Indian-American Groups Debunk Sara Gonzales’s Viral H-1B Staffing Claims in Texas
January 23, 2026
Indian-American investors and advocacy groups strongly opposed Sara Gonzales’s viral video accusing two companies of misusing the H-1B visa system. Gonzales targeted 3Bees Technologies and Qubitz Tech Systems, claiming they hired H-1B workers but had no real offices or work. Rajeev Sharma, co-founder of the Indian American Advocacy Council, said, "It is completely legal to start a business listing the home address, the way Apple, Google, Amazon and Disney did." He added, "Legal immigrants trying to work should not be harassed," and even suggested Gonzales "might be in the US illegally." Gonzales confronted Hari Madiraju, the visa contact for Qubitz, at his home asking about 12 H-1B workers allegedly working there. Hari called 911 saying, "Somebody is knocking on my door and then they are like threatening me. ... Please, can you help me?" The video sparked backlash from 'America First' activists who questioned Hari’s police call instead of clarifying the matter. US entrepreneur James Blunt wrote, "Contracting workers out to end clients is legal and an established practise. ... Calling it ‘weird’ doesn’t make it illegal; it just makes her uninformed." He outlined legal H-1B staffing features: client’s address listed on required documents, candidates’ wages matching location, genuine employer-employee relations, and that a home-based LLC address does not mean all workers operate there. Often, operating offices exist elsewhere nearby. Gonzales also pointed out 3Bees’s phone numbers lead to India and its address is in Telangana. The company director is listed as Vamsi Krishna Vajinapally. Both companies appear linked to the Telugu community.
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Tags:
H-1b visa
Indian-American
Sara Gonzales
3Bees Technologies
Qubitz Tech Systems
Us Staffing
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