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US launches H-1B visa fraud investigation; Labour official names Cognizant among firms under scrutiny | World News

3 min readUpdated: Jul 9, 2026 01:09 PM The US Department of Labour has launched a major investigation into alleged fraud involving the H-1B and PERM work visa programmes, with a senior federal official naming Indian IT giant Cognizant among the companies being scrutinised.
The investigation is being led the Department of Labour’s Office of Inspector General (OIG), which said it has uncovered alleged schemes involving fraudulent visa applications, exploitation of foreign workers and practices that may have undercut American workers. The probe is part of the Task Force to Eliminate Fraud, led US Vice President JD Vance, news agency PTI reported, citing Fox Business.
Cognizant named Labour official
Speaking to Fox Business on Wednesday, Labour Department Inspector General Anthony D’Esposito said investigators had already begun issuing subpoenas and were pursuing multiple leads.
“We’ve already started to issue dozens of subpoenas; we are going to make sure that we track down every lead. We have whleblowers talking about some of the biggest companies like Cognizant, who have been sort of… in the chatter of issues with PERM and H-1B visas,” D’Esposito said.

pic.twitter.com/NER6vMidsr🚨 US Labour Department says it will launch probe into H-1B visa abuse into companies like IT firm Cognizant, which was founded in India
— Geo Frontline (@geofrontlinetv) July 9, 2026
 
He did not accuse Cognizant of wrongdoing or provide details of any specific allegations. As of Wednesday, the company had not publicly responded to the remarks.
What the investigation is about
According to the Office of Inspector General, investigators are examining allegations that some employers and labour brokers:

Submitted fraudulent H-1B and PERM visa applications.
Exploited foreign workers through coercive wage kickback arrangements.
Undercut American workers hiring foreign labour at below-market wages.
Used the visa system to profit rather than address genuine labour shortages.

The OIG said such practices undermine programmes designed to fill legitimate skill shortages in the US labour market.Story continues below this ad
“These abuses undermine the integrity of Department of Labour programmes designed to address genuine labour shortages—not to line the pockets of bad actors at the expense of American jobs,” the agency said in a statement.
Focus on worker exploitation
The watchdog said the investigation also targets suspected human trafficking and forced-labour networks linked to guest worker visa programmes.
“The OIG is determined to root out every scheme that preys on vulnerable workers and takes jobs from American workers,” the statement added.
Why it matters
The H-1B visa programme is widely used US technology companies to hire highly skilled foreign professionals, with Indian nationals accounting for the overwhelming majority of H-1B approvals each year. PERM certification, meanwhile, is a key step for many employment-based green card applications.Story continues below this ad
Any expanded federal scrutiny of H-1B and PERM filings could have implications for major technology companies, outsourcing firms and thousands of foreign workers, particularly Indians employed in the US tech sector.
(With inputs from PTI)
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