Conservative watchdog Sara Gonzales has pulled back the curtain on what appears to be a sprawling H‑1B visa scam operating in Texas, and the findings are alarming. Her on‑the‑ground reporting shows supposed tech firms that sponsor foreign workers but list residential homes or virtual office spaces as workplaces, raising obvious questions about the legitimacy of those petitions. This is not the kind of honest work‑visa program America needs when good, hardworking citizens are struggling to find steady employment.
Gonzales highlighted two companies in particular — Qubitz Tech Systems and 3Bees Technologies — that show patterns any reasonable person would call suspicious: dozens of H‑1B beneficiaries tied to small houses or empty WeWork rooms, and sparse evidence of real operations at the addresses listed. Her reporting demonstrates how easy it can be to game government databases and hide shell operations behind paperwork. If visa petitions can be rubber‑stamped to non‑existent workplaces, the system is being weaponized against American workers and communities.
The story exploded online after political figures amplified a viral video alleging far larger abuses, including claims that a Dallas immigration lawyer facilitated hundreds of thousands of H‑1B approvals in recent years. Those explosive numbers — shared by high‑profile voices — helped turn a regional investigative report into a national outrage and set off needed scrutiny of how many foreign workers really are being funneled into slices of our economy. Whether or not every viral tally is accurate, the underlying pattern of suspicious employer listings is what matters for policy and enforcement.
The attorney named in social posts has publicly pushed back, reminding critics that lawyers do not “approve” visas and that final determinations rest with federal agencies, which underscores a deeper problem: paperwork and processes are being stretched in ways that confuse responsibility. That rebuttal does not erase the footage of empty offices, residential addresses tied to dozens of foreign employees, or the obvious need for better oversight. Americans are right to demand clarity and accountability when our immigration system is suspected of being abused.
States are finally responding. Texas Governor Greg Abbott has moved to pause sponsorship of new H‑1B petitions at state agencies and public universities while the issue is reviewed, a tough but sensible step that prioritizes Texans and forces a hard look at how these visas are being used. Conservatives should applaud decisive action from state leaders who are protecting local jobs and insisting on transparency from institutions that accept public dollars.
This episode proves the case Republicans have been making for years: the H‑1B system, as currently administered, invites abuse and undermines American workers if left unchecked. Congress and federal agencies must stop hiding behind bureaucracy and perform forensic audits, criminal probes where warranted, and immediate reforms to prevent shell companies and virtual‑office fraud from gaming our immigration laws. The truth is simple — no sane nation should tolerate a system that allows fictitious employers to displace citizens in their own communities.
Journalists like Gonzales who put in the work to follow paper trails and knock on doors deserve praise, not censure, for exposing ugliness many inside the beltway prefer to ignore. Patriots who care about jobs, communities, and the rule of law should demand more reporters do the same and more lawmakers act now to close these loopholes. If we love this country, we must protect its workers and its borders from being hollowed out by clever paperwork and political indifference.

