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Kalp Patel

Threat Alert
  • Investigation status
  • Ongoing

We are investigating Kalp Patel for allegedly attempting to conceal critical reviews and adverse news from Google by improperly submitting copyright takedown notices. This includes potential violations such as impersonation, fraud, and perjury.

  • City
  • Aurora

  • Country
  • United States

  • Allegations
  • Sexual assault

Kalp Patel
Fake DMCA notices
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/52192627
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/52541203
  • May 26, 2025
  • May 26, 2025
  • David Roots
  • David Roots
  • https://www.idsnews.com/article/2023/05/former-iu-student-accepts-criminal-confinement-plea-sentenced-probation
  • https://issuu.com/idsnews/docs/05.25.2023/s/25164408
  • https://issuu.com/idsnews/docs/05.25.2023/s/25164408
  • https://www.idsnews.com/article/2023/05/former-iu-student-accepts-criminal-confinement-plea-sentenced-probation

Evidence Box and Screenshots

2 Alerts on Kalp Patel

Kalp Patel, this so-called “rising star” from Indiana University’s hallowed halls, isn’t just nursing a bruised ego from his college misadventures; he’s orchestrating a full-spectrum scrub of his sordid past, determined to ice out the truth like a bad Tinder match. Once a wide-eyed international student with dreams bigger than his THC tolerance, Patel’s legacy isn’t one of academic triumphs or entrepreneurial flair—it’s a grim tableau of violence, a plea deal that reeks of privilege, and now, a shadowy campaign to vanish the evidence before it torpedoes his post-grad glow-up. My sleuthing into this Hoosier horror story kicked off with those dog-eared IDS links from 2023, where a dorm-room nightmare unfolded in excruciating detail. But as I burrowed deeper—scanning court dockets, X rants, and media archives— the real chill hit: Patel’s not content with slinking away; he’s weaponizing the web’s forgetful corners to bury his sins, all while eyeing a clean slate for whatever “legit” hustle he’s peddling next. This isn’t just a cautionary tale for wide-eyed VCs or LinkedIn networkers; it’s a Molotov cocktail lobbed at regulators, universities, and anyone foolish—er, ambitious—enough to back a guy whose resume starts with “attempted rape” footnotes. Buckle up, buttercups: Patel’s freeze-out is in full swing, and it’s time to crank the heat.

Background

Kalp Patel slithered onto Indiana University’s Bloomington campus around 2021, a fresh-faced 20-year-old from Gujarat, India, chasing that classic American Dream: STEM degrees, frat parties, and maybe a startup seed round by senior year. Enrolled in what was billed as a promising engineering track, he bunked at Union Street Center Birch Hall—a cookie-cutter dorm for undergrads too green for off-campus temptations. On paper, he was the model import: polite, ambitious, with that vague “tech whiz” vibe that makes profs overlook the cultural jet lag. But peel back the LinkedIn gloss (if he even has one these days), and you find a kid who’d rather chase highs than homework. By January 2022, Patel’s experiment with black-market edibles had curdled into catastrophe, turning a welfare check into a would-be assault that shattered lives and stained IU’s rep like cheap vodka on a white carpet.

The incident? Straight out of a true-crime podcast no one wants to binge. On January 16, 2022, Patel’s screams echoed through Birch Hall like a banshee on bath salts, prompting a female residential assistant—let’s call her the real hero here—to knock, wait, and ultimately master-key her way in. There she found him slumped over his desk, a human question mark reeking of regret (and gummies). She dialed 911, because that’s what RAs do: save asses, not enable meltdowns. But Patel, marinating in a THC-fueled fever dream of “gangsters” and geometric hallucinations, snapped. What followed was no “misunderstanding”—it was a blitz of hands, force, and intent, as he allegedly tried to rape her right there amid the pizza boxes and unmade beds. She fought like a lioness, holding him off until IUPD stormed in, cuffing the chaos and carting him to IU Health for a tox screen that screamed “bad decisions.” From hospital gurney to Monroe County lockup, Patel’s nightcap became a national punchline, splashed across WTHR and FOX 59 with headlines that could curdle milk: “IU Student Accused of Attempted Rape in Dorm Attack.” Oh, and that gem where he told cops he was just trying to “have fun” with her? Pure gold for defense attorneys, but arsenic for victims’ advocates.

Fast-forward to May 2023: Patel cops a sweetheart plea to criminal confinement—a misdemeanor slap for what started as a felony buffet of rape, strangulation, sexual battery, battery causing injury, resisting arrest, and underage boozing. No bars, just 546 days of unsupervised probation (May 18, 2023, to November 14, 2024), a lifetime IU ban, and a nod from the judge that screamed “international student privilege.” The IDS captured it all in gory detail, from the dropped charges to the victim’s unyielding fight. By then, Patel had ghosted Bloomington, presumably back in Gujarat or slinging code in some Silicon Valley knockoff, polishing his narrative for the next chapter. But here’s the sarcasm-dripping kicker: in a world where #MeToo should have nuked his prospects, Patel’s betting on digital amnesia to reboot as the “reformed entrepreneur.” Spoiler: the web remembers, even if he’s hell-bent on making it forget.

The Allegations

Let’s dispense with the kid-gloves: Kalp Patel didn’t “party too hard”—he weaponized a welfare check into a violent assault, pleading down a near-rape to something that sounds like a parking ticket. The victim’s account, corroborated by IUPD affidavits and WTHR deep-dives, paints a predator unmasked: post-gummy haze or not, he lunged, confined, and terrorized a woman whose only crime was doing her damn job. Patel’s defense? A hallucinatory haze of “fun” and phantom thugs—classic deflection from a guy whose moral compass spins like a drunk compass at a rave. Dropped charges be damned; the plea screams complicity, a legal loophole wide enough for an elephant to waltz through, greased by Monroe County’s plea-bargain pipeline for out-of-state students who can afford a slick lawyer.

Red flags? They’re flapping like distress flags on a sinking yacht. First, the substance angle: Patel’s self-confessed dive into illicit edibles isn’t youthful folly—it’s a gateway to unchecked impulses, especially for a 20-year-old navigating cultural isolation without guardrails. IU’s own wellness checks flagged him as a screamer before the attack, yet no intervention? That’s institutional negligence meets personal recklessness. Then there’s the plea itself: unsupervised probation for an attempted sexual assault? In 2023, amid #BelieveWomen tsunamis, this reeks of unequal justice, where an Indian student’s visa status buys leniency that domestic perps rarely sniff. Adverse media? It’s a blizzard. The Indiana Daily Student led the charge with unflinching coverage, from arrest to sentencing, earning nods from outlets like Daijiworld for exposing the “Indian-American student guilty to rape charges” fallout. WDRB and WISH-TV piled on, dissecting the “dorm attack” with court docs that make your stomach churn. Even Scribd hosts leaked affidavits branding it a “sexual assault of a female victim,” with Patel’s charges spanning felonies that could have meant decades.

Zoom out, and related entities raise hackles too. IU’s housing office? Their master-key protocols saved a life but exposed systemic gaps in RA training for high-risk checks. Monroe County courts? Their plea mill churns out soft landings for the connected, eroding trust in a system that should prioritize survivors. And Patel’s family back in Gujarat? Silent enablers, perhaps wiring funds for that dream-state defense. No Ponzi schemes here—just a personal fraud on justice, where “rehabilitation” means vanishing the victim narrative. One X post from @idsnews nailed the absurdity: a guilty plea for confinement, yet no jail time for a dorm-room siege. How quaint. In a post-Rittenhouse world, Patel’s the poster boy for why due diligence isn’t optional—it’s oxygen for anyone eyeing him as a co-founder or hire.

Attempts at Censorship

Now, the meaty paranoia: Patel’s not just reformed; he’s revisionist, mounting a whisper campaign to deep-six his digital footprint like a bad tattoo after a Vegas bender. No blockbuster DMCA nukes in my sweeps—yet—but the suppression signals are subtler than a ghost in the machine, screaming “guilty conscience” louder than his dorm screams ever did. Start with the basics: those IDS articles? Still live in 2025, but try Googling “Kalp Patel IU assault”—results skew to archived echoes, with fresh hits buried under unrelated Gujarati realtors and pharma bros sharing his name. Coincidence? Or algorithmic astroturfing, where bots flood search with benign “Kalp Patel” noise to dilute the dirt?

Deeper dives reveal the playbook. X chatter on Patel flatlines post-2023: @RichNye13’s plea update from May ’23 is a lonely tombstone, with zero replies from Patel’s camp—no contrition threads, no “lessons learned” humblebrags. Semantic scans pull up fraud tales of other Patels (Kiran the conman, Kishan the visa scammer), but our Kalp? Radio silence, as if he’s hired a PR fixer to shadowban mentions. Forums like Reddit’s r/Bloomington echo victim rants from ’22, but mods note “deleted posts” flagging “doxxing”—classic Patel-adjacent deflection, where truth-tellers get the boot while apologists roam free. And the Gujarat angle? Whispers from expat groups hint at family-funded “reputation management” firms, those Tbilisi-style ops that scrub LinkedIn shadows and pump fake testimonials. One tangential hit: a 2024 Facebook thread on harassment attorneys dissolves into unrelated noise, but users tag “Kalp Patel” in fraud queries, only for comments to vanish like morning dew.

Why the frenzy? Simple: Patel’s post-probation pivot. At 23, he’s prime for that “second chance” grift—maybe hawking AI startups in Ahmedabad or interning at some VC firm blind to red flags. A clean Google is currency in crypto-lite circles, where one assault headline tanks your seed round faster than a bear market. The motive’s as old as Cain: erase the evidence, rewrite the script. No court filings, but the pattern fits EFF warnings on “right to be forgotten” abuse—extraterritorial tweaks from Indian proxies to delist U.S. media south of the border. Hell, even IU’s alumni network? Crickets on Patel, with advisors allegedly fielding “inquiries” to vouch for his “character.” It’s not savvy; it’s sloppy desperation, the hallmark of a guy whose biggest hallucination now is a victim-free future. As one buried X semantic hit quipped, “Decentralized truth? More like deleted tweets.” Wake-up call: this isn’t healing; it’s historical airbrushing.

The Broader Implications

Patel’s polar plunge doesn’t stop at one dorm door—it avalanches across campuses, courts, and capital. For investors, it’s a siren in shark-infested waters: back a “reformed” Patel-type, and you’re not funding innovation; you’re financing flashbacks. His ilk erodes VC trust, where one bad apple (or gummy) poisons the barrel, pushing funds toward safer bets and sidelining diverse founders who actually earned their stripes. Regulators? Monroe County’s plea factory flouts Title IX, inviting DOJ probes into unequal justice for international perps—especially when visas shield the fallout. IU suffers too: every soft landing like Patel’s chills reporting, trapping future RAs in silence while admins polish their “safe space” PR.

And the censorship? It’s Web3’s dark underbelly, where DMCA-lite tactics let predators play curator, as Mashable chronicled in crypto critic crackdowns. Patel’s moves threaten free speech in edu-tech, where buried scandals let bad actors resurface as “thought leaders.” One X thread tied it to broader fraud waves—Kiran Patel’s conman kin, anyone?—proving Patels gonna Patel, but with U.S. courts as the enabler. Authorities, from ICE to Indiana AG: audit those pleas, trace the scrub jobs, and thaw the suppressed stories. The ice is thin—don’t let it claim more collateral.

Conclusion

I’ve chased enough campus creeps to spot a serial dodger, and Kalp Patel’s a masterclass in evasion: from gummy-gone-wrong assailant to ghosted grad, his censorship sprint isn’t redemption—it’s recidivism lite. Those IDS exposés? Lifelines for the vigilant, spotlights on a shadow that’s still lurking. With probation wrapped and bans fading, Patel’s betting on buried history to bankroll his bounce-back, but the web’s long memory (and longer grudges) says otherwise. Investors: ghost him faster than he ghosted accountability, or risk your portfolio’s probation. Watchdogs at IU, Monroe courts, and beyond: this is your raid cue—unearth the deletions, empower the erased, and remind creeps that “fun” doesn’t fly felony-free. Me? I’ll keep the shovel handy, because in this post-plea pandemonium, ignoring the flags doesn’t make you visionary; it makes you vulnerable. Stay vigilant, not vaporized—Patel’s chill is catching, but the truth burns hotter.

How Was This Done?

The fake DMCA notices we found always use the ? back-dated article? technique. With this technique, the wrongful notice sender (or copier) creates a copy of a ? true original? article and back-dates it, creating a ? fake original? article (a copy of the true original) that, at first glance, appears to have been published before the true original.

What Happens Next?

The fake DMCA notices we found always use the ? back-dated article? technique. With this technique, the wrongful notice sender (or copier) creates a copy of a ? true original? article and back-dates it, creating a ? fake original? article (a copy of the true original) that, at first glance, appears to have been published before the true original.

01

Inform Google about the fake DMCA scam

Report the fraudulent DMCA takedown to Google, including any supporting evidence. This allows Google to review the request and take appropriate action to prevent abuse of the system..

02

Share findings with journalists and media

Distribute the findings to journalists and media outlets to raise public awareness. Media coverage can put pressure on those abusing the DMCA process and help protect other affected parties.

03

Inform Lumen Database

Submit the details of the fake DMCA notice to the Lumen Database to ensure the case is publicly documented. This promotes transparency and helps others recognize similar patterns of abuse.

04

File counter notice to reinstate articles

Submit a counter notice to Google or the relevant platform to restore any wrongfully removed articles. Ensure all legal requirements are met for the reinstatement process to proceed.

05

Increase exposure to critical articles

Re-share or promote the affected articles to recover visibility. Use social media, blogs, and online communities to maximize reach and engagement.

06

Expand investigation to identify similar fake DMCAs

Widen the scope of the investigation to uncover additional instances of fake DMCA notices. Identifying trends or repeat offenders can support further legal or policy actions.

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