Many Indians commit crimes here, and their information is available on police websites, YouTube videos, DOJ, ICE, and other government sources. Many people send me this information to post or make videos, and I have done so in the past.
Over time, I have realized that many of these individuals are released on bail and continue to lead normal lives here. Some have even gone a step further and sent me legal threats to remove my videos that were based on police and news links.
Upon my request, they showed that 3 out of 4 individuals in a human trafficking case were released from jail. I also checked with one of my American followers who is an attorney, and he said that a case being closed does not necessarily mean that no crime took place.
Still, every time I received legal threats, I removed the content after paying consultation fees to my attorney. This has been costing me a lot of money, even though the data comes from official sources like the DOJ.
Recently, the wife of a CEO of a body shop tried emotional blackmail, saying:
“I am like your sister. My two kids are in university. My husband is innocent. He signed papers trusting his friend and was not involved in H-1B crimes. He is now working elsewhere, and if his client sees your posts, they will fire him.”
Shockingly, he was arrested, released from jail, and is still able to get a job.
Hence, I have decided not to post whatever people send me, as it is costing me money.
🧭 Why I’m Stepping Back from Posting Arrest-Based Content
⚠️ Disclaimer:
This post is for awareness and discussion only.
I do not generalize or target any community.
Information shared in the past was based on publicly available sources such as police reports, DOJ releases, ICE data, and media coverage.
All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
🧾 Post:
Over time, many followers have sent me links — police records, DOJ updates, YouTube news clips — asking me to post or make videos about cases involving Indians in the U.S.
Yes, much of this information is publicly available.
And yes, I have shared such content in the past.
But over time, I’ve learned something important:
An arrest is not the end of the story.
Many individuals are released on bail and continue living normal lives while their cases are ongoing. Some cases take unexpected turns. Some never reach clear public conclusions.
At the same time, posting even publicly available information has come at a cost.
I have received multiple legal notices and threats asking me to remove content — even when the sources were official or already in the public domain.
In some cases, I had to consult attorneys and spend significant money just to handle these situations.
In one instance, individuals involved in a serious case showed proof that they were released, and the legal situation was still evolving.
An attorney I spoke with made an important point:
A case closing or changing status does not always mean nothing happened — but it also does not mean the full truth is publicly known.
That complexity matters.
Recently, I also experienced emotional pressure from families connected to such cases — requesting removal of content due to personal and professional consequences.
That was a turning point.
🧠 Final Decision:
Going forward, I will not post or amplify arrest-based content sent by followers, even if it is publicly available.
Not because the issue doesn’t matter —
but because the legal, financial, and ethical risks are real and significant.
💭 Final Thought:
Public awareness is important.
But so is responsibility — and understanding that every case has layers beyond headlines.
✍️ — Kumar Exclusive

On Fri, Jul 31, 2015 at 7:56 AM, Kumar
Americans have no future in America because of H1B, outsourcing and Americans prefer cheap labor to save cost to the companies and benefit the middleman(a stupid broker system to supply resumes).
(You are reading truth on my wall, if you are an honest Indian, welcome to read but an hypocrite then get last from here).
Here you go:
1. Americans displaced by Indians and Indian companies, displaced American writing here http://keepamericaatwork.com/2. Highly paid American jobs are poached by Indians and Indian Companies and at the same time, that prevailing wages are not paid to cheap labor but the middlemen are getting benefitted for forward resume between multiple Indian layers. Layer business is not wrong but ripping candidates for forward between multiple layers is unlawful.3. Indians are slaves and doing modern day slavery to employers/ American corporations and America either by doing illegal gas station or part time jobs or peanuts salaries. None of them are interested to ask why? but mourn in depression. On the other hand, give a different dimension back home for our activities here.
The lust for Dollars and Green Card can bend you to do anything because you love America than anything else on this earth. The only difference is some admit but majority deny it. Honestly, we do not love India including my brothers and sisters there. If answer is YES, we do not know what is America? We would build our nation like USA or at least kicked out caste(racism), poverty and corruption by this time. In fact, we started all caste groups and corruption here too.4. On top of it, all Indian Castes, regions, religions started their batches to mint easy money. Caste is spreading here like anything to break America’s EEOC so Americans are ruled out to hire if hiring managers are Indians. Anyways Indians and Indian Companies do not hire Americans in America.5
Ppl comments:
Unfortunately, Google did not let me watch your video(H1B-Episode 47 90% Indians Employers spoiled H1B IT Business in USA Daily I receive emails on how Indian employers (90%) cheat them by taking $6000 from them who ever in India or outside America. I have been doing lots of study on this and shared my experiences how Indians(both employers and employees) spoiled America and ditching Americans and America by proxy calls, proxy interviews, proxy project supports etc apart from no guest house, no bench salaries, no Over Time Paid etc, charging Green Card money from $5000 to $25,000 apart from employees paying fee for Labor, I-140 and 485 from their pocket than by the employers.
Many argue that they are correct and in fact Indians are so blind that they could not identify the difference between LAW, Immigration laws and SCAMS so all (90%) involving in SCAM and CRIME and practicing crime in USA. They are bringing shame to India and Indians here. kumarexclusive.com. An “error occurred, blah, blah” Let me start by saying I will be completing my Associates degree in IT to become Microsoft certified. After that I go out on my own. I see the anti-American climate out there by scummy politicians looking for a quick buck before social security collapses due to no one funding it. The tech companies aren’t looking at qualified Americans at their front door. They looking at the “best and brightest” H1B Indians, Chinese, etc in the side door. They making side deals with politicians. Now– why is social security not getting funded? Doesn’t take a 5th grader to figure out that companies are not willing to pay qualified Americans what they are worth. The liabilities to social security will just keep increasing as the boomers get older and live longer. Fewer people paying into the system due to lack of good paying jobs, and politicians letting corporations open the side door. Just heard today Chinese are hacking into American systems. No sh-t sherlock. What is the saying “If you build it they will come’. Chinese build it so Big Corp can save a buck. But they will come to collect what is owed to them. What goes around comes around. Chinese already looking to establish their own internet completely firewalled from the internet of the West.First of all I’ve never met a poor Indian in the US. They either own a diamond store, or a gas station. They are more likely the rich bosses of companies in India where jobs got outsourced to. They, being very localized here, also create a path for their family and friends. The environment politcian’s create for them must be very favorable since it requires considerable time, energy, money, and risk, to move and settle in a foreign country. (A hypothetical interview with an Indian: Indian speak English? Yes? Barely understood but good enough. You are hired)I want to state that I am not racist before what I am about to post – I am an American worker who has worked around H-1B workers in the government for the past 10 years and I can say without a doubt that it hurts the majority of Americans and I think it is a very unfair process.
Within the US, many prime American government jobs that start off around 65k-100k are flooded with Indian workers, who migrated here and work in these prime jobs while so many qualified Americans cannot find work or get these opportunities.
Not only are these luxury jobs given to these workers, many lie on their 20 page long resumes about their qualifications and get put into positions that pay extremely well and they do not have to do much work to keep their job. They are also treated differently within the workplace, double standards exist everywhere. Indians will usually do the minimum required on any project, nothing more and nothing less, will not ask to move on and await for someone to do something, meanwhile they have no problems watching TV on their phones, running off in groups to talk and hangout while on the clock, come in late and leave early while claiming 8 hours on these jobs knowing full well they were not on-site for the required 8 hours. If anything is said to them, you get accused of being racist, you cannot take action against them without being prejudiced. They form many inner circles, watch out for themselves and build their areas up with only other Indians – all the while moving their entire family members over in the process while they have this secured cushion jobs that many Americans here are not even allowed to be considered towards.One of these places, I met and got involved with an Indian girl, who was an American, she migrated here through college 20 some years ago, she was not a H-1B worker and she even taught me a lot of things about the Indian culture and how they go about securing these types of jobs for themselves and how they cheat the system along the way to get these jobs.Many Americans do not even have a clue how large of an enterprise this is and how many of these luxurious jobs are given to Visa workers while they struggle and pay taxes, and cannot find jobs, even barely minimum wage jobs. But meanwhile nice upper middle class jobs are given away in the thousands to H-1B Indian workers and they go back and forth from India every few months, paid maternal leave, Husband and Wives work for the same dept, it goes on and on.These work visas are killing the American dream for true citizens and it isn’t fair by any means the large scale and thousands of jobs that are given to Indian H-1B workers. I am hoping that this will become more exposed to more Americans because they will become outraged with the truth is finally out there.Now I am all for Immigration, just as my GF is and allowing others to start new lives with their families but not under this horrible program. No offense to you or anyone you may know working like this but it is just a terrible unfair process and I am pushing for legislation to make it stop ASAP.
🧭 Title:
Why I’m Stepping Back from Posting Arrest-Based Content
⚠️ Disclaimer:
This post is for awareness and discussion only.
I do not generalize or target any community.
Information shared in the past was based on publicly available sources such as police reports, DOJ releases, ICE data, and media coverage.
All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
🧾 Post:
Over time, many followers have sent me links — police records, DOJ updates, YouTube news clips — asking me to post or make videos about cases involving Indians in the U.S.
Yes, much of this information is publicly available.
And yes, I have shared such content in the past.
But over time, I’ve learned something important:
An arrest is not the end of the story.
Many individuals are released on bail and continue living normal lives while their cases are ongoing. Some cases take unexpected turns. Some never reach clear public conclusions.
At the same time, posting even publicly available information has come at a cost.
I have received multiple legal notices and threats asking me to remove content — even when the sources were official or already in the public domain.
In some cases, I had to consult attorneys and spend significant money just to handle these situations.
In one instance, individuals involved in a serious case showed proof that they were released, and the legal situation was still evolving.
An attorney I spoke with made an important point:
A case closing or changing status does not always mean nothing happened — but it also does not mean the full truth is publicly known.
That complexity matters.
Recently, I also experienced emotional pressure from families connected to such cases — requesting removal of content due to personal and professional consequences.
That was a turning point.
🧠 Final Decision:
Going forward, I will not post or amplify arrest-based content sent by followers, even if it is publicly available.
Not because the issue doesn’t matter —
but because the legal, financial, and ethical risks are real and significant.
💭 Final Thought:
Public awareness is important.
But so is responsibility — and understanding that every case has layers beyond headlines.
✍️ — Kumar Exclusive
🧭 Title:
“మాట్లాడొద్దు అంటారా… లేక తప్పు ఆపాలా?”
⚠️ Disclaimer:
ఈ పోస్ట్ అవగాహన కోసం మాత్రమే.
ఏ సమాజం, దేశం, మతం లేదా వ్యక్తిని టార్గెట్ చేయడం కాదు.
జనరలైజేషన్ చేయడం లేదు.
🔥 Telugu Punch Post:
కొంతమంది అంటున్నారు:
“H-1B స్కామ్స్ గురించి మాట్లాడుతున్నావు కాబట్టి Americans ఇండియన్స్ని టార్గెట్ చేస్తున్నారు.”
ఒక్కసారి ఆలోచించండి…
తప్పు గురించి మాట్లాడితే సమస్య వస్తుందా?
లేక తప్పు చేస్తే సమస్య వస్తుందా?
మీరు మీరే అంటున్నారు:
“అవును… కొందరు స్కామ్స్ చేస్తున్నారు.”
అయితే…
అది నిజమైతే — మాట్లాడకూడదా?
లేక ఆపాలా?
ఇంకో లాజిక్:
“Americans hate వల్ల Indians jobs పోతున్నాయి… చాలామంది US వదిలి వెళ్తున్నారు.”
ఇది చాలా పెద్ద క్లెయిమ్.
Layoffs అనేవి:
- మార్కెట్ వల్ల కూడా వస్తాయి
- కంపెనీ decisions వల్ల కూడా వస్తాయి
- visa issues వల్ల కూడా వస్తాయి
ప్రతి దాన్ని “hate” అని చెప్పడం easy escape మాత్రమే.
మరి ఈ డబుల్ స్టాండర్డ్ ఎందుకు?
- American criticize చేస్తే → “target చేస్తున్నారు”
- Indian Indian ని abuse చేస్తే → “fun, trolling”
ఇది ఏ లాజిక్?
ముఖ్యమైన పాయింట్:
తప్పు చెప్పడం anti-Indian కాదు
అందరినీ ఒకేలా చూపించడం తప్పు
ఇవి రెండు వేర్వేరు.
💥
నిజం దాచొద్దు…
తప్పు ఆపండి.
✍️ — Kumar Exclusive
🧭 Title:
“Don’t Speak About It” vs “Fix It” — The Real H-1B Debate
⚠️ Disclaimer:
This is for awareness and discussion only.
Not targeting any community. Not generalizing.
Sharing perspectives based on what people are saying online.
🧾 Post (Human tone):
I keep hearing this argument from some people:
“Because you talk about H-1B scams, Americans are starting to hate Indians.”
Let me say this clearly.
Talking about a problem is not the same as creating the problem.
If something wrong is happening — fraud, fake resumes, exploitation —
then the issue is that behavior, not the person pointing it out.
At the same time, I agree with one thing:
Not all Indians are bad. Not even close.
But then why are we afraid to say:
“Yes, some people are doing wrong — and it should stop”?
That’s where the contradiction starts.
Another point people make:
“Americans are firing Indians out of hate. People are leaving the U.S.”
These are big claims.
Layoffs happen everywhere — Americans, Indians, everyone.
Tech layoffs, market slowdown, visa issues — all of this is real.
We can’t just say everything is “hate.”
That’s too easy and honestly not accurate without proof.
And then this part really confuses me:
Some people say:
“Yes scams are happening… but don’t talk about it publicly.”
So what do we do then?
Stay silent?
Pretend everything is perfect?
That doesn’t protect Indians.
That actually makes things worse in the long run.
Also, something we don’t talk about enough:
When Americans criticize Indians → people get upset
But when Indians abuse other Indians online → silence
Why this double standard?
Respect should go both ways.
At the end of the day, it’s very simple:
Calling out wrong is not anti-Indian.
Generalizing an entire community is wrong.
Both things can be true at the same time.
🧠 Final line:
If we care about our reputation,
we should fix the problem — not silence the discussion.