Tag: nigerian

  • Fraud: U.S. court sentences 27-year-old Nigerian to four years imprisonment without parole

    Fraud: U.S. court sentences 27-year-old Nigerian to four years imprisonment without parole

    A 27-year-old Nigerian, Segun Prosper Otaru, who lived in St. Robert, Missouri, United States has been sentenced to four years and three months in federal prison without parole.

    According to US Department of Justice statement, Otaru was sentenced by U.S. Chief District Judge Beth Phillips.

    The court also ordered Otaru to pay $25,056 in restitution, and to forfeit the same amount to the government.

    Otaru is a legal permanent resident of the United States.

    According to court documents, Otaru entered the United States in April 2013, under apparently fraudulent pretenses; contrary to the requirements of his student visa, he did not even begin his studies in the United States. The year after entering the United States, Otaru obtained lawful permanent status through marriage to a citizen.

    On May 2, 2019, Otaru pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and one count of aiding and abetting the theft of public money. According to court documents, over the course of his five years in the United States, Otaru used 13 aliases and multiple bank accounts opened under false identities in order to move funds and perpetrate various frauds as a part of an organized crime network.

    Otaru admitted that, at least as early as 2016, he participated in a scheme to defraud people through various scams, such as posting internet advertisements on sites such as Craigslist.com for goods, services, and rental accommodations. Conspirators sought to induce individuals responding to the advertisements to pay for the goods and services, which they had no intention to provide.

    For example, conspirators used existing pictures and descriptions of properties found from legitimate websites to create fraudulent Craigslist postings under properties for rent. When victims responded to the advertisement, conspirators instructed them to send a deposit in order to hold the property.

    Conspirators also defrauded business wholesalers by tricking them into wiring funds into accounts they controlled as purported “shipping fees” for merchandise they purchased using stolen credit card numbers. After using a stolen credit card number to purchase items from the victim businesses, conspirators claimed the merchandise needed to be shipped to a foreign country. Conspirators insisted on using their own shipper and instructed victims to charge the full amounts for the merchandise plus shipping fees to the stolen credit card numbers. They instructed victims to send the shipping fees to “their shipper” at the provided bank account maintained by the conspirators, including Otaru’s accounts.

    Otaru also participated in a scheme to submit false and fraudulent federal income tax returns in order to receive refunds. Conspirators used stolen identities to file returns that listed false employers, wages, and employment taxes paid. At least 167 false and fraudulent federal income tax returns were designated for deposit to seven different bank accounts controlled by Otaru and another person. These 167 federal tax returns requested refunds totaling approximately $644,280. They actually received at least $24,356 in fraudulently-obtained tax refunds.

    Otaru opened and maintained a series of bank accounts – some in his own name and in the names of various aliases. In order to open bank accounts using false names, Otaru obtained from his co-conspirators false identification documents, usually counterfeit passports and drivers’ licenses, purportedly issued by nations in Africa, such as Nigeria, Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and South Africa. The false passports contained forged and counterfeit United States visas, as false evidence of the bearer’s evidence of authorized stay and employment in the United States.

    Periodically, Mr. Otaru received shipments from Africa in which false identification documents were concealed.

    In April 2017, U.S. Customs and Border Protection seized a package sent to Otaru from Nigeria that was manifested as “local body scrub.” In addition to a container of soap, the package contained four counterfeit passports (purportedly issued by Nigeria, Ghana, Liberia, and Sierra Leone) with four corresponding foreign driver’s licenses. All documents displayed Otaru’s picture but bore different names. All documents were fraudulent, and the passports further contained counterfeit United States visas.

    In August 2017, U.S. Customs and Border Protection seized a package sent to Otaru from Nigeria that was manifested as “native suite and sandals.” Hidden in the soles of the sandals were four counterfeit passports (purportedly issued by Nigeria, Gambia, South Africa, and Liberia) with four corresponding foreign driver’s licenses. All documents displayed Otaru’s picture, but bore different names. All documents were fraudulent, and the passports further contained counterfeit United States visas.

    Otaru also possessed and used a fraudulent Kenyan passport and two fraudulent Nigerian passports.

    Otaru kept some of the funds obtained from the schemes for his own use. He transferred some of the funds to co-conspirators in the United States and in other countries. He sometime laundered proceeds of the various frauds by purchasing vehicles and shipping them overseas to co-conspirators in Africa through his business, Big-O-Motors.

    Court documents note that following Otaru’s release from incarceration, it is expected that he will be removed from the United States.

  • Nigerian born lecturer spends $190k grant money on strip clubs

    Nigerian born lecturer spends $190k grant money on strip clubs

    Dr. Chikaodinaka D. Nwankpa, a Nigerian-born former university professor in Philadelphia spent tens of thousands of dollars in US government money for local strip clubs and sports bars over a 10-year period, the Justice Department said.

    Nwankpa misused $189,062 of government grants from July 2007 through April 2017 while working at Drexel University, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    The university has agreed to pay back the money to resolve its potential civil liability in the case. Drexel said Tuesday in a statement that it takes “allegations of unethical or unlawful business conduct … very seriously,” USA Today reported.
    The government’s investigation began in 2017 after Drexel voluntarily disclosed fraudulent charges to eight federal grants that it received from the Navy, the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation.

    The grants were supposed to be spent on research related to energy and naval technology, but an internal audit revealed Nwankpa used the money for personal iTunes purchases and for “goods and services” provided by Cheerleaders, Club Risque and Tacony Club.

    The Justice Department said Drexel has been cooperative in the government’s investigation to determine the full scope of the former professor’s spending.

    Drexel said in its statement that Nwankpa was placed on administrative leave during the investigation.

    He subsequently resigned from his position, paid back the university $53,328 and was barred from federal contracting for six months. He has not been charged with a crime.

    Nwankpa had been with the university since 1990, according to his Drexel faculty bio. He was named head of the university’s Electrical and Computer Engineering Department in 2015.

    In the same bio description, he says he has written hundreds of refereed journal and conference papers that were supported by grants totalling more than $10 million.

    “This is an example of flagrant and audacious fraud, and a shameful misuse of public funds,” said US Attorney William M. McSwain.

    “The agencies providing these grant funds expect them to be used towards advancements in energy and naval technology for public benefit, not for personal entertainment.”

    McSwain lauded Drexel for reporting the matter but expressed disappointment that Nwankpa’s conduct “went unnoticed for so long.”

    Drexel stated that the university is improving its auditing controls and training staff to recognize “financial irregularities” and report fraud.

    NCIS Northeast Field Office Special Agent in Charge Leo S. Lamont said misuse of taxpayer money not only “eroded the public trust” but also jeopardized efforts to obtain the best technology and research.

  • Unidentified Nigerian dies in UK’s largest detention centre

    Unidentified Nigerian dies in UK’s largest detention centre

    The Home Office in the United Kingdom is investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of a Nigerian in the country’s largest detention centre.

    The yet to be named immigration detainee was found dead in his cell in Harmondsworth removal centre on Thursday evening.

    The deceased is believed to be in his forties.

    The Independent reports that he was discovered lying still in his cell by another detainee.

    Tapiwa Furumdi, 24, who has been in Harmondsworth for a year, was in the cell next to his when he died.

    Furumdi,from Zimbabwe,according to The Independent , said he heard the deceased expressing shock and anger.

    “Someone had gone into the room and found a body and started making noise. Apparently he was already dead. I heard something like: ‘This bloody immigration, look what they’re doing to us’,” he said.

    “When I looked in the room, his tongue looked all bloated out of his mouth. I’m still shaken up by it.”

    Furumdisaid officers attended the scene quite quickly, but that “it was quite apparent that he was already dead”. He said it was not clear how he had died.

    The 24-year-old said he didn’t know the man well, but that he was a “quiet guy”, adding: “He kept himself to himself, a really private person. He didn’t talk much at all.

    “I don’t think he was happy in here. It’s sad. I felt sorry for the guy.”

    A Home Office spokesperson said: “Any death in detention is a tragic event and our thoughts and condolences are with the family and friends of [the deceased].

    “The welfare of all those in our care is of the utmost importance. All deaths in immigration detention are subject to investigation by the police, the coroner and the independent Prisons and Probation Ombudsman.”

    The government has rejected widespread calls to end the indefinite detention of immigrants in the UK, claiming a time limit would “severely constrain” the ability to maintain effective immigration control.

    Campaigners have long urged ministers to introduce a 28-day limit on how long people can be detained in removal centres, saying the system is severely damaging for the wellbeing of detainees.

  • BREAKING: EFCC arrests two more wanted Nigerian suspects on FBI list

    BREAKING: EFCC arrests two more wanted Nigerian suspects on FBI list

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Abuja Zonal Office has the arrested two of the 77 Nigerians on FBI list.

    The suspects, Chika Augustine and Godspower Nwachukwu, were arrested in Abuja.

    The breakthrough was announced by the new Zonal Head, Mr. Aminu Ado Aliyu at a briefing.

    He said $35,000 has been recovered from one of them (Chika Augustine).

    He also claimed that another suspect, who had long been on FBI radar, was picked up in November 2018, investigated and ready for trial.

    Asked if the suspects on FBI list will be extradited, Aliyu added: “This decision is between the EFCC headquarters and FBI.

    A 252-count federal grand jury indictment unsealed in August charged 77 Nigerian nationals with participating in a massive conspiracy to steal millions of dollars through a variety of fraud schemes and launder the funds through a Los Angeles-based money laundering network as uncovered by the FBI.

  • New British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson appoints 39-year-old Nigerian as Minister

    39-year-old Kemi Badenoch has been appointed as the minister of children by British prime minister, Boris Johnson.
    Born in Wimbledon by Nigerian parents, she spent part of her childhood in Lagos and left for UK at age 16, where she did her A levels in an FE college in London.
    She was an engineering apprentice before she went ahead to study systems engineering at the University of Sussex. She is a member of of the British Computer Society and also studied law at Birkbeck, University of London.
    She was elected to parliament in 2017, having previously served for the conservatives in the London assembly.
    At the parliament, Badenoch talked about her experiences of poverty in Nigeria, including living without electricity or functioning water supply.
    She also narrated how she had to do her homework using candles.
    In a tweet, she said her appointment is a huge privilege to make a positive difference.
    “I’m humbled to have been appointed a junior minister at the DfE. A huge privilege to be able to serve and make a positive difference on a number of issues close to my heart. I look forward to working with the ministerial team and everyone at @educationgovuk,” she tweeted.

  • Nigerian pilgrims embrace other Muslims from across the globe

    Nigerian pilgrims in Madinah have embraced other Muslim nationals from across the world in the course of observing their religious rites.
    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that many pilgrims were spotted at the Prophet’s mosque and other places in Madinah exchanging taking pictures with one another and exchanging addresses.
    Al-Haj Nasir Uddin, from Bangladesh, who spoke with NAN, said it was pleasing relating with Nigerian pilgrims, ”because Nigerian pilgrims are peace-loving people.”
    Uddin, who was seen taking picture with some Nigerian pilgrims at the Prophet’s mosque, promised to maintain contacts he made with Nigerians in Madinah when he get back home.
    Ahmed Yusuf from the FCT said he made friends among many Muslim pilgrims from other countries, adding that it was incumbent on Muslims to relate with others.
    ”Islam enjoins all Muslims to love and unite with one another, even among adherents of other religions.
    “Once a Muslim meets another Muslim and they greet with peace be upon you, you get instant acceptsnce with warm embrace signifying the unity of man.
    “Islam is a potent force uniting people of different nationalities, culture, colour and tradition among others,” he said.
    Yusuf promised to make more foreign friends before the end of the Hajj rites.
    He scored the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) and state Muslim Pilgrims Welfare boards 80 per cent in terms of accommodation and feeding.
    Also speaking, another Nigerian Pilgrim, Alhaji Abdulfatai Bello, said his meeting with other nationals was rewarding and interesting.
    “Anywhere we find ourselves as Muslims, Islam enjoins us never to discriminate but love and unite with other people, irrespective of differences in languages and places of abode.
    ”I am happy to note that, that atmosphere of unity and love is being displayed between Nigerian pilgrims and our people from other climes.
    ”I have met several nationals in Madinah in the course of my hajj and we have been interacting on a positive note.
    “If we can embrace this attitude, on a large scale in Nigeria, the country will be better for all of us,” he said.
    Meanwhile, 17,161 pilgrims have so far been transported to Madinah since their inaugural flight in Katsina on July 10 while over 6,000 have been transported to Madinah as at Tuesday.
    Similarly, NAHCON revealed on Wednesday that MaxAir NGL1049 departed Ilorin for Jeddah at 05:40hrs with 369 Kwara Pilgrims comprising 187 male and 182 female and 185 Kano pilgrims comprising 121 male and 64female.
    It added that total Nigerian pilgrim in Madinah and Makkah has become 19,081 in 39 flights.

  • ICAEW appoints Nigerian to chair Africa Members Advisory Board

    ICAEW – the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales -– has today announced the appointment of Ede Dafinone as Chair of its Africa Members Advisory Board, taking over with immediate effect from Daniel Ndonye (Kenya) who has retired.

    Ede who since June 2019 has served on the ICAEW Council as the member representing Africa, is an accomplished business leader and an experienced board member in both the public and private sectors,” said Michael Armstrong, ICAEW’s Regional Director for the Middle East, Africa and South Asia. “We are confident that he will add great value to our Africa Members Advisory Board, considering his experience in multiple industries, and that ICAEW will benefit from his insights, judgment and counsel.” said Mr. Armstrong.

    The ICAEW Africa Members Advisory Board (MAB) is a volunteer advisory board, whose primary aim is to advise, guide and support the ICAEW Middle East, Africa and South Asia (MEASA) Regional Director and Africa team to implement ICAEW‘s international strategy.

    There are over 1.8m chartered accountants and students around the world, and African chartered accountants make up a considerable portion of ICAEW’s membership. ICAEW trains, develops and supports each one of them so that they have the knowledge and values to help build local and global economies that are sustainable, accountable and fair.

    In addition to serving as Chair, Mr. Dafinone has been on the Africa MAB (representing Nigeria) since its inception in 2016. He is currently the Deputy Managing Partner of Crowe Dafinone (Chartered accountants) based in Lagos, Nigeria. He started his career with Touche Ross & Co in London in 1984 and joined his family firm in 1989. In 2000 the Dafinone family were recognised by Guinness World Records for holding a record number of chartered accountants in one family (6) who all qualified as members of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales. The late patriarch of the family and founder of the family firm David Dafinone became a member of the Institute in 1963.

    Ede’s experience spans audit and consultancy in a wide range of sectors including conglomerates, government parastatals, building contractors, manufacturing, transport and haulage contractors. This experience will be invaluable as the ICAEW seeks to increase its profile across various sectors on the continent,” said Mr. Armstrong. “As the accounting profession undergoes massive changes due to the advancement of technology like Artificial Intelligence and the growing use of the cloud, we feel that it is important for ICAEW to have someone on the ground to guide us on how to implement our strategies on the continent,” he added.

    Nigeria’s financial services sector is a diversified one, in which the largest firms follow a universal model and a range of specialised actors tap specific niches. New trends include merchant banks, sector-specific lending vehicles, and from policymakers, increased focus on financial inclusion. These include microfinance, mobile tools, and the establishment of a network of mobile money agents to service this developing financial infrastructure.

    Mr. Dafinone said that he was eager to offer his insights while growing ICAEW’s profile on the continent. “I look forward to bringing together the strengths of our members across Africa to support ICAEW’s vision of strong global economies,” said Mr. Dafinone.

    Dafinone holds directorships of a number of companies including NEM Insurance Plc and chairs the National Executive Council of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation (affiliated to WWF).

    He has held various public and other appointments, including serving as a member of the Federal Government Steering Committee on the Determination and Resolution of Cross Debts between Public Enterprises in 2001.

    Through the Dafinone foundation, Dafinone runs social and community projects to provide scholarships for post graduate education, distribute micro-credit loans to women and support the development of vocational skills within the community.

  • 26-year-old Nigerian dies in Indian prison

    26-year-old Nigerian dies in Indian prison

    A 26-year-old Nigerian detained since last year in an Indian jail in Mathura has died.
    Times of India reported today that the Nigerian identified as Kumbha Roderick, died during treatment at the district hospital on Wednesday morning.
    According to police, Kumbha Roderick was arrested on September 30 last year by Mathura police under section 14 of Foreigners Act (overstaying in a foreign country) and sections 420 (cheating), 467 (forgery of valuable security), 468 (forgery for purpose of cheating) and 471 (using as genuine a forged document) of the IPC along with the relevant sections of IT Act.
    Mathura jail superintendent Shailendra Maitrey said that Kumbha was admitted to the jail’s hospital on Tuesday after he complained of uneasiness.
    He added that prisoner’s condition started deteriorating on Wednesday morning after he vomited and was rushed to the district hospital where he died during treatment.
    The official also said that the exact cause of death would be ascertained only after postmortem.
    Chief medical officer RS Maurya said that the inmate was admitted to the district hospital in an unconscious condition around 9.05 am and died at 9.40 am.

  • Authors want Nigerians to revive reading culture to keep history afresh

    Authors want Nigerians to revive reading culture to keep history afresh

    The Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), on Wednesday urged Nigerians to revive the nation’s dwindling reading culture to eliminate illiteracy, keep history afresh and be in tune with developments in the global scene.
    Mr Abubakar Daddere, Chairman, Nasarawa State chapter of the body, gave the advice on Wednesday in Lafia.
    Daddere, in a paper titled “Why we must develop a strong reading culture in Nasarawa State”, delivered to mark the 26th Anniversary of June 12, urged youths to read more so as to keep history for posterity.
    The event was organised by Mr Haliru-Barau Habib, a writer, in collaboration with ANA, Nasarawa State chapter.
    According to him, the books a people read determine their overall culture, development and growth.
    “The dwindling reading culture in Nasarawa State today is increasingly worrisome; people are more interested in watching television, browsing the web, among other forms of entertainment,” he said.
    Mr Daddere called on parents to create workable ideology for their children that would curtail the dwindling reading culture, urging them to build book shelves in their homes and stock same with books instead of home movies, computer videos games, among others.
    The ANA chairman appealed to schools to establish reading clubs and also display exciting and attracting books in the libraries’ shelves to stimulate reading interest among students.
    In his remarks, Habib said that the occasion was organised to revisit history in order to educate the society about what played out on June 12, 1993.
    Barau commended Buhari for signing June 12 into law to be recognised as Democracy day in Nigeria, saying that the move had pacified the family of late MKO Abiola and the entire Yoruba nation.
    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), reports that the event featured drama, presentation of short stories and poems by Corps members and secondary schools students.
  • U.S. honours Nigerian Muslim cleric for rescuing 200 Christians

    The U.S. Mission in Nigeria has honoured Chief Imam of Nghar Village, Abdullahi Abubakar who protected 200 villagers during attacks on Barkin Ladi Local Government Area of Plateau in June 2018.

    The U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria, Stuart Symington awarded the Chief Imam with Ambassador’s Peacemaker Award for Heroism at an interfaith dialogue organised by the embassy on Friday in Abuja.

    Symington urged the world to emulate Abubakar’s act of brotherliness which he described as a virtue of kindness to promote global peace.

    The ambassador also advised mankind to love each other and let the idea of one family take the centre stage.

    “Abubakar’s act of brotherliness raised hope of a cohesive society in the face of growing mistrust.

    “Today, there is only one word that matters and that is perhaps, love. Or perhaps, one more word, family.

    “With the lesson of this Imam, Chief Imam, this Village Head, this Deputy Imam, and all of those who brought you this story, is a lesson not just for Nigeria, but for all mankind – one family, one race, one love,” Symington stated.

    He said that coming together to invest in each other was one of the best ways to end recurrent violence in the country.

    “It (violence) will end when all come together and invest in each other and when individuals find the path forward, for not just for their own daughters and sons, but for the daughters and sons of every Nigerian,” he said.

    Abubakar said God, who created mankind, had a reason for creating mankind in different forms and brought mankind together and gave a command to mankind not to harm each other.

    “God has created us as diverse people. Some black, some white, some tall, some short. God has a reason. He is the only One who knows why he created us that way.

    “It is unfortunate what happened in my community which led to the demise of some in the community and by Allah’s grace, some have survived to tell the story,” Imam Abubakar said.

    June 23rd, 2018 remained indelible in the minds of indigenes of Nghar Community and the whole of Barkin Ladin Local Government when over 400 hoodlums on motorcycles and armed with sophisticated weapons invaded the area.

    They went from community to community on a killing spree and the gruesome attack left 84 people dead.

    However, the swift action taken by the chief imam of the community who hid some Christians helped in reducing the number of causalities.