds
of thousands of dollars
of unjustified tax
deductions. These
schemes resulted in an
IRS loss of more than
$1.8 million.
The United States also
instituted a civil
forfeiture action to
forfeit the assets
acquired by Prasad with
the fraud proceeds,
including multiple real
properties he purchased
and numerous financial
accounts containing
funds traced to Prasad’s
crimes. These assets
have an aggregate value
of approximately $5
million. Today, Prasad
agreed to forfeit all
the assets to the United
States.
Prasad
pleaded guilty to one
count of conspiracy to
commit mail fraud and
wire fraud in violation
of 18 U.S.C. § 1349, 18
U.S.C. § 1341 & 18 U.S.C.
§ 1343, which carries a
maximum sentence of 20
years in prison. He also
pleaded guilty to one
count of conspiracy to
defraud the United
States in violation of
18 U.S.C. § 371, which
carries a maximum
sentence of five years.
However, any sentence
following conviction
would be imposed by the
court only after
consideration of the
U.S. Sentencing
Guidelines and the
federal statute
governing the imposition
of a sentence, 18 U.S.C.
§ 3553.
United States District
Judge Beth L. Freeman
scheduled Prasad’s
sentencing hearing for
March 14, 2023. Prasad
remains out of custody
pending his sentencing
hearing.
Assistant United States
Attorney Michael G.
Pitman is prosecuting
the case, with the
assistance of Sahib Kaur.
Assistant United States
Attorney Karen D.
Beausey is representing
the United States in the
civil forfeiture action,
with the assistance of
Carolyn Caparas. The
prosecution was the
result of an
investigation led by
Internal Revenue
Service, Criminal
Investigation with the
assistance of the
Special Enforcement
Program.