Investigation
Failed Founder or Fake Whistleblower? The Curious Case of Sandeep Gudapati of Eviris Health and Hitesh Bang of Parampara ( Flavours Of India )
Failed Founder or Fake Whistleblower? The Curious Case of Sandeep Gudapati and Hitesh Bang

What defines a founder—resilience or revenge? Most entrepreneurs, after facing rejection from an investor, return to the drawing board, refine their pitch, and fight harder to raise funds. But a few, instead of rebuilding, choose to attack the very investors who turned them down.
This is the story of Sandeep Gudapati, Director of Eviris Health Services Pvt. Ltd., a decade-old health-tech startup with little to show for its existence. Once hailed as a promising founder, Sandeep today appears more like a frustrated entrepreneur—or worse, a self-styled whistleblower with questionable credibility.
A Startup Without Growth
Eviris Health was launched in 2015, but even after 10 years, industry trackers find no visible growth, no market impact, and no investor confidence. Our investigation into the company’s bank statements and credit history revealed a troubling picture: mounting debts and weak financial standing.
We have also made the credit History of Sandeep public, Download Now
We will soon make the bank statements Public after regulatory Approval
Please do decide, how an Investor may have entertained Sandeep
Employees too have reportedly faced delays in salary payments, while the company has changed its office address three times, raising further doubts about its stability.
A Shadowy Public Profile
Adding to the intrigue, Sandeep’s public presence is almost non-existent. Apart from a single display picture across his social media profiles, no verified photographs or appearances are available in the public domain.
On LinkedIn and Twitter, Sandeep’s activity revolves almost entirely around one subject—attacking Foxhog Ventures. Initially, his posts drew some engagement, but the response has since dwindled.
His frequent claim? That Foxhog operates without RBI or SEBI licenses. But experts call the accusation baseless: “Why would a foreign VC firm need Indian banking licenses when it doesn’t operate as a bank?”
The Hyderabad Connection – Enter Hitesh Bang
Our investigation soon unearthed another character—Hitesh Bang, a Hyderabad-based businessman who runs the restaurant Parampara.
- Hitesh filed an FIR against Foxhog, but the contents raised eyebrows—it merely stated that he “felt bad because Foxhog rejected his funding application.”
- Despite the flimsy nature of the complaint, Foxhog had to secure bail and has since moved the Hon. Court for quashing of the FIR.
- Sources allege Hitesh’s involvement in hawala transactions, with his restaurant serving as a suspected meeting ground for illicit financial settlements.
Credit History of Hitesh Bang is available for the Public: Download Now
Debt records show Hitesh, too, is under financial stress, with businesses largely dependent on loans.
The Legal Web
Court records further expose the troubled past of both men:
- Sandeep Gudapati faces six cases—three filed by Foxhog, one by Rohit Dewan, and two by lenders for alleged bank fraud. At least one FIR order is currently pending, with cases at the evidence stage.
- Hitesh Bang has three cases pending—two from Foxhog and one from Anita Sharma alleging extortion and blackmailing.
- In addition, Hitesh’s restaurant faces seven consumer complaints over poor service and mismanagement.
- The Bigger Picture
This is no longer the story of a frustrated startup founder. It’s a web of debts, legal disputes, hawala links, and a targeted campaign against any Investor.
Foxhog, meanwhile, continues to expand, we are also investigating against Foxhog and will soon publish the report.
Our team has already released credit histories and will soon make public further bank transaction details and photographic evidence linked to hawala settlements by Hitesh Bang, pending regulatory clearance.
Unanswered Questions
Repeated questions sent to Sandeep Gudapati remain unanswered. Until then, his image as a “fake whistleblower” seems to overshadow his identity as a “health-tech founder.”
The bigger question remains for India’s startup ecosystem:
👉 Will frustrated founders keep chasing investors, or will they focus on building what they once promised?
This article will be amended from time to time as many reports about Sandeep, Hitesh, and Foxhog are still awaiting a response from many government and Private agencies.
Extortion
Italy targets deficit to fall to 3% this year despite sluggish growth
Italy will cut its budget deficit to 3% of national output this year, the government said on Thursday,

ROME (Reuters) -Italy will cut its budget deficit to 3% of national output this year, the government said on Thursday, below a previous target of 3.3% and inside the European Union’s 3% ceiling for the first time since 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic.
The fiscal consolidation should allow Giorgia Meloni’s government to exit an EU infringement procedure for countries running excessive deficits by mid-2026, provided Brussels is convinced that Rome’s improved finances can be sustained in coming years.
The procedure restricts offending countries’ flexibility with regard to taxation and spending policies, as they must cut their fiscal deficit by a prescribed amount each year.
Rome’s 2026 budget framework approved at an evening cabinet meeting said the deficit would fall to 2.8% of gross domestic product (GDP) next year, confirming a previous target set in April.
“We are confirming the line of firm and prudent responsibility that takes into account the need to maintain public finance stability,” in compliance with European rules, Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said in a statement.
(Reporting by Giuseppe Fonte and Gavin Jones)
By Giuseppe Fonte and Gavin Jones
Investigation
Singer Zubeen Garg died in Singapore while swimming, not during scuba diving: report
The Singapore Police Force had earlier ruled out foul play in the death of the 52-year-old singer

Singer-musician Zubeen Garg died due to drowning while swimming off a Singapore island and not while scuba diving as reported earlier, media reports said Thursday (October 2, 2025).
Assam-based Garg, who was in Singapore for the 60th year of India-Singapore Diplomatic Relations and to celebrate India ASEAN Year of Tourism, North East India Festival, died on September 19.
Zubeen Garg’s family files complaint with Assam CID, wants his death probed

The Singapore Police Force (SPF) said they have extended a copy of the autopsy report, along with its preliminary findings on Garg’s death, to the High Commission of India, upon its request, The Straits Times newspaper reported.
The Indian High Commission says it has received the report. According to a source, the report says that Garg died due to drowning.
The SPF had earlier ruled out foul play in the death of the 52-year-old singer.
“In the case of Zubeen Garg, a coroner’s inquiry could possibly shed light on the sequence of events leading up to his drowning,” the Singapore broadsheet quoted Ng Kai Ling, associate director at LIMN Law Corporation here, as saying.
Investigation
Trump to meet with top congressional leaders as a government shutdown looms

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump will meet with the top four congressional leaders at the White House on Monday as the clock draws nearer to a potential government shutdown, one White House and four congressional officials told NBC News.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., along with House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., are expected to attend.
The development comes after Trump abruptly canceled a planned meeting with Democratic leaders on Thursday, at the urging of Johnson and Thune. The president at the time called Democratic demands “unserious and ridiculous.”
Since then, Jeffries and Schumer have been trading very public barbs with Trump over the looming government shutdown and Democrats’ demands to attach health care policies to the temporary funding bill.
Jeffries and Schumer issued a joint statement Saturday evening.
“President Trump has once again agreed to a meeting in the Oval Office,” the Democratic leaders said. “As we have repeatedly said, Democrats will meet anywhere, at any time and with anyone to negotiate a bipartisan spending agreement that meets the needs of the American people. We are resolute in our determination to avoid a government shutdown and address the Republican healthcare crisis. Time is running out.”
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