In Austin today, a federal judge sentenced 35-year-old
Lukman Shina Aminu of Manchester, NH, to 51 months in federal prison today for
his alleged scheme to launder over a million dollars from multiple fraudulent
schemes, including thousands stolen from former Texas state employees
retirement plans, announced U.S. Attorney John F. Bash, FBI Special Agent in
Charge Christopher Combs, San Antonio Division, IRS-Criminal Investigation
Special Agent in Charge Richard D. Goss, Houston Field Office, and Texas
Department of Public Safety Director Steven McCraw.
In addition to the prison term, U.S. District Judge Robert
Pitman ordered that Aminu pay $1,158,285.14 in restitution and be placed on
supervised release for a period of three years after completing his prison
term.
On January 2, 2019, Aminu pleaded guilty to one count of
conspiracy to commit money laundering.
By pleading guilty, Aminu admitted that beginning in June 2017, he used
personally identifiable information (PII) from state employees to make changes
to their accounts in the Employees Retirement System of Texas internet
portal. Bank deposit information on
file in the system was changed which re-routed retirement payments to debit
cards Aminu controlled. Aminu then used
the debit cards for cash withdrawals and to purchase money orders which were
used for personal expenses and to purchase used vehicles to be shipped overseas
to Nigeria and Benin for resale. Aminu
also admitted to receiving multiple transfers from victims of other schemes on
other debit cards that had been opened using their PII. This scheme also involved using car purchases
and shipments to send money back to Nigeria (in the value of the shipped car),
while simultaneously laundering the funds or “cleaning the money” to make the
money appear as legitimate income.
“Today’s sentencing is a message to all who seek to
deceitfully defraud others for personal gain,” said FBI San Antonio Division
Special Agent in Charge Christopher Combs. “In this case, the defendant’s
actions robbed former Texas public servants of their retirement payments. These
selfish actions harmed countless families as the defendant then used the money
to purchase used vehicles and ship them to be sold overseas. The FBI will not
rest until those who perpetrate these crimes are brought to justice.”
The FBI, IRS-Criminal Investigation and the Texas Department
of Public Safety – Public Integrity Unit investigated this case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Galdo
prosecuted this case on behalf of the government.
No comments:
Post a Comment