Tag: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

  • Controversy as FBI arrests 32-year-old Nigerian over alleged $11m wire fraud

    THE US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has arrested the Nigerian young billionaire, Obinwanne Okeke, for alleged conspiracy to commit computer fraud.

    Okeke is being held for the alleged hacking of an account belonging to the CEO of Unatrac Holding Limited, a steel company.

    At stake was $11million.

    The arrest of the man cited by Forbes in its ‘Africa’s 30 Under 30 List in 2016’ immediately sparked an outrage in the social media.

    The FBI said it is also holding at least 29 other Nigerians for fraud.

    A Special Agent of FBI, Marshall Ward, said in a sworn affidavit in Norfolk, Virginia, USA, that illicit financial transactions were traced to a G-mail account believed to be owned by Okeke.

    According to Ward the transactions   and conspiratorial communications with at least six other emails were carried out between 2016 and 2019.

    He said: “Unatrac’s Chief Financial Officer received a phishing email containing a web link purportedly to the login page of the CFO’s online email account hosted by Microsoft Office365.

    “When the CFO opened the link, it instead led him to a phishing website crafted to imitate the legitimate Office365 login page.

    “Believing the page to be real, he entered his login credentials, which were captured by an unknown intruder who controlled the spoofed web page.

    “Between April 6 and April 20, 2018, the intruder accessed the CFO’s account at least 464 times, mostly from Internet Protocol (IP) addresses in Nigeria.”

    He deponent added: “There is a probable cause to believe Okeke has conspired with several individuals to access computers without authorisation, and using such access to cause the fraudulent wire transfer of funds.”

    The FBI agent said the investigations began in July 2018 after Unatrac Holding Limited, an export sales office for Caterpillar heavy industry and farm equipment in the United Kingdom was defrauded of $11 million through a phishing scheme.

    The report led to an investigation, which began in July 2018 after the FBI reviewed the submitted documents and eventually led to the arrest of Okeke.

    The credentials were used to remotely login into the CFO’s account, monitor his correspondences and intercepted legitimate emails from employees on the company’s financial team. The emails were marked as read and moved to another folder outside the CFO’s inbox.

    Unatrac financial team members, deceived by the genuine-looking emails initiated by the intruder, processed 15 fraudulent payments between April 11 and April 19, 2018.

    “For instance, the finance staff received and processed three invoices to Pak Fei Limited: one for $278, 270.66, one for $898, 461.17 and one for $1, 957, 100,” Ward said in the affidavit.

    “In total, nearly $11, 000, 000 was sent, all of which went to overseas accounts.”

    Okeke is the Chief Executive Officer of Invictus Group.

    Giving details of the arrests in a statement, FBI said: “Those individuals are often members of transnational criminal organizations, which originated in Nigeria but have spread throughout the world. Fraudsters can rob people of their life’s savings in a matter of minutes.

    “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, culminating 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.

    “Business Email Compromise, 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 organizations 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.

    “Those individuals are often members of transnational criminal organizations, which originated in Nigeria but have spread throughout the world. Fraudsters can rob people of their life’s savings in a matter of minutes.

    “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.

    “This operation demonstrates the FBI’s commitment to disrupt and dismantle criminal enterprises that target American citizens and their businesses.

    “We will continue to work together with our law enforcement partners around the world to end these fraud schemes and protect the hard-earned assets of our citizens. The public we serve deserves nothing less.

    Read Also: FBI arrests 34 Nigerians for alleged cyber fraud

    “Following an investigation led by the FBI with the assistance of the 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 victimized 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.

    “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.

    “Attorney General Sessions 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.”

     

     

  • Comey is a leaker, says Trump

    Comey is a leaker, says Trump

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday called James Comey, former Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), “a leaker”.

    Trump on his Twitter handle on Friday also said that many statements made by the former FBI chief on Thursday were false.

    “In spite of so many false statements and lies, total and complete vindication…and WOW, Comey is a leaker!” Trump tweeted.

    Trump’s reaction followed the admission by Comey that he gave the memos of his conversations with Trump to a friend to leak to the media.

    The former FBI chief also revealed for the first time that he turned over memos about his conversations with Trump to the Special Counsel investigating the Russian scandal, Robert Mueller.

    Comey had, while testifying before the Senate Intelligence Committee investigating the alleged Russian collusion with Trump Campaign during the 2016 presidential election, made some damming remarks about Trump.

    The former FBI boss, at the public hearing televised live, accused Trump of suggesting to him to “let Michael Flynn”, the president’s former National Security Adviser, “go”.

    Comey had testified that Trump and others in his administration lied when they said FBI agents had lost confidence in him to continue leading the bureau.

    Referring to Trump’s suggestion that he may have recorded their conversations, Comey said: “Lordy, I hope there are tapes”.

    Comey had also described Trump as a liar but stressed that Trump was not under investigation and the Russian interference did not affect the votes of the election.

    Trump’s personal lawyer, Marc Kasowitz, issued a statement afterwards denying Comey’s testimony that the president pressured him to drop his investigations into the Trump campaign’s possible collusion with Russia.

    Kasowitz also said Trump never demanded “I need loyalty, I expect loyalty” as Comey testified on Thursday.

    “Contrary to numerous false press accounts leading up to today’s hearing, Mr Comey has now finally confirmed publicly what he repeatedly told the president privately:

    “The president was not under investigation as part of any probe into Russian interference.”

    “He also admitted that there is no evidence that a single vote changed as a result of any Russian interference,” Kasowitz’s statement said.

    NAN also reports that a source close to the Trump legal team said on Friday that Kasowitz  plans to file a complaint on Monday about former Comey’s disclosure of conversations with the president,

    A source, who declined to be identified because the matter was not public, said Kasowitz will file the complaint with the Justice Department’s inspector-general.

    The source also added that Kasowitz will also make a “submission” to the Senate Judiciary and Senate Intelligence committees about Comey’s testimony.

  • FBI: Trump to nominate Christopher Gray as head

    FBI: Trump to nominate Christopher Gray as head

    President Donald Trump on Wednesday said that he will nominate Christopher Wray, former U.S. Assistant Attorney-General under President George Bush, to lead the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

    “I will be nominating Christopher Wray, a man of impeccable credentials, to be the new Director of the FBI. Details to follow,” Trump said in a statement on Twitter.

    The U.S. Senate must approve Trump’s choice to replace former FBI Director James Comey, whom the president fired last month amid the agency’s ongoing probe into alleged Russian meddling into the U.S. election.

    Trump’s announcement comes the day before Comey is scheduled to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Moscow’s alleged interference and any potential ties to Trump’s campaign or associates.

    The president met last week with candidates for the FBI director post, including Wray, according to White House spokesman Sean Spicer.

    Wray currently works for King and Spalding’s Washington and Atlanta offices where he handles various white-collar criminal and regulatory enforcement cases, according to the firm.

    He served as assistant attorney general in the Justice Department’s criminal division from 2003 to 2005, working on corporate fraud scandals and cases involving U.S. financial markets, according to his biography on the law firm’s website.

    Many lawmakers have said that Trump should pick a career law enforcement professional.

    One former FBI official questioned whether Wray had the management experience to run an agency with more than 35,000 people, given the small size of the division he ran at the Justice Department.

  • Democrats fault Trump’s dismissal of FBI director

    Democrats fault Trump’s dismissal of FBI director

    Democratic Senators have reacted to the dismissal of the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), James Comey, handling an investigation into alleged links between Donald Trump’s team and Russia who was dismissed by President Donald Trump on Tuesday.

    The Senators were quick to point out the constitutional crisis that has been created by President Donald Trump removing a man in charge of investigating him.

    Senator Dick Durbin said on the Senate floor that the dismissal of Mr Comey raises questions “as to whether the Russian interference in the last presidential election…will also be investigated by the FBI.”

    Comey’s dismissal was contained in a statement issued by the White House Press Secretary, Sean Spicer, saying that Mr Comey’s appointment has been terminated and removed from office with immediate effect.

    President Trump was said to have acted on “clear recommendations” from Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, in a move that has shocked Washington.

     

    The statement from Attorney General Sessions reads in part: “As Attorney General, I am committed to a high level of discipline, integrity and the rule of law to the Department of Justice – an institution that I deeply respect.

    Based on my evaluation and for the reasons expressed by the Deputy Attorney General in the attached Memorandum, I have concluded that a fresh start is needed at the leadership of the F.B.I.

    In a memorandum titled “Restoring public confidence in the FBI,” Rosenstein said he couldn’t defend Comey’s handling of the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails.

    Rosenstein said that such information may be disclosed in legal proceedings, but that it’s not something that should be done “gratuitously.”

    “The Director laid out his version of the facts for the news media as if it were a closing argument, but without a trial. It is a textbook example of what federal prosecutors and agents are taught not to do,” he said.

    Comey has defended his actions, saying that he was simply trying to not conceal the FBI’s decision to investigate the additional emails.

    But Rosenstein refuted Comey’s language, saying that federal agents “are not concealing anything” when conducting an investigation quietly.

    The White House said its search for Comey’s successor begins immediately. Andrew McCabe, who has been the FBI’s deputy director, is now acting director, a Justice Department official disclosed.

  • FBI, U.S. Justice Department offer support to ICPC

    FBI, U.S. Justice Department offer support to ICPC

    The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) says it has received an offer of support from the U.S. Government to enhance its operations.

    The offer, according to a statement posted on the ICPC website, is specifically coming from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the U.S. Department of Justice.

    A team of officials from both organs of the U.S. government made the proposal during a visit to the ICPC Chairman, Mr Ekpo Nta, in Abuja, the commission said.

    It said the team comprised Special Agent Pamela Bergren of the FBI; Scott Thorley of the U.S. Department of Justice; Special Agent John Wilson of the FBI and Legal Attache, U.S. Embassy, Nigeria; and Jim Oscar of the FBI.

    Wilson was quoted as saying that the team would like to organise a mentorship programme for investigators and prosecutors of the commission.

    He emphasised that the involvement of prosecutors in the investigation process of a case from start to finish would greatly improve the chances of successful prosecutions.

    The special agent reportedly noted that the team had been working with other anti-corruption agencies in Nigeria.

    He added that the proposed mentorship would help the officers of the commission to achieve timely case management and save resources that would have been otherwise wasted.

    Responding, the ICPC chairman, represented by the Commission’s Secretary, Mr Elvis Oglafa, solicited the assistance of the U.S. in its operations.

    Nta said the commission would welcome any idea that would improve its prosecutorial and investigative processes as well as the various preventive strategies in its anti-corruption campaign.

     

  • $5m scam: FBI declares Nigerian wanted

    $5m scam: FBI declares Nigerian wanted

    The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) has declared a Nigerian, Kelechi Declan James, wanted  for allegedly scamming  victim  of more than $5 million.

    A statement on FBI website reads: “FBI agents are looking for the public’s assistance in locating Kelechi Declan James. He has federal criminal charges against him from an investigation by FBI New York’s Cyber Crime Task Force. James is known to frequent the Brooklyn neighborhoods of East New York (Crescent Street and Loring Avenue; Vermont Street between Blake Avenue and Dumont Avenue), Brownsville, Bedford-Stuyvesant (MacDougal and Hull Streets), Crown Heights (Park Place and Utica Avenue), Flatbush (E 29th and Avenue D), and East Flatbush (East 51st and Winthrop Street). The FBI is offering a $1,000 reward for information that leads to his arrest.

    “James is 32 years old, 6’0″ tall, and approximately 175 pounds. He is a Nigerian national, has brown eyes and black hair, and may have a beard. Anyone with information as to the whereabouts of James is urged to contact law enforcement immediately. The FBI can be reached 24 hours a day at (212) 384-1000. He is not considered to be violent in nature.

    “As alleged in a complaint sworn out of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, James, along with four other co-conspirators, ran a business e-mail compromise scheme that resulted victim losses of more than $5 million for their victims.

    “As part of scheme, James and his co-conspirators defrauded victims across the U.S. by tricking them into wiring money to bank accounts the victims believed were owned by family members, friends, or business associates. They did this in two ways: by overtaking an e-mail account of an individual trusted by the victim and then requesting money be wired to a bank account; or by developing a relationship of trust with victim like an Internet romance and then asking the victim to wire money. As soon as the money was wired, it would be moved from one account to another, and the funds would be withdrawn. James’s role in this scheme was to withdraw the money from bank accounts.”

  • Election: Clinton, Trump in marathon race for last-hour campaigns

    Election: Clinton, Trump in marathon race for last-hour campaigns

    With the election day looming on Tuesday, the U.S. leading presidential candidates Democratic Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump engage in a marathon race over the weekend in the final battle for the White House.

    The campaigns by both Clinton and Trump have become very frantic with Clinton and Trump crisscrossing the country’s battleground states that are seen critical to cause an electoral upset.

    The electioneering witnessed exceptional rancour through of the last several months of Clinton’s contest with Trump while her email scandal has seen her early two-digit lead tightened to the Election Day.

    Trump had five campaign stops in five states on Sunday and had been to more than a dozen states since Friday as he made frantic efforts to flip Democratic states as he battled Clinton for the White House.

    With the entire 18-month race boiling down to the last two days, Trump covered nearly 4,800 kilometres on Sunday as he hovered around the battleground states of Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Florida.

    Of those battleground states, however, only Iowa is currently leaning Republican, but Trump is making a last-hour effort for the Democratic territory to score a historic upset.

    The Republican nominee also stayed on point in his message at each rally on Sunday that “it’s now or never to reject America’s corrupt establishment.”

    “This is a marathon today. We’ll call this the midnight special speech. You have to get everyone you know to the polls.

    “We are going to have one of the great victories of all time. This is going to be Brexit times 50,’’ Trump said.

    Trump also warned about a Somalis immigrant population, who had left their war-ravaged country and settled in large numbers around Minneapolis in Minnesota.

    “You don’t even have the right to talk about it. You don’t even know who’s coming in. Clinton’s plan will import generations of terrorism,” Trump warned.

    Clinton began her day Sunday by campaigning in Philadelphia after attending a get-out-the-vote concert in the city on Saturday night.

    She will also return to the state for two rallies on Monday, a sign that the state is among the battlegrounds where her lead over Trump has dwindled in recent days.

    Clinton campaigned in Pennsylvania, Ohio and New Hampshire with musical, sports and political celebrities including Beyoncé, Jay-Z, and LeBron James, aimed at appealing to young voters and minorities.

    She is also using the closing days of the race to try to shore up support in battleground states like Michigan and Ohio where she has been leading and tip the balance in other swing states.

    The Democratic nominee currently has a lead in the national polls and has several more paths available to win in the Electoral College on Tuesday.

    She also stayed on point in the rallies to argue that Trump has a “dark and divisive” vision of the country and that she is offering something more hopeful.

    “I want an America where everyone has a place, where everyone is included and I know there is a lot of frustration, even anger, in this election season.

    “I see it, I hear it, you know, I’m a subject of it. I get it. But anger is not a plan. Anger is not going to get us new jobs,’’ she appealed to voters in her “get-out-the-vote” message.

    Sunday’s rally event was Clinton’s last scheduled visit to Ohio, where she trailed despite the heavy emphasis on turning out black voters in Cleveland.

    Clinton was scheduled to cap her day Sunday with an appearance in Manchester, New Hampshire, where folk star James Taylor was warming up the crowd.

    Both Clinton and Trump also scrambled to gain an advantage in some newly competitive battleground states as well as lock down others where they have held leads.

    In an attempt to garner the 270 electoral votes needed to win, Trump pounced on new targets in his sights in historically Democratic states including Michigan, Minnesota and New Mexico.

    Michigan, once thought to be safe for Democrats, has become a last-minute battleground with Clinton heading to there on Monday.

    Former president Bill Clinton made a stop in Michigan town of Lansing on Sunday after visiting churches in Flint, another Michigan town.

    Clinton also deployed a full slate of high-level surrogates around the country on Sunday, including President Barack Obama, who appeared in Florida town of Kissimmee.

    Obama urged Hillary Clinton’s supporters in this critical battleground state to cast votes and “help finish what we started eight years ago”.

    “Now here’s the thing, though, Florida: All the progress we’ve made goes out the window if we don’t win this election and we win this election if we win Florida”.

    “If we win Florida, it’s a wrap. We win Florida, it’s over. So we’ve got to work our hearts out these next two days as if our future depends on it.

    Obama cited his economic accomplishments in office, praised Clinton’s work ethic by calling her “the Energizer bunny;” and urged the electorates to vote for Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Patrick Murphy.

    “You can’t stick her with a Republican Congress that behaves the way they’ve been behaving with me.”

    Obama also denounced Republican candidate Donald Trump on multiple fronts, saying “our democracy is on the ballot” and Trump’s character makes him uniquely unqualified to serve as commander-in-chief.

    “Now, if somebody can’t handle a Twitter account, they can’t handle the nuclear codes,’’ Obama said.

    Clinton campaign said on Sunday that the race was effectively over and that the campaign believed the Democratic nominee would hold on to Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin.

    Clinton’s campaign announced that rock star Bruce Springsteen would join her at a Philadelphia rally that would also include Obama and first lady Michelle Obama.

    Obama will also campaign in the Michigan state’s city of Ann Arbor on Monday.

    “We think we have this race over. This week, we’re going to get over our 270 electoral votes,” Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta said on Sunday.

    As the campaign closes on Monday, nationally, the ABC/Washington Post tracking poll shows Clinton ahead by five points, with 48 percent to Trump’s 43 per cent.

    The final NBC/Wall St. Journal poll also showed Clinton ahead by four points, with 44 percent to Trump’s 40 per cent.

    A final poll by Morning Consult for Politico found Clinton leading by 45 per cent to Trump’s 42 per cent nationally.

    However, the USC/L.A. Times “Daybreak” tracking poll, which consistently has shown a stronger result for Trump than any other major survey, showed him with a five-point lead of 48 per cent and to Clinton’s 43 per cent.

    Meanwhile, the Clinton campaign continues to use its huge financial advantage over Trump to press its case to swing voters on the airwaves.

    The campaign on Sunday released two national ads appealing to moderate and Republican voters to reject Trump and embrace Clinton.

    Both ads feature straight-to-camera testimonials from Republican military veterans who say they cannot vote for their party’s nominee, citing Trump’s comments about women.

    Another two-minute ad was set to air Monday night, aimed at reaching about 20 million people, according to a campaign aide.

    Trump also released a closing campaign ad, a two-minute spot tying Clinton to the “failed and corrupt political establishment” and “global special interests.”

    The ad, which features images of piles of cash along with Jewish corporate and financial leaders, including Goldman Sachs Lloyd Blankfein and Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, was sharply criticised by the Anti-Defamation League for anti-Semitic overtones.

    With the announcement on Sunday by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) clearing Clinton over email scandal that plummets her ratings and tightened her lead over Trump, Clinton’s campaign has maintained a more optimistic look at her victory.