How US busted Ghana’s $50m ‘sakawa’ empire run by 6 men



Investigative authorities in the United States this week announced the arrest of six Ghanaians suspected to be involved in a cyber-fraud operation that saw them rip off victims to the tune of $50 million.

According to the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, the defendants were arrested across a number of states at different times.

The identities of the suspects were given as follows: Farouk Appiedu, Fred Asante, Celvin Freeman, Lord Aning, Sadick Edusei Kissi, and Faisal Ali.

The operation that led to their arrest spanned between 2013 and 2020 during which period the group committed a series of business email compromises and romance scams against individuals and businesses located across the United States.

The frauds perpetrated by the Enterprise have consisted of, among other frauds, business email compromises, romance scams, and fraud schemes related to the novel coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic, an official statement said in part.

Collectively over the period of their operations, four of the six suspects, Appiedu, Asante, Freeman, and Aning; were said to have controlled more than 45 bank accounts that had deposits that totalled over approximately $55 million.

The operation was undertaken by the New York Offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigations, FBI, and the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigations (IRS, CI). Prosecution of the case is being handled by the Office’s Complex Frauds and Cybercrime Unit.


Three-step modus operandi

First, the objective of the Enterprise’s business email compromise fraud scheme was to trick and deceive businesses into wiring funds into accounts controlled by the Enterprise through the use of email accounts that “spoofed” or impersonated employees of a victim company or third parties engaged in business with a victim company.

Second, the Enterprise conducted the romance scams by using electronic messages sent via email, text messaging, or online dating websites that deluded victims, many of whom were vulnerable older men and women who lived alone, into believing the victim was in a romantic relationship with a fake identity assumed by members of the Enterprise.

Once members of the Enterprise had gained the trust of the victims using the fake identity, they used false pretenses to cause the victims to wire money to bank accounts the victims believed were controlled by their romantic interests, when in fact the bank accounts were controlled by members of the Enterprise.

Finally, the Enterprise submitted fraudulent loan applications through a loan program of the United States Small Business Administration (the “SBA”) designed to provide relief to small businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic, namely the Economic Injury Disaster Loan (“EIDL”) Program.

The Enterprise submitted fraudulent EIDL applications in the names of actual companies to the SBA and when an EIDL loan was approved, the funds were ultimately deposited in bank accounts controlled by members of the Enterprise, including certain of the defendants.



Details of retrieved vehicles

As part of the investigation of one of the accused, Farouk Appiedu, the US government further announced the seizure and is seeking the forfeiture of four luxury cars purchased, at least in part, with fraud proceeds.

The seized automobiles include two 2019 Rolls Royce Cullinans, a 2020 Bentley Continental GT, and one 2020 Mercedes-Benz G63 AMG.





Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Comments

Latest News

Introducing the Ultimate Excel Add-In for Changing Text Cases

Family To Auction GHANASCO Cars As Govt Fails To Intervene

Introducing AlatiphA xCurrencies: A Dynamic Excel Add-in for Currency Formatting

250 Labone students sacked for non-performance

Soldiers Brutalise Students Of Wa Islamic School

Popular Posts

ICT for JHS

Regular BECE ICT Pasco

Gov’t Intervenes As Court Orders Auctioning Of GHANASCO Cars

AlatiphA Products


AlatiphA xUtils

AlatiphA xCases

REVOLUTIONIZE HOW YOU CHANGE TEXT CASES WITH ALATIPHA xCASES ADD-IN!

Welcome to the next level of Excel functionality!

Enter the AlatiphA xCases Add-In, a powerful tool designed to simplify and automate the process of converting text cases in Excel. Whether you’re preparing a report, cleaning up imported data, or standardizing formatting, this add-in is your go-to solution.

Features at a Glance

Uppercase Conversion: Quickly convert all selected text to uppercase.

Lowercase Conversion: Transform text to lowercase for uniformity.

Proper Case Conversion: Capitalize the first letter of each word, ideal for names and titles.

Sentence Case Conversion: Capitalize only the first letter of each sentence, perfect for paragraph formatting.

Why Use the AlatiphA xCases Add-In?

Save Time and Effort: Manually adjusting text cases in Excel can consume valuable time, especially when dealing with extensive data. This add-in automates the process, saving you hours of work.

Enhance Data Accuracy: By automating case changes, the add-in minimizes the risk of human error, ensuring your data remains consistent and professional.

User-Friendly Design: With a clean interface and simple commands, the AlatiphA xCases Add-In is accessible to both novice and advanced Excel users. Prompts guide users through errors, such as selecting non-text ranges or working on protected sheets.

Say goodbye to manual use of functions to change texts cases. AlatiphA xCases—Excel, elevated!

Learn More

Price: GH¢ 0.00

Buy Now
AlatiphA xUtils

AlatiphA xCurrencies

REVOLUTIONIZE HOW TO FORMAT CURRENCIES WITH ALATIPHA xCURRENCIES ADD-IN!

Do you find yourself repeatedly formatting numbers and currencies in Excel?

Whether you're a finance professional, an accountant, or simply a power user of spreadsheets, managing currency formats can be time-consuming and tedious.

Enter the AlatiphA xCurrencies Add-In, an innovative Excel add-in that simplifies formatting tasks with a suite of powerful macros.

Features at a Glance

Format as GH¢ (Ghanaian Cedi): Specifically tailored for users who frequently work with Ghanaian Cedis, this add-in simplifies the process.

A simple prompt lets you choose whether to format with or without decimals.

Add "GH¢" to Empty Cells: This add-in goes a step further by allowing users to populate empty cells with the "GH¢" symbol. It’s especially useful for marking placeholders or templates in financial documents.

Multi-Currency Formatting: With businesses operating globally, it’s common to work with multiple currencies in the same spreadsheet.

This add-in supports formatting for multiple currencies like Ghanaian Cedis (GH¢), US Dollars ($), Euros (€), British Pounds (£), Japanese Yung (¥) and Nigerian Naira (NGN).

You can specify whether to include decimal places, making it perfect for financial reporting or transaction summaries.

Why Use AlatiphA Currencies?

Save Time and Effort: This add-in isn’t just about formatting—it’s about efficiency and accuracy.

By automating repetitive tasks, it allows you to focus on analyzing data and making decisions.

Plus, its flexibility to handle multiple currencies ensures it fits seamlessly into any workflow.

Enhance Data Accuracy: By automating currency formatting, the add-in minimizes the risk of human error, ensuring your data remains consistent and professional.

Works only on empty cells, ensuring no accidental overwriting of existing data.

Automatically centers the GH¢ in the cells for better aesthetics when marking placeholders.

User-Friendly Design: With a clean interface and simple commands, the AlatiphA xCurrencies Add-In is accessible to both novice and advanced Excel users:

Validation of Selection: Ensures users select a valid range before proceeding.

Protection Checks: Prevents modifications to protected sheets, safeguarding your data integrity.

Interactive Prompts: Guides users through choices for currency symbols and decimal preferences.

Say goodbye to manually changing the currencies. AlatiphA xCurrencies — Excel, elevated!

Learn More

Price: GH¢ 0.00

Buy Now

AlatiphA Ebooks


  • More Ebooks »



  • AlatiphA is an Education and Technology blog that provides quality contents on education and technology.

    AlatiphA is optimized for news, ebooks, educational templates, training, learning, testing (quizing) and many more.

    Tutorials, eBooks and tests are constantly reviewed to avoid errors but we cannot warrant full correctness of all contents.

    While using this blog, you agree to have read and accepted our:

    Disclaimer,
    Terms of use
    &
    Privacy policy.

    We're Social