reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The discussion concerns alleged H-1B visa abuse connected to “Quibbits Technology,” “Three Bs Technologies,” and other related companies. The first visits involve a residential address at 130 Darbonne Lane, Irving, Texas 75039, where the doorbell is broken and windows appear boarded up. The narrator claims 27 H-1B visas were approved for that address between 2022 and 2025 and lists job titles such as software developer, software engineer, and IT project manager. No one appears to be present for the supposed workers.
The narrator says the investigation began after online chatter about H-1B scams that included misplaced or incorrect information, and then explains how H-1B visas are described as working: a business files an LCA (Labor Condition Application) stating it has a job needing specific skills and cannot find Americans; after the LCA is certified by the Department of Labor, the H-1B petition can be filed with USCIS; USCIS then issues authorization so the sponsored worker can come to the U.S. and work.
The narrator argues that businesses can be set up using an address and paperwork filed, including from a home address, which could allow sponsors to bring in multiple visa holders. They ask a neighbor about what they have seen at 130 Darbonne Lane. The neighbor says they know the family that lives there, but they do not know what the family works for and they do not see workers coming in and out; the neighbor says the family keeps to themselves and that the neighbors see young boys playing.
The narrator then claims the company’s website lists a different address after the page was “scrubbed,” changing to 7300 Lone Star Drive, Suite C 200 in Plano, Texas, even though parts still reportedly show Darbonne Lane. At 7300 Lone Star Drive, the narrator finds an unfinished building under construction with no staff or office activity and no apparent offices for “Three B’s Technologies.” When searching the address further, the narrator says it is tied to “Legacy Club,” described as a members-only social club with an availability target of early 2026, and the narrator questions why a technology company would use that address.
The narrator identifies a person connected to the visa filings and residence as Vamsi Krishna Vaginapalli and claims there is “potential fraud” involving multiple addresses being WeWork locations. They say the address listed for “Three B’s Technologies” is an old WeWork location and that another WeWork location is also listed as active on the Texas Business Registry. The narrator also claims some H-1B workers sponsored by the person were contracted to other businesses such as Verizon, and that another H-1B filing was made at “Critty Info Systems.” They state that the website for “Critty Info Systems” appears to have coding and spelling errors and lists an office address that takes users to a virtual office location; they also claim the India contact information references a made-up name. They add that other listed addresses reportedly do not exist and that the UK office address is linked to another entity.
The narrator then references “H2M Info Systems,” stating its website is made in WordPress, lists an award/integrity-themed “About Us,” and that the “careers” section shows no open positions. They say a phone number with a Florida area code is not reachable. They also claim its listed location is another WeWork site and that an H-1B worker was allegedly subcontracted to a company in Des Moines, Iowa.
The narrator then says “Three B’s Technologies is not an isolated incident” and moves to another company: Quibbits Tech Systems, which they claim filed 13 H-1B visas, with 12 approved in 2025 and one denied. They attempt to locate “12 workers” associated with that company at an address and encounter a person (identified as Hari / Speaker 1) who refuses to speak. The person says they cannot talk, states the address is “03 Roman 3 Drive” (Newport, Texas 7503 is mentioned) and later references “existence.com” as well as “03 Roman 3 Drive.” The narrator also states that USCIS data allegedly indicates workers are at their office.
The narrator claims that the address associated with Quibbits Tech Systems (cubbitstechsystems.com) is in Irving, Texas, and they go there. The office appears to be a legitimate office building, but the narrator says the workspace looks cramped with only a couple of fold-out tables and one chair, and repeatedly asks where the workers are. The narrator asserts the uncovered information is public and claims H-1B visa fraud patterns can be found via H-1B databases and address lookups. The narrator concludes by asking why USCIS has not acted and calls for a moratorium on H-1B visas. They state they will continue exposing abuse and provide an email address (Sarahtips@blazemedia.com) to report suspected visa fraud.