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April 28, 2012
FBI's Most Wanted Nigerian Internet Fraudster Denied Bail By Nigerian Court Until Extradition Request Is Heard On May 30, 2012.
Justice James Tsoho of the Federal High Court, Lagos will on May 30, 2012 hear the extradition request filed by the office of the Attorney General of the Federation against 26-year old Olaniyi Jones Makinde who is wanted in the United States of America for alleged criminal offences bordering on wire fraud.
When the case came up on Monday, April 23, counsel to the accused, Akin Olatunji, urged the court to grant bail to the accused. He said the accused had been in the detention since January when he was arrested. Olatunji further pleaded with the court to be lenient, claiming that the case commenced in 2010, when the accused was first arrested but later granted bail.
However, prosecuting counsel, Muslim S. Hassan, said that the extradition proceedings is different from the criminal case for which the accused was first arraigned and that the moment the extradition process commenced, the criminal case was dropped. He told the court that if there was going to be any issue of bail, the defence counsel should do it properly by presenting a bail application before the court. However, Justice Tsoho ordered that the accused be remanded in Ikoyi prison while adjourning the case to May 30.
Olaniyi Jones is wanted in the United States for criminal offences committed by his syndicate, which include six other persons: Karlis Karklins, Charles Chidi, Waya Nwaki, Osarhieme Obaygbona, Marvin Dion Hill and Alphonsus Osuala. Between August 2009 and June 2010, Olaniyi and his six co-defendants worked together across three continents as part of a conspiracy to steal approximately Three Million Two Hundred Thousand United States Dollar ($3.2 million) from payroll companies and banks. To do so, they used internet "phishing attacks” and bogus websites to trick unwitting consumers into giving up their online usernames and passwords.
After obtaining this personal identification information, Karlins, Chidi and other members of the syndicate added fake employees to the payroll accounts of victim companies at payroll processing companies. They used these victims’ online accounts to ‘pay’ the fake employees through electronic transfers. The syndicate then shared the proceeds by transferring them to accounts that they controlled overseas via bank wire, Western Union and Moneygram.
The Federal Bureau of investigation, FBI reveals that Olaniyi Jones had two specific roles in the conspiracy. First, he opened bank accounts in Nigeria into which the fraudulent proceeds of the scheme were wired. Olaniyi also used a fraud commonly known as 'romance scam", where he assumed the false identity a young European woman online, to trick men into believing that they were having a romantic relationship with a "Brenda Stuart". Olaniyi used e-mail accounts in Brenda Stuart's name to trick these "Money Mules" or ‘maga’ or ‘mugun’ into sending overseas the proceeds of the fraud that his conspirators deposited into the “Money Mules" bank accounts.
Click on the link below to read the full story about how it all started:
EFCC Arrest Nigerian Fraudster On FBI's Extradition Request
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