Tag: FBI

  • FBI offers $10,000 reward for Nigerian-linked fraud suspect

    FBI offers $10,000 reward for Nigerian-linked fraud suspect

    The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has announced a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to the arrest of Olumide Adebiyi Adediran, a Nigerian-linked man wanted for a string of white-collar crimes.

    Adediran is facing charges of bank fraud, identity fraud, and unauthorised credit card transactions in the U.S., and is also accused of violating conditions of release after absconding ahead of his trial in December 2001.

    According to the FBI, he entered a bank in Champaign, Illinois, in August 2001 and attempted to withdraw funds using a fraudulent check. Investigators allege that he also opened bank and credit card accounts with stolen identities, defrauding unsuspecting citizens.

    Read Also: FBI moves to arrest Lagos fraudster over N460m Trump inauguration crypto scam

    When his trial was due to commence, Adediran fled, prompting the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois to issue a federal arrest warrant on January 2, 2002.

    The suspect, who has been on the run for more than two decades, is described as 5 feet 11 inches tall, weighing about 200 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes. He is believed to have used several aliases, including Kevin Olumide Adediran, Eric O. Williams, Stephen Dediyi, Maxo Alexandre, and Olumide Adkins.

  • FBI moves to arrest suspected Lagos fraudster over ₦460m Trump inauguration crypto scam

    FBI moves to arrest suspected Lagos fraudster over ₦460m Trump inauguration crypto scam

    The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has filed a civil forfeiture complaint against a Nigerian, Ehiremen Aigbokhan, accused of stealing over ₦460 million in cryptocurrency intended for the inauguration of President Donald Trump in January 2025.

    According to court documents, Aigbokhan allegedly orchestrated a sophisticated Business Email Compromise (BEC) scheme from Lagos, Nigeria. The operation involved creating spoofed email addresses that closely resembled those of officials on the Trump-Vance Inaugural Committee.

    Investigators said the suspects used a nearly identical email address, substituting a lowercase “L” for an uppercase “I”, to impersonate committee co-chair Steve Witkoff. The deception led a donor to transfer 250,300 USDT.ETH (a cryptocurrency pegged to the U.S. dollar) on December 26, 2024.

    Authorities reported that the funds, valued at more than ₦400 million at the time, were quickly dispersed to multiple digital wallets. The FBI, working with cryptocurrency company Tether, froze the accounts on December 31 after identifying suspicious transactions.

    Further forensic analysis traced the activity to Lagos, with login records linking the fraudulent wallet to a Binance account registered by Aigbokhan in October 2024. Officials noted the account had no prior deposits before receiving the stolen funds.

    Read Also: FBI arrests Nigerian ‘tech queen’ over ‘multi-million dollar fraud’

    In total, U.S. authorities seized 20,017 USDT.ETH from Aigbokhan’s wallet and another 20,336 USDT.ETH from a connected wallet, together worth over ₦60 million.

    The U.S. Department of Justice is now seeking court approval to permanently forfeit the digital assets. Assistant U.S. Attorney Rick Blaylock Jr., who is prosecuting the case, confirmed that Aigbokhan also faces charges related to money laundering and wire fraud.

    The FBI has not disclosed whether extradition proceedings have begun but described the case as one of the most significant cybercrimes linked to a U.S. presidential event.

    The incident has renewed calls for stricter cybersecurity measures in political fundraising and underscored the growing threat posed by international cybercriminal networks.

    Officials urged donors and organizations to verify email communications and carefully check payment details before authorizing large transfers.–

  • FBI arrests Nigerian ‘tech queen’ over alleged multi-million dollar fraud scheme

    FBI arrests Nigerian ‘tech queen’ over alleged multi-million dollar fraud scheme

    Sapphire Egemasi, a Nigerian tech enthusiast known online as the “tech queen,” has been arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in connection with a massive fraud scheme targeting U.S. government agencies.

    Egemasi, a programmer with an active Devpost profile, was apprehended around April 10, 2025, in the Bronx, New York. She was arrested alongside several alleged co-conspirators, including Ghanaian national Samuel Kwadwo Osei, believed to be the ringleader of the syndicate.

    The arrests follow a federal grand jury indictment filed in 2024, which charged the group with multiple counts of internet fraud and money laundering. The crimes allegedly took place between September 2021 and February 2023.

    According to prosecutors, the syndicate defrauded the city of Kentucky of millions of dollars by creating spoof websites that mimicked official U.S. government portals. These fraudulent platforms were used to harvest login credentials and redirect funds into accounts under the group’s control.

    Read Also: Records on Tinubu not ready, say FBI, DEA

    Investigators say Egemasi served as the technical lead of the operation. She allegedly designed the fake websites and managed the coordination of wire transfers. Records show that in August 2022 alone, the group rerouted $965,000 into a PNC Bank account and funneled another $330,000 into a Bank of America account.

    Before her arrest, Egemasi was reportedly based in Cambridge, United Kingdom, though authorities believe she previously lived in Ghana, where she may have forged ties with other members of the syndicate.

    To mask the origin of her wealth, Egemasi claimed on social media and professional platforms to have held internships with multinational corporations such as British Petroleum, H&M, and Zara. Her LinkedIn profile portrayed a polished image of a successful tech professional, while her social media accounts featured images of lavish vacations to destinations like Greece and Portugal—trips prosecutors allege were funded by illicit gains.

    Egemasi and her co-defendants are currently in federal custody, awaiting trial in Lexington, Kentucky. If convicted, each faces up to 20 years in prison, hefty financial penalties, and likely deportation upon completing their sentences.

  • FBI arrests Anambra council chairman over alleged ‘$3.3m romance scam’

    FBI arrests Anambra council chairman over alleged ‘$3.3m romance scam’

    The newly elected chairman of Ogbaru LGA in Anambra state, Franklin Nwadialo has been arrested in Texas, United States (US), for allegedly running a $3.3m romance scam.

    The US department of justice confirmed his arrest in a statement. It noted that Nwadialo is facing a 14-count charge and risks a 20-year sentence if found guilty.

    The federal bureau of investigation (FBI) had arrested the 40-year-old LGA chairman on arrival in Texas.

    He has been transferred to the Western District of Washington for arraignment.

    “According to the indictment, Nwadialo used various versions of the name ‘Giovanni’ when he met his victims online on websites such as Match, Zoosk, and Christian Café,” the statement reads.

    “Nwadialo used false images for his profile and typically told the victims that he was in the military and deployed overseas so he could not meet the victims in person.

    “Using these personas, Nwadialo invented many reasons he needed the victims to send him money.

    “In one such case in 2020, he indicated he had been fined by the military for revealing his location to the victim. He asked the victim to help him pay the $150,000 fine. In all, that victim was defrauded of at least $2.4 million.”

    The US department of justice cited another instance where the accused contacted a second victim in 2019 to help move funds from US accounts to accounts controlled by him and his co-schemers.

    “In this instance, Nwadialo represented that he needed the help moving money in connection with his father’s death. The victim transferred at least $330,000 to the accounts controlled by the defendant,” the department stated.

    “A third victim was defrauded by Nwadialo when he told her that he was investing money for her.

    “He claimed that a check she received from another victim was proceeds from her investments, and he had her “reinvest” the money in a specific cryptocurrency account that he controlled. The victim transferred at least $270,000 at Nwadialo’s direction.

    “Finally, in August 2020, Nwadialo defrauded another victim who he met on an online dating site and caused this victim to transfer at least $310,000 by claiming he needed financial assistance, including help paying for his father’s funeral or his son’s school tuition.

    “The 14 counts of wire fraud relate to the communications with Nwadialo and the wiring of funds from victims to the defendant and his co-schemers.”

    The case is being prosecuted by Sok Jiang, an assistant United States attorney.

  • UPDATED: U.S court declines request to compel FBI, CIA, IRS, others to release documents on Tinubu

    UPDATED: U.S court declines request to compel FBI, CIA, IRS, others to release documents on Tinubu

    The United States District Court of the District of Columbia has refused a request by one Aaron Greenspan seeking to compel US security agencies to promptly release to him information, including documents relating to President Bola Tinubu.

    Judge Beryl A. Howell, in a ruling on Monday, declined Greenspan’s request on the grounds that he failed to satisfy the relevant conditions for the grant of such a prayer for temporary relief, as contained in the emergency hearing motion, which he filed last Friday.

    Greenspan had, in June this year. filed the civil suit, with number: 23 – 1816 under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), against the Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys (EOUSA), Department of State (DOS), Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI), Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

    He alleged that the defendants – EOUSA, DOS, FBI, IRS, DEA and the CIA violated the FOIA by “failing to issue determinations within the statutory deadline,” “failing] to conduct reasonable searches for records,” and “failing to produce records responsive to” his FOIA requests.

    Greenspan had, in an FOIA request to the EOUSA, sought for “records from the Northern District of Illinois and/or Northern District of Indiana involving charging decisions for the following individuals – Bola Ahmed Tinubu (President of Nigeria as of 2/2023” and “Mueez Adegboyega Akande (deceased as of 11/16/2022.”

    He claimed that EOUSA, in a letter denying his request, invoked FOIA Exemptions 6 and 7, which protect from disclosure of information that would constitute unwarranted invasions of personal privacy and information compiled for law enforcement purposes that may constitute an unwarranted invasion of the personal privacy of a third party.

    Read Also; Impeachment: I’m committed to APC reconciliation move, says Aiyedatiwa

    A hearing was subsequently scheduled for October 31 for the defendants to present their responses.

    Greenspan however, returned to the court on Friday to file the emergency motion, upon learning that the Nigerian Supreme Court will hear on October 23 the appeals by the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP, Atiku Abubakar and that of the Labour Party (LP), Peter Obi against the September 6 judgment of the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC), which affirmed President Tinubu’s victory in the last presidential election and dismissed the petitions by Atiku and Obi.

    He told the court, among others, that his request for prompt release of the documents, even before the hearing scheduled for October 31 was because “the Nigerian Supreme Court will hear an appeal of a judicial tribunal’s decision confirming Mr. Tinubu as President of Nigeria on Monday, October 23, 2023.”

    Greenspan claimed that the Nigerian Supreme Court deliberately moved the hearing of the appeals by Atiku and Obi to yesterday to render his suit before the U.S court nugatory, contending that the documents he requested for “would likely be directly relevant to the foreign proceedings in Nigeria.”

    Judge Howell, in the ruling on Monday, held among others, that Greenspan failed to establish that he is likely to succeed on the merits; that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm if the preliminary relief he sought was not granted; that the balance of equities tips in his favour, and that the relief he seeks is in the public interest.

    The judge, who also noted that Greenspan has not established that the purported documents and information he wants the court to compel the defendants to produce actually exist, further held that “neither a preliminary injunction nor a temporary restraining order is appropriate in this case.

    “Given that the FOIA request is for records that, if any exist, may be of a highly sensitive and private nature, and that the subject of those documents – Bola A. Tinubu – has had no opportunity to protect his privacy interests in any such records, the balance of equities militates strongly in favour of denying this emergency motion.”

    He held that the position of the law is that, in such a case, the plaintiff bears the burden of proving that he/she is likely to succeed on the merits of the case.

    Judge Howell added: “In plaintiff’s underlying FOIA request and complaint, he seeks documents relating to purported federal investigations into the President of Nigeria, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    “As previously noted, EOUSA originally denied the plaintiff’s FOIA request, invoking FOIA Exemptions 6 and 7(c), which protect information that would constitute unwarranted invasions of personal privacy and information compiled for law enforcement purposes that may constitute an unwarranted invasion of the personal privacy of a third party.

    “Plaintiff has failed even to attempt to argue how his request may overcome those exemptions and achieve a likelihood of success on the merits. This failure to address this important factor in his emergency motion weighs strongly in favour of denying his motion.”

    The judge also found that the plaintiff failed to demonstrate that he was going to suffer actual and real irreparable injury if the relief he sought was not granted, rather than a mere possibility or theoretical injury.

    He added that the “plaintiff falls far short of satisfying this standard. He (plaintiff) has not supplied the court with any indication of a concrete, actual threat that he will suffer in the absence of an injunction. While his emergency motion states that a Nigerian Supreme Court hearing is scheduled to occur in the coming days, the plaintiff cites no injury he will suffer that is in any way traceable to the relief requested in this motion.

    “Granting plaintiff’s emergency motion would essentially allow him to jump the line ahead of other requests deemed similarly time-sensitive under FOIA’s expedition standards. The inherent tradeoffs implicated in ordering an agency to produce records in a specific FOIA request ahead of others by granting a preliminary injunction thus, must be considered in evaluating the balance of the equities, and weigh heavily in favour of denying such injunctive relief.

    “Plaintiff has not made any representation to the court that the balance of equities tips in his favour or that the granting of his motion would further the public interest. For the foregoing reasons, it is hereby ordered that the plaintiff’s emergency motion for a hearing to compel immediate document production is denied.

    Meanwhile, President Tinubu’s lawyers have filed a motion before the court, seeking to be made a party to enable them to defend the President in the suit.

  • Dealing with peer pressure

    The social media has not quietened over the FBI’s list of some 80 foreigners, mostly Nigerians, suspected to have committed internet fraud in the United States. The list has been followed by various videos of some of the suspects spending money in a profligate manner.  I personally saw three of such videos – one of a purported baby shower in which the supposed pregnant woman who was seated was surrounded by men spraying so much money that the floor was a carpet of dollars.  The second video had a couple dancing amidst confetti of dollars showered by some men.  The third video, the most bizarre, showed a baby, probably six months old, reclining on a bed with bundles of 100 dollar bills around her.  A male tells the baby in Igbo to ‘march’ on the money as she had ‘entered’ a good life.

    Discussing the issue with a friend, she said many of the suspects must have been pushed to evil by peer pressure.  This got me thinking about whether there was a scientific way of dealing with peer pressure and how parents and schools could prepare young people early to resist negative peer pressure.  If children are sensitised about peer pressure early in life from their homes, and the lessons are reinforced in schools, perhaps we would have fewer young people being lured into social vices in the name of conformity.

    Having a sense of belonging is big deal to young people and it is important that they learn from home to be content with whatsoever things they have.  It is the adults themselves, parents or others in the family or neighbourhood, who are responsible for teaching these values.  Children should not only learn to be content but respect others for their differences. The differences may be in income, intellect, physical attributes, ethnic, cultural or religious orientation.   I believe if a child learns to respect the uniqueness of others around him compared to who he is, he would appreciate, rather than be jealous of them and lured to bad behaviour.  Parents should start early to teach children not to laugh at others for being awkward, weaker, thinner, fatter, shorter or something different from the social norm.  That way, others would not be pressured into doing things that go against their values.

    In school teachers who call pupils names in the classroom for being slower in their work, or unable to answer questions, or shabby, or clumsy, do not also help matters.  The name calling is usually taken outside the classroom situation and exaggerates the way such child is different from others.  It makes it easier for others to gang up against the victim and make him/her vulnerable to doing whatever may make him/her more acceptable.

    To cope with peer pressure, a website, Parentsandteens.com, advises young people to be clear about their values – what they hold dear – on which they base their decisions.  If a decision to do something goes against their values, they should learn that it is okay to be different.  However, the site notes that it is not always easy going against what others seem to agree with – in other words, it is not easy saying no.  It advises teenagers to say ‘No’ only when they mean it; and should they be unsure seek time to think about the matter or offer an alternative.  Another website,

    https://www.accreditedschoolsonline.org/resources/peer-pressure/ urges adults to help out young people dealing with peer pressure by counseling them or stepping up to save them if need be.

    One story I find instructive about peer pressure was shared by the CEO of Flying Doctors Nigeria, Dr Ola Orekunrin-Brown at the Master class organised for 81 finalists of the InterswitchSPAK 2.0 science quiz and TV show last week. Dr Orekunrin-Brown shared how she longed to be cool and popular during her high school days in the UK, but was just an outsider who others regarded as a nerd in glasses.  It was so bad that she said had no date for her prom despite there being eight more boys in her class than girls.  Now, many years later, she is a successful CEO of a medical emergency transportation company.  Her rejection back then has had no bearing on her success today.  She advised the young people to always stay true to their values and learn think about the future – beyond whatever is giving them pressure.

    To wrap it up, I would advise young people to learn to love themselves and develop a sense of humour that can survive even the most ridiculous of situations.  I think it would be easier to survive laughing with and at those laughing at you to the point that it takes the sting out of the situation than crying and giving them the pleasure of causing you pain.   I would also advise young people to use their heads and think beyond the embarrassment of not doing a dare.  Trying to fulfil a dare has led many to their deaths.  It is simply not worth it.

  • FBI launched to breed creative giants

    TO discover and celebrate creative young talents in universities, a new creative contest, Future Brand Idol (FBI) has  been launched in Lagos. The event, which held at the Oxygen Academy Lagos, had in attendance key stakeholders from the integrated marketing communications sector and seeks to provide a viable platform for Nigerian students who are interested in Advertising and Public relations to be exposed and become well-bred creative talents while on campus.

    Speaking during the launch, Team Lead, Future Brand Idol (FBI), Ahmed Abdullahi, explained that the platform was borne out of the need to provide capacity development for the huge creative talents that abound in Nigeria. “Our intent is to build a credible brand immersion platform for students of Communication, advertising, marketing and other related courses in Integrated Marketing Communication, through an annual creativity contest,’’ he said”

    Commenting on the initiative, Provost, 02 Academy, Ozone Mbanefo, described the initiative as laudable and timely especially at a time when the industry thrives on creative ideas that are relevant and impactful. “Whether on the client or agency side, creative talents are valuable assets that help to positively project the image of the brand, this is why a platform like FBI is laudable” Ozone concluded.

    Executive Creative director, Noahs Ark, who was also present at the launch, likened the platform to Portfolio Night in Nigeria and expressed confidence in the capacity of the platform to improve and increase the level of creativity especially as it concerns brands among Nigerian students.

    On the impact that FBI would have on the industry at large, Managing Director, Withoutabox PR (WAB), Theodore Nyingifa, expressed that well-bred talents from campuses will develop into competent and very creative brand custodians and cosultants “once we get it right from the campuses, learning on the job becomes even more easier” said Theodore.

     

     

  • FBI arrests 34 Nigerians for alleged cyber fraud

    The U.S. Federal authorities have arrested no fewer than 34 Nigerians for allegedly defrauding businesses and U.S. citizens of several millions of dollars, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said.

    FBI said in a statement that the fraud was a significant coordinated effort to disrupt Business Email Compromise (BEC) schemes that were designed to intercept and hijack wire transfers from businesses and individuals, including many senior citizens.

    It said a counter effort, ‘Operation Wire Wire’, a coordinated law enforcement effort by the U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Department of the Treasury and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, was conducted over a six month period.

    “The operation culminated in over two weeks of intensified law enforcement activity resulting in 74 arrests in the United States and overseas, including 29 in Nigeria, and three in Canada, Mauritius and Poland.

    “The operation also resulted in the seizure of nearly $2.4 million, and the disruption and recovery of approximately $14 million in fraudulent wire transfers,” FBI said.

    “Following an investigation led by the FBI with the assistance of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Criminal Investigation, Gloria Okolie and Paul Aisosa, both Nigerian nationals residing in Dallas, Texas, were charged in an indictment filed on June 6 in the Southern District of Georgia.

    “According to the indictment, they are alleged to have victimised a real estate closing attorney by sending the lawyer a spoofing email posing as the seller and requesting that proceeds of a real estate sale in the amount of $246,000 be wired to Okolie’s account.

    READ ALSO: Nigerian jailed three years in U.S for email scams

    “They are charged with laundering approximately $665,000 in illicit funds.  The attorney experienced $130,000 in losses after the bank was notified of the fraud and froze $116,000.

    “Adeyemi Odufuye aka “Micky,” “Micky Bricks,” “Yemi,” “GMB,” “Bawz” and “Jefe,” 32, and Stanley Hugochukwu Nwoke, aka Stanley Banks,” “Banks,” “Hugo Banks,” “Banky,” and “Jose Calderon,” 27, were charged in a seven-count indictment in the District of Connecticut in a BEC scheme involving an attempted loss to victims of approximately $2.6 million, including at least $440,000 in actual losses to one victim in Connecticut.

    “A third co-conspirator Olumuyiwa Yahtrip Adejumo, aka “Ade,” “Slimwaco,” “Waco,” “Waco Jamon,” “Hade,” and “Hadey,” 32, of Toledo, Ohio, pleaded guilty on April 20 to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

    “Odufuye was extradited from the United Kingdom to the United States and on Jan. 3, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft.

    “Nwoke was extradited to the United States from Mauritius on May 25, marking the first extradition in over 15 years from Mauritius.  His case is pending.

    “Richard Emem Jackson, aka Auwire, 23, of Lagos, Nigeria, was charged in an indictment filed on May 17 in the District of Massachusetts with two counts of unlawful possession of a means of identification as part of a larger fraud scheme.

    “According to the indictment, on two occasions in 2017, Jackson is alleged to have possessed the identifications of two victims with the intent to commit wire fraud conspiracy,” the U.S. authorities said.

    FBI said foreign citizens perpetrate many BEC scams adding, “those individuals are often members of transnational criminal organisations, which originated in Nigeria but have spread throughout the world”.

    The U.S. authorities expressed gratitude for the outstanding efforts of the participating countries, including law enforcement actions that were coordinated and executed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in Nigeria to curb business email compromise schemes that defraud businesses and individuals alike.

    U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions said: “This operation, which was funded and coordinated by the FBI, serves as a model for international cooperation against specific threats that endanger the financial well-being of each member country’s residents.

    “Fraudsters can rob people of their life’s savings in a matter of minutes. These are malicious and morally repugnant crimes.

    “The Department of Justice has taken aggressive action against fraudsters in recent months, conducting the largest sweep of fraud against American seniors in history back in February.

    “Now, in this operation alone, we have arrested 42 people in the United States and 29 others have been arrested in Nigeria for alleged financial fraud.

    “And so I want to thank the FBI, nearly a dozen U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, the Secret Service, Postal Inspection Services, Homeland Security Investigations, the Treasury Department, our partners in Nigeria, Poland, Canada, Mauritius, Indonesia, and Malaysia, and our state and local law enforcement partners for all of their hard work”.

    Since the Internet Crime Complaint Centre  (IC3) began keeping track of BEC and its variant, Email Account Compromise (EAC), as a complaint category, there has been a loss of over $3.7 billion reported to the IC3, FBI said.

    BEC, also known as “cyber-enabled financial fraud,” is a sophisticated scam often targeting employees with access to company finances and businesses working with foreign suppliers and/or businesses that regularly perform wire transfer payments.

    The same criminal organisations that perpetrate BEC also exploit individual victims, often real estate purchasers, the elderly, and others, by convincing them to make wire transfers to bank accounts controlled by the criminals.

    This is often accomplished by impersonating a key employee or business partner after obtaining access to that person’s email account or sometimes done through romance, lottery, employment opportunities, fraudulent online vehicle sales, and rental scams.

    The FBI provides a variety of resources relating to BEC through the IC3, which can be reached at www.ic3.gov and victims are encouraged to file a complaint online with the IC3 at bec.ic3.gov. (NAN)

  • FBI arrests 29 Nigerians, 54 others in email fraud crackdown

    The United States (U.S.) authorities said it has arrested 74  people in a global crackdown on email fraud scams, in
    which criminals have attempted to steal billions of dollars from businesses and individuals.

    Of those arrested, 42 were in the U.S., 29 in Nigeria, and the others in Canada, Mauritius, and Poland, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) said.

    The cases involve a growing type of fraud known as “business email compromise” that targets employees with access to corporate finances. The fraudsters send emails that appear to be from trusted corporate executives or vendors, which instruct targeted employees to wire funds to accounts controlled by criminals.

    The same groups also ran similar scams targeting individuals, including real-estate buyers and the elderly, the bureau said.

    Nearly $2.4 million was seized in the six-month operation dubbed “Operation Wire Wire” and about $14 million in fraudulent wire transfers was recovered, according to the FBI.

  • Trump hails sack of FBI deputy chief

    U.S. President Donald Trump has hailed the firing of outgoing FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe by Attorney-General Jeff Sessions two days to retirement after two decades of service to the bureau.

    McCabe announced his retirement from the bureau abruptly in January and it was to take effect on Sunday.

    His dismissal, just days before he was set to retire, puts his full pension and benefits package in jeopardy and is seen as an inglorious end to a career of almost 22 years with the bureau.

    Trump responded on Twitter just after midnight on Saturday, calling McCabe’s firing “a great day for the hard working men and women of the FBI – A great day for Democracy.”

    He tweeted: “Andrew McCabe FIRED, a great day for the hard working men and women of the FBI – A great day for Democracy.

    “Sanctimonious James Comey was his boss and made McCabe look like a choirboy.

    “He knew all about the lies and corruption going on at the highest levels of the FBI!”

    Sessions, in a statement, said an internal FBI investigation recommended dismissal over McCabe’s alleged “lack of candour” about contacts he had with a former Wall Street Journal reporter in 2016.

    Sessions said he accepted the recommendation that “concluded that Mr McCabe had made an unauthorised disclosure to the news media and lacked candour – including under oath – on multiple occasions”.

    “Based on the report of the Inspector General, the findings of the FBI Office of Professional Responsibility, and the recommendation of the Department’s senior career official, I have terminated the employment of Andrew McCabe effective immediately,” Sessions said.

    Sessions also said in explaining his decision that: “The FBI expects every employee to adhere to the highest standards of honesty, integrity, and accountability.

    “As the OPR proposal stated, ‘all FBI employees know that lacking candour under oath results in dismissal and that our integrity is our brand’”.

    However, in a statement issued immediately after his termination was announced, McCabe said the decision was politically motivated.

    He said: “The big picture is a tale of what can happen when law enforcement is politicised, public servants are attacked.

    “And people who are supposed to cherish and protect our institutions become instruments for damaging those institutions and people.

    “Here is the reality: “I am being singled out and treated this way because of the role I played, the actions I took, and the events I witnessed in the aftermath of the firing of James Comey.

    “The release of this report was accelerated only after my testimony to the House Intelligence Committee revealed that I would corroborate former Director Comey’s accounts of his discussions with the President.

    “The OIG’s focus on me and this report became a part of an unprecedented effort by the Administration, driven by the President himself, to remove me from my position, destroy my reputation, and possibly strip me of a pension that I worked 21 years to earn.

    “The accelerated release of the report, and the punitive actions taken in response, make sense only when viewed through this lens”. (NAN)