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Epic work visa abuse by Indian who worked 19 jobs, many simultaneously


               
2025 Jul 4, 1:26pm   993 views  30 comments

by Patrick   follow (59)  

https://sfstandard.com/2025/07/04/engineer-scams-tech-startups/


The ‘economically rational’ scammer who duped 19 startups into hiring him
All over Silicon Valley, companies are realizing they hired the same gifted coder, often at the same time.

Dhruv Amin, founder of AI-tool builder Create, was immediately blown away by Soham Parekh.

Earlier this year, Amin was looking to hire the sixth member of his team, and was finding it tough to locate top-level engineering talent who would accept a low-for-Silicon Valley salary of roughly $150,000. But then in walked the twenty-something Parekh, who aced the in-person coding challenge at Create’s San Francisco office.

“Oh, he was great,” Amin recalled. “He was a good engineer, really knowledgeable.”

Amin hired Parekh and announced the promising addition to the company in his monthly memo to investors. But then things started going wrong.

Parekh called in sick the very first day, so Amin offered to ship Parekh’s work laptop to his apartment. To his surprise, the engineer didn’t give him an address for a residence, but rather for a co-working space about ten minutes away on Montgomery Street, where several Y Combinator-backed startups, including the AI lip-sync company Sync, happened to operate.

Parekh finally showed up for two days in the office and then called in sick once more. Amin and his cofounder Marcus Lowe noticed that, on Parekh’s Github account, he was completing code for other projects. Eventually, Lowe decided he had had enough. He marched to the coworking space and asked anyone who would listen: “Is Soham Parekh here?”

“No,” someone called out in response. “He’s working from home. He’s sick.”

It turned out that Parekh was working for Sync at the same time. Now Amin had a new investor memo to send out: they had to fire Parekh for working two jobs at once. “We felt like idiots,” he said.

It was only this week that Amin realized that he wasn’t alone. “PSA: there’s a guy named Soham Parekh (in India) who works at 3-4 startups at the same time,” wrote Suhail Doshi, the founder of AI design company Playground, on X on Tuesday. “He’s been preying on YC companies and more. Beware.”

In the comments, dozens of founders told their own version of Surviving Soham, revealing a shockingly similar playbook: the Indian coder aced technical interviews, promised companies he was close to securing an O-1 visa, and then stopped showing up to the office or producing code remotely. He’s worked at least 19 jobs since 2021, according to SohamTracker, a database that sprang up in the aftermath of Doshi’s disclosure; he started at least five of those jobs in the last two months.

The image shows a table listing 55 companies with their names, job start dates, employment status, days worked, websites, and proof links. Some have check marks.

The SohamTracker is keeping a running tally of all the companies that employed Soham Parekh.

https://www.sohamtracker.com/

The Standard spoke to five founders who interviewed Parekh, three of whom hired him. Many of the 15 companies that employed Parekh fired him within a few months of subpar work, usually after the prolific engineer had scored a handful of paychecks and, in at least one instance, a company laptop.

The Standard reached out multiple times to the number and email listed on Parekh’s resume; he did not respond to requests for comment. On Thursday, Parekh went on the podcast TBPN, where he copped to the accusations and attributed his actions to “dire financial circumstances” and mental health struggles. “It was not more so out of greed, but essentially necessity,” he said. “I just thought that if I worked multiple places, I can basically help myself alleviate the situation I was in much faster.”

“It’s very economically rational,” said podcast cohost John Coogan.

More than a cautionary tale about mental health struggles, however, Parekh is as much a sign of our hustle-culture times. The subreddit r/overemployed has swelled to nearly half a million members, and every day, redditors post stories about secretly balancing two or three remote jobs. Researcher Yegor Denisov-Blanch, who studies software engineering productivity at Stanford University, said that, out of the 100,000 engineer coding portfolios he has access to, he’s personally found at least 50 engineers who are working full-time at two different companies.

PSA: there’s a guy named Soham Parekh (in India) who works at 3-4 startups at the same time. He’s been preying on YC companies and more. Beware.

I fired this guy in his first week and told him to stop lying / scamming people. He hasn’t stopped a year later. No more excuses.
— Suhail (@Suhail) July 2, 2025

Most self-identified overemployees target remote jobs in large companies. Parekh, however, took a more challenging route, purposefully eschewing big tech jobs for scrappy, code-all-night startup gigs. He scoured Y Combinator’s job postings for smaller companies, many of which required him to work in-person — a bizarre choice for someone trying to balance multiple jobs at once. Parekh told TBPN it was about choosing jobs he “actually cared about.”

The spurned companies offered a different perspective on Parekh’s shenanigans. “It’s a playbook,” said one founder who hired the engineer for four months before firing him. “He knows early-stage companies are desperate for various top engineers, and the founders are extremely distracted because they’re trying to build a company.”

On the podcast, Parekh maintained he’s not a con artist. “I don’t really care much about the money,” he said. “I was really into it for building.”

‘I have a lot to prove’

Parekh’s resume paints him as a pitch-perfect startup employee.

According to a C.V. submitted to at least two companies, Parekh graduated from the University of Mumbai in 2020 with a degree in computer engineering; completed stints as an intern at Amazon and Google; and earned a master’s degree in computer science from the Georgia Institute of Technology. (It is unclear if he actually completed the internships. The Standard reached out to both universities to confirm Parekh’s enrollment. Neither school has responded.)

One early-stage founder, who requested to remain anonymous, said he was floored by Parekh’s application when he first saw it last year. If someone with these kinds of credentials comes across your desk, the founder said, “that’s somebody you’re going to at least try out.”

To land jobs, Parekh had an ever-shrinking list of people willing to act as references. One person, Divyansh Chaurasia, said he worked with him at Alan.ai. “I was always nice to him, because I felt he’s a good guy going through a lot,” Chaurasia explained. Chaurasia provided over ten reference calls for Parekh, before getting frustrated in March and declining to do any more.

For at least two of the US-based jobs Parekh landed, he came into the office for a few days to a week before disappearing. For one of the companies, he said he went back to India. He gave a variety of excuses to explain why he could no longer be in-person or why he wasn’t delivering on deadlines. He told one founder his grandmother had died — then later that his fiancée had left him. In May, he told another founder that he was stuck in the crossfire between India and Pakistan that was triggered by a terrorist attack in Kashmir.

“Also fyi they shot a drone in the air near my house 10 mins away,” Parekh wrote on Slack to Leaping AI cofounder Arkadiy Telegin, insinuating that he lived near the conflict. Meanwhile, Mumbai, where Parekh appears to be based, is over 1200 miles from Kashmir and was unaffected by the attacks.

Soham also used to guilt trip me for his being slow on PRs when India Pakistan thing was going on, all while he was in Mumbai.

Next person should hire him for the Chief Intelligence Officer role. pic.twitter.com/kYZqkpWIse
— Arkadiy Telegin (@akyshnik) July 2, 2025

Now that Parekh’s identity is widely known in the Valley, some are calling for formal punishment. “Please report him to US immigration as he abused his visa status to work under b1/b2 and for scamming the US startups,” Chaurasia wrote in an email to The Standard.

On the TBPN podcast, Parekh assured the hosts that he had already landed on his feet and was working with an AI video company called Darwin. “This is the only thing I’m going to focus on,” he said. “They’ve put a bet on me. I have a lot to prove.”

Sanjit Juneja, the founder of Darwin, confirmed Parekh’s employment: “Soham is an incredibly talented engineer and we believe in his abilities to help bring our products to market,” he said in a written statement.

Like so many talented, if controversial, figures in Silicon Valley, Parekh is getting his second chance. But the damage to the overall startup ecosystem might already be done. “After the Soham saga, pretty sure very few YC startups will hire remote Indians,” wrote Varunram Ganesh, head of growth at payroll platform Warp, on X. “Classic case of one guy exploiting a high-trust society, which leads to downfall of all the others around him.”

Create’s Amin, who is American-Indian himself, said that Parekh “did unfortunately color our opinion a little bit” of candidates based in India who might need a visa sponsorship. Within a few months of firing Parekh, Amin decided to hire an Indian engineer who was waiting on his H1-B visa. The candidate ended up being legitimate, and the visa process went smoothly.

But, as they waited for the visa confirmation, a Parekh-induced paranoia set in. “We were just like, we really hope this is real and goes through and it isn’t a fake again,” he said. “Because if this is fake, we’re going to get crushed.”

Comments 1 - 30 of 30        Search these comments

1   Patrick   2025 Jul 4, 6:12pm  

Lol, one of those companies that Soham Parekh applied to is dedicated to helping people cheat in interviews:

https://cluely.com/


Cluely is an undetectable Al that sees your screen,
hears your calls, and feeds you answers - in real time.
2   KgK one   2025 Jul 4, 8:33pm  

Gifted for sure. Most people struggle to get one good job , he convinced 19. If he was delivering on AI projects, even.more impressive.
5   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 5, 2:00pm  

KgK one says

Gifted for sure. Most people struggle to get one good job , he convinced 19. If he was delivering on AI projects, even.more impressive.


he’s Indian. he targeted the greed of us tech companies.

it’s easy to scam a greedy person than honest, appeal to greed, they rarely consider deal being too good. i’m sure most of these startups deserve Indian cheats like that. Silicon Valley is known for hiring foreigners over Americans.
7   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 5, 7:23pm  

you know something is wrong when some dude in india can get 19 jobs, but Americans don’t get any.

i just think all tech jobs will be in India and China. Businesses move everything there.
8   HeadSet   2025 Jul 6, 6:37am  

KgK one says

If he was delivering on AI projects, even.more impressive.

He may have been subcontracting work to fellows in India. Or just one hell of a genius.
9   indc   2025 Jul 6, 7:54am  

https://youtu.be/IWMngMm3_88?si=2xMgaDifRGWu4-9a

Here is interview.

There is no abuse. He has been working for multiple companies from India.

I am not sure when he came to US or even if he is on work visa

I would like @patrick to change the title of this thread that he abused the visa.
10   indc   2025 Jul 6, 7:57am  

If you are an introvert you accomplish much more than flash people.
11   Patrick   2025 Jul 6, 9:57am  

@indc

It's the opinion of the author of the article that he abused his visa status:


Now that Parekh’s identity is widely known in the Valley, some are calling for formal punishment. “Please report him to US immigration as he abused his visa status to work under b1/b2 and for scamming the US startups,” Chaurasia wrote in an email to The Standard.
12   RWSGFY   2025 Jul 6, 12:38pm  

indc says

https://youtu.be/IWMngMm3_88?si=2xMgaDifRGWu4-9a

Here is interview.

There is no abuse. He has been working for multiple companies from India.



This is the definition of abuse. And he was't really working, just occupying various positions and collecting salaries while delivering basically nothing.
13   Bd6r   2025 Jul 6, 1:23pm  

Good for the Indian guy. He managed to screw over multiple companies or at least their HR showing just how retarded they are.
14   HeadSet   2025 Jul 6, 1:52pm  

Bd6r says

Good for the Indian guy. He managed to screw over multiple companies or at least their HR showing just how retarded they are.

He scammed startups, though. May not have had much of an HR department.
15   KgK one   2025 Jul 6, 2:01pm  

There is going to be movie. Similar to catch me if you can. His movie hire as much as you can.
If he was delivering reasonably , not a big issue. Some of these companies may have conflict of interest, but if AI is in different areas then that may not be an issue. If you get good at setting up parameters in AI model, that's skill deserves major reward. He is a specialist he can be hired as contractor. It's like 100 guys can try to fix machine but guy knows where to hit the hammer to get it working.

To be honest he will have job, cia or other agencies would love to have him.
16   indc   2025 Jul 6, 5:45pm  

RWSGFY says

This is the definition of abuse

What is he abusing?
17   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 6, 5:55pm  

HeadSet says

Bd6r says


Good for the Indian guy. He managed to screw over multiple companies or at least their HR showing just how retarded they are.

He scammed startups, though. May not have had much of an HR department.


I read the article. So it went something along the lines of his salary being lower than what most people would ask. So startup founders, jumped on that like a "screaming deal", didn't think it was too good to be true. Got burned, by the "DO NOT REDEEEM!" Indian. I do think they deserved it.

And I don't think he's the only one doing it. There's a ton of scams coming out of India, everyone knows about their gift card scams, or toll road scams. It's very widespread.
18   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 6, 5:59pm  

indc says

RWSGFY says


This is the definition of abuse

What is he abusing?


It's not abuse, it's fraud. You can't sign a contract promising to work certain hours for someone, and then actually work for someone else for those hours intentionally. Intentionality elevates this big time in legal. That's a felony if it hits beyond certain dollar amount. That varies by state, in ours that is $200 where it jumps from misdemeanor to felony. Man is lucky, he's dealing overseas with some tech companies. If he was in the states, he'd have a record.
19   indc   2025 Jul 6, 8:03pm  

It's funny how everyone is coming up with different terms like abuse, scam and fraud.

The point of this post is abuse of Visa.
@patrick said the author mentioned that b1/b2 visa is abused. They are business visas. He can stay in US for maximum 3months so the claim is wrong. He cannot take anyones job in those 3 months.

@Fortwayne said he is fraud. Sonam said he used to work for 140hrs per week. If he is finishing his job on time how is it a fraud.

All I can blame him is for his greed. As it might have affected the quality of work.
This thread just shows how lazy Americans have become that they are complaining that someone else is working hard.

In 2000's silicon valley employees used to work in 2-3 jobs. I never thought that they were scamming, abusing or part of a fraud. I respected them for their hard work.

I am not sure how he scamed anyone if he finished his job.
20   Patrick   2025 Jul 6, 8:26pm  

MolotovCocktail says







Made my own American version:


21   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 6, 8:47pm  

indc says


Fortwayne said he is fraud. Sonam said he used to work for 140hrs per week. If he is finishing his job on time how is it a fraud.


I can tell you guys here don't know laws very well. Out here this is jail time and fines for what he did. He defrauded people and was paid for work he didn't do and most importantly did not intend to do. Falls under fraud, theft. That is intentional theft, deprivation of property with intention to deprive of property. If he was living in America doing this, his butt would be in jail cell right now.

Besides I think he was hired as full time employee with certain limits, since he had paychecks. Those come with restrictions such as required work hours and times, not free do whatever. Contractors have to submit hours or work to get paid, usually weeks or month later. His wasn't the case.

Here is what he'd be charged with if he were in Idaho:

https://legislature.idaho.gov/statutesrules/idstat/Title18/T18CH31/SECT18-3128/ (I was wrong, its $300 for felony, not $200... was raised)
https://legislature.idaho.gov/statutesrules/idstat/title18/t18ch24/sect18-2407/ (and potentially this once amount hits over $1,000)

For purposes of this section, the punishment for a felony shall be a fine of up to fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or imprisonment in the state prison not exceeding five (5) years, or both such fine and imprisonment.
22   Blue   2025 Jul 7, 1:04am  

Time: not real.
If he says working 140H/week which can’t be sustainable for long term even if that was correct.

Code generation: limited scope.
It could be plausible to write code with AI generators for startups who would start from scratch. I am still pessimistic as even startups change products rapidly. But it would get harder for products already in production while working with a team of people.

Ethics and law: Poor and possibly illegal
Not sure about the companies he worked for but it’s a violation of ethics and law in certain businesses related to things like IPs which prohibit anyone not to work for any other companies without written permission.

Since he appears to be smart and productive, he can start his own company possibly cofound with some others for better outcomes.
23   Eric_Holder   2025 Jul 7, 12:30pm  

Fortwaye says

indc says


RWSGFY says



This is the definition of abuse

What is he abusing?



It's not abuse, it's fraud. You can't sign a contract promising to work certain hours for someone, and then actually work for someone else for those hours intentionally. Intentionality elevates this big time in legal. That's a felony if it hits beyond certain dollar amount. That varies by state, in ours that is $200 where it jumps from misdemeanor to felony. Man is lucky, he's dealing overseas with some tech companies. If he was in the states, he'd have a record.


I like how our Indian friends are openly dishonest, unethical and dishonorable and proud of not even knowing that they are.
24   Blue   2025 Jul 8, 12:08am  

indc says


I am not sure how he scamed anyone if he finished his job.


I believe that is an assumption.
Very likely he misrepresented himself and cheated most employers I believe unless they say otherwise.

In either cases, if he accepted even one W2 job, most likely he violated state laws. I don’t know every state but I believe it’s illegal to take second job unless his first job papers say otherwise which is a rare case in high tech.

It’s unlikely all job offers he took allowed to go and take another job. Even if they do, no one can do context switching among so many jobs simultaneously unless he is a genus.

A true genus would not take that many startup jobs but rather solve more challenging high impact problems at one place.
There are so many visible red flags with this person.
I could be wrong but I think he knows how to use AI tools much better but not so smart in dealing with reality and the consequences.
25   indc   2025 Jul 8, 7:44pm  

https://youtube.com/shorts/4C3pMU1IG2g?si=fKxRGFabcgEHXDUs

In indianapolis this lady worked at 3 jobs upto 96hrs per week.

Can someone check what kind of fraud she perpritrated?
26   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 8, 8:03pm  

indc says

https://youtube.com/shorts/4C3pMU1IG2g?si=fKxRGFabcgEHXDUs

In indianapolis this lady worked at 3 jobs upto 96hrs per week.

Can someone check what kind of fraud she perpritrated?


boy you defensive, wonder why. it’s not crime to have multiple jobs, you probably do. it is illegal to scam people. he didn’t work those jobs, he didn’t put in the hours, he lied about it. that is fraud, felony based on dollar amounts.

simple rules, you get paid to put in 40 hours, you have to put them in. misrepresenting worked hours is fraud.
27   gabbar   2025 Aug 10, 5:26am  

It is in the interest of American institutions (students/universities, corporations/h-1b visa employees, farms/agriculture workers, real estate/construction workers, politics/minority voters) to have new blood/immigrants (legal or illegal).

"Its always about the dollar" - Joe Pesci as Russell Bufalino in The Irishman (or as our friend Wookieman might say)

I don't think Trump administration will do anything to moderate the negative impacts of H-1B visa program given that he thinks that its good, for himself and others. This is a dead horse.
29   WookieMan   2025 Aug 29, 9:14am  

Fortwaye says

simple rules, you get paid to put in 40 hours, you have to put them in. misrepresenting worked hours is fraud.

As an IC, which I assume he was you get the job done, it's not hourly. If you can get something done in an hour you're done. What do you think business consultant do? They work for 20 different companies and have 2 conference calls a day for a weekly meetings about an industry they personally know nothing about. I live this every Monday and Tuesday in the morning with my wife's now corporate company. Her fault to be honest as the owners were lazy and didn't want to manage anymore because she sold so much.

Mind you I don't like H-1234lbgt programs (that's a joke) but Americans have been doing this for eons. It is actually legal as an IC. Most IC's have their own contracts. Think of real estate and a listing agreement. If you don't read the fine print, you're usually locked in for 6 months. Call it work or not, but if a broker does 2 hours and does nothing after, there's nothing you can do. If they don't sell the house, nothing. But they may get buyer leads and sell them houses and make $10-20k of your listing or even more in hight value areas.

I highly doubt they were W-2 jobs as that's more expensive for both parties. As IC there's a huge burden of proof that you weren't doing the job based on YOUR contract. It's a business transaction.

Again, I don't agree with the practice, but a ton of people, Indian or otherwise sell a service and do very little. It's not illegal.
30   SunnyvaleCA   2025 Aug 29, 9:41am  

Reading the text quoted in this original post on this thread, all indications are that he was hired as a full-time employee. For example, the post mentions a "salary" and that he was "promising addition to the company" and that he called in sick for the first day. Finally: "Parekh called in sick the very first day, so Amin offered to ship Parekh’s work laptop to his apartment." Typically, an independent contractor uses his own equipment.

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