Charges allege they funneled $6 million through bank
accounts over two years
SALT LAKE CITY – A
federal grand jury returned a 10-count superseding indictment Wednesday
afternoon charging eight individuals in connection with a fraud scheme
primarily targeting widowed women over 65 years old. The indictment alleges that over
approximately two years, the defendants defrauded dozens of victims out of more
than $6 million, which they laundered through accounts they controlled.
According to the indictment, the defendants and unnamed
co-conspirators used social media and social gaming applications to target
widows. The defendants created false
identities to befriend potential victims, feigned romantic interest, and
eventually pressured them to send money to the defendants. The indictment also
alleges the defendants engaged in a series of subsequent transactions to
disguise the origins of the funds and promote the operation of the conspiracy –
often sending significant sums of money overseas.
Charged in the indictment are Jeffersonking Anyanwu, age 25,
Daniel Negedu, age 21, Onoriode Kenneth Adigbolo, age 31, Chukwudi Kingsley
Kalu, age 28, and Godsent Nwanganga, age 24, all Nigerians living in Orem;
David Maduagu, age 27, a Nigerian living in Taylorsville; and Richard Ukorebi,
age 38, and Adrianna Sotelo, age 20, both of West Valley City. Ukorebi is also
Nigerian.
All defendants are charged with one count of conspiracy to
commit mail fraud, three counts of mail fraud, and one count of money
laundering conspiracy. Anyanwu, Negedu,
Adigbolo, Kalu, Ukorebi, Nwanganga and Sotello are also each charged with one
count of money laundering.
The indictment alleges that in the typical execution of the
scheme, the defendants and their co-conspirators would create a fake online
personality on a social media website or dating application, befriend a woman
through that website, and convince the woman through the fake persona that they
had some urgent financial need. The fake profiles included a businessman in
Europe, high ranking United States military officers, a successful Utah
businessman, an individual in Sweden under house arrest, and an engineer
working as a subcontractor for a large oil company working in Oman. The fake schemes alleged in the indictment
included telling women that a U.S. military member was stranded overseas,
pitching loans or investment opportunities, and describing an urgent business
need to purchase equipment. After presenting the false financial need, the
victims were provided with the defendants’ bank account information. Once the
money was in the defendants’ accounts, they would transfer the money to each
other and to overseas accounts, withdraw the money as cash, or use the money
for personal expenses. The indictment includes several examples of fake
profiles the defendants allegedly used to obtain and launder money from
victims. The victims in these examples ranged in age from 52 to 76.
One victim of the alleged scheme, a 75-year-old woman
identified as C.S. in the indictment, was contacted on social media by the
defendants using the profile “Aaron.Brain.” “Brain” claimed to be a
businessperson living in Germany.
“Brain” provided photos and discussed his business, claiming he was
involved in a business supplying pipe for a sewer in Turkey. “Brain” provided photographs of industrial
pipes in a warehouse. He told the victim
she could make $600,000 in his business venture. He convinced C.S. to send 10 checks totalling
$275,000 and make five wire transfers totalling $81,000 between April 2, 2018
and May 17, 2018.
The defendants and their unnamed co-conspirators used the
name of a U.S. military general to befriend N.W., a 74-year-old woman, through
social media. Using the persona of the
general, they pretended to be a high-ranking officer at Ft. Bragg deployed
overseas. They claimed to have a
“portfolio” that was restricted due to customs fees and he needed her
assistance to get his “portfolio” released.
They instructed N.W. to send checks made out to several of
defendants. The address they provided
for mailing the checks was an address for Negedu in Vineyard, Utah, and other
locations. N.W. sent approximately
$140,150.
The maximum potential penalty for each of the first four
counts in the indictment is 20 years in prison and a fine of $250,000 (or
double the stolen amount). The penalty
for each money laundering and money laundering conspiracy count is 10 years in
federal prison and $250,000 (or double the laundered amount).
Anyanwu, Negedu, and Adigbolo were initially charged in an
indictment returned by a federal grand jury in late May. They were arraigned on the charges and
entered pleas of not guilty. They will
remain in custody pending resolution of the case after U.S. Magistrate Judge
Paul M. Warner found them to be a financial danger to the community, a risk of
non-appearance, or both. Ukorebi,
Maduagu, and Sotelo were previously charged by criminal complaint and
arrested. Ukorebi and Maduagu were
ordered detained pending trial. Sotelo
is released on supervision pending trial.
Nwanganga is incarcerated on unrelated charges. Kalu remains at large.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys in Salt Lake City are prosecuting
the case. Special agents of the FBI and
Postal Inspectors from the U.S. Postal Inspection Service are investigating the
case.
No comments:
Post a Comment