A Nigerian, Emmanuel Ehkator, has been sentenced by a
District Court Judge, Middle District of Pennsylvania in the United States to
three years in prison for $11m fraud.
Ehkator, who was also investigated by
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for criminal conspiracy to commit
mail and wire fraud, was ordered by the court to pay $11,092,028 “in
restitution” to his victims.
Ehkator’s property in Canada and the
“contents of several bank accounts” in Nigeria were also declared forfeited by
Justice Yvette Kane.
A statement by the EFCC Head, Media
and Publicity, Mr Wilson Uwujaren, said the commission had in August 2010,
arrested 42–year-old Ehkator in Nigeria. He was subsequently extradited to the
US a year after following his plea of guilt.
The statement said the prosecutor,
Assistant US Attorney, Christy H. Fawcett, told the court that Ehkator was part
of an “attorney collection scam” in which he would contact US and Canadian law
firms by email.
It said Ehkator would claim to be
individuals or businesses outside North America owed money by
entities in the US and asked for legal representation to collect money.
The prosecutor had said, “Often, the
prospective clients said the money owed
came from a real estate transaction, tort claim, or divorce settlement. Once
the law firm agreed to represent the out-of-country client, the law firm would
be contacted by the US entity purportedly owing money with an offer to pay the
client by cheque.
“The debtor company would advise the
law firm to deposit the
cheque in the law firm’s trust account, retain the law firm’s fee, and wire the
remaining funds to accounts in Asia.”
It was learnt that after funds from
the law firm’s trust account had been wired to the Asian bank, it would then be
discovered that the cheque that had been mailed to the law firm was a
counterfeit.
The counterfeit cheques, which
appeared to be drawn on legitimate accounts from well-established financial
institutions, often included a telephone number for the financial institution.
In an attempt to determine the validity
of the cheque, lawyers would call the number only to reach another conspirator
who would falsely verify the cheque.
Ehkator’s co-defendant, Yvette
Mathurin, was said to have been charged for conspiracy and was awaiting
extradition from Canada. Another co-conspirator, Kingsley Osagie, was arrested
as he arrived in the Atlanta, Georgia area from Nigeria and was said to be
currently awaiting trial in the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
The United States Postal Inspection
Service, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the United States Secret Service,
the Toronto Police Services and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were said to
be involved in the investigations into the wire fraud.
Tags
Society
meen....c d whole security agency way dey find dis guy...u be celebrity o....lol
ReplyDelete