The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission has arrested two young men who claimed to be undergraduates of the
University of Jos, Isaiah Friday and Azzaior Samuel, for an alleged N2.05bn
fraud.
Two bureau de change operators,
Salihu Mahmoud and Dan Ibrahim, were also arrested in connection with the
alleged crime.
The suspects were also accused of
being members of a syndicate that specialised in breaking into the computer
data base of financial institutions to carry out dry posting of funds.
The Head, Media and Publicity, EFCC,
Wilson Uwujaren, said the suspects were arrested in Lagos and Jos.
He said, “Their arrest comes on the
heels of a petition which the commission received from Union Bank of Nigeria
Plc, Marina, Lagos, in January 2013, alleging that a criminal attack had been
launched on its data base known as ‘Flexcube’, by yet-to-be-identified
criminals who falsified the bank records and accounts and created unjustified
huge opening balances in several accounts across the bank’s branches. They
subsequently transferred funds from those accounts to several accounts in other
banks.
“The petition, which was signed by
one A.F Olufade, Head of Fraud Investigation at the bank, said cashwithdrawals and electronic transfers
totalling N2.05bn was involved in the scam.”
It was learnt that EFCC initial
investigation showed that Friday, who was carrying out computer system
maintenance services for one of the Union Bank branches in Jos, Plateau State,
on a part-time basis, paved the way for the fraudsters to penetrate the bank’s
database.
Uwujaren said, “Friday was traced and
arrested. His arrest led to the arrest of Azaaior Samuel.
“Investigations further revealed that
Samuel introduced Friday to Mahmoud, who is the mastermind of the fraud with
others now at large.
“Mahmoud and other collaborators told
Friday that they needed access to the bank’s database in order to carry out
some postings. They promised to give Friday N.5m if the deal succeeded.”
It was gathered that Friday
agreed. On the day the crime was committed, he told people at the bank that
Samuel was his colleague who had accompanied him to work.
It was learnt that after the gang had
succeeded in gaining access to the bank’s premises, it carried out the postings
to six different company accounts domiciled in Union Bank’s Marina branch in
Lagos.
Uwujaren said, “The accounts are Gona
Bureau De Change Limited, Jaxmine Bureau De Change Limited, Dan Kawu Bureau De
Change Limited, Godswill Great Communications, ZHG Services Limited and A and B
Console Limited. The postings were carried out and the syndicate thereafter
went to the bank to withdraw all the funds. Friday was paid as promised and
other syndicate members now at large shared the remaining balance.”
The EFCC spokesman added that the
commission had been able to recover $2,129,900 and another
N134,542, from the fraudsters.
He said, “Other items recovered are
furniture worth N10m from Salihu Liman’s one bedroom apartment in Yaba, Lagos;
four vehicles, landed properties in Kano and Kaduna and a four-bedroom duplex
worth N45m in Lagos.
Investigation into the scam
continues.”
Tags
Society
Thumbs up EFCC! They are common men though.
ReplyDeleteThis is good for Union Bank and other banks that have decided to go cheap in labour service like contract staffs and casual employees. When you pay someone N20,000 per month the person will go any length to survive. This is a wake up call.
ReplyDeleteHahahahahahahahahah na laugh I dey laugh oooooooooo
ReplyDeleteWel,The money recovered shuld b channel into the approciate quters.so far in nigeria,when a money lik this is been recovered We notices that another "legal"theif drill it off again. Qudus to EFCC
ReplyDelete