Punjabi man perpetuates $20-million fraud on Grammy winner
November 10th, 2010 - 3:35 pm ICT by IANSNew York, Nov 10 (IANS) A Punjabi computer repairman put the secret cult Opus Dei in Dan Brown’s epic novel ‘The Da Vinci Code’ to great use to fleece a Latin Grammy-winning pianist and oil-family heir to the tune of $20 million.
Vickram Bedi, 36, and his girlfriend Helga Invarsdottir, 39, of small town of Chappaqua in New York State were arrested last week and have been charged with grand larceny for duping Grammy-winning pianist and jazz composer Roger Davidson.
Their scam began in 2004 when Davidson took his virus-infected laptop computer to Bedi’s computer shop at Mount Kisco in Westchester County in New York State.
Soon Bedi and his girlfriend came to know that their high-profile client is actually the great grandson of the founder of Schlumberger oil company in Houston which reported revenue of $23 billion last year, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.
When Davidson asked Bedi to remove the virus from his laptop, the Indian American began the game of brainwashing by telling Davidson that his computer had actually been attacked with a virus so strong that it even damaged Bedi’s Datalink’s computers, the paper quoted the prosecutors as saying.
Bedi tricked Davidson into believing that he had tracked the virus to a remote village in Honduras and that Bedi’s uncle, purportedly an officer in the Indian military, had travelled in a military aircraft to Honduras and retrieved the suspicious hard drive, the journal said.
Then Bedi told Davidson that his uncle had also uncovered an assassination plot against him (Davidson) by Polish priests linked to the murderous cult Opus Dei - made famous by Dan Brown in his novel ‘The Da Vinci Code.’
After charging thousands of dollars from Davidson to secure his computer, Bedi and his girlfriend went on to charge about $160,000 per month for providing 24-hour bogus protection for Davidson and his family, the journal quoted the police as saying.
Police found $6 million in Bedi’s bank account and $1.6 million in his girlfriend’s account. They also seized several cars, commercial properties and $150,000 in cash hidden under Bedi’s bed.
“They did it very systematically and infiltrated every aspect of his life. It was almost a brainwashing technique,” the area police chief said.
The scam came to light when the couple were investigated in connection with another criminal complaint against them.
“The systematic method with which they continued the larceny over a period of more than six years is nothing short of heartless,” the report quoted Westchester County District Attorney Janet DiFiore as saying.
Bedi and his girlfriend are being held on a $3 million bail.
- Indian-origin man uses Da Vinci Code to fleece Grammy winner (Lead) - Nov 10, 2010
- Indian-American accused of conning musician works out plea deal - Dec 04, 2010
- Is Madge considering Opus Dei conversion? - Apr 20, 2011
- 'Da Vinci foresaw end of the world in 4006' - Mar 15, 2010
- Chinese retailer fined over $200,000 for duping customers - Dec 23, 2011
- Secret of Mona Lisa smile revealed - Aug 22, 2010
- Ali Zafar strives for originality - Mar 02, 2012
- Steve Jobs to be honoured with Grammy award - Dec 22, 2011
- MotoGP: Simoncelli's body returns to Italy - Oct 26, 2011
- Spanish doctor kidnapped in Nigeria set free - Apr 22, 2012
- Sex book with 200 blank pages outsells Harry Potter, The Da Vinci Code! - Mar 15, 2011
- Vedanta foundation officials quizzed in misappropriation of funds - Mar 26, 2012
- Leonardo Da Vinci's grave to be dug up? - Feb 02, 2010
- Did Da Vinci's dyslexia help him to be a master painter? - Nov 12, 2010
- Probe against Bedi still on, police tell court - Jan 07, 2012
Tags: assassination plot, brainwashing, chappaqua, computer shop, da vinci code, dan brown, datalink, epic novel, grand larceny, indian military, jazz composer, laptop computer, latin grammy, military aircraft, mount kisco, oil company, opus dei, schlumberger, wall street journal, westchester county