Four
defendants indicted in Nigerian 'Advance-Fee' fraud scam
WASHINGTON, March 23 /U.S. Newswire/
-- Four defendants have been indicted on federal charges of running
an "advance-fee" scheme that targeted U.S. victims with promises of
millions of dollars, including money from an estate and from a
lottery, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal
Division and U.S. Attorney Roslynn R. Mauskopf of the Eastern
District of New York announced today.
Three of the defendants
named in the 11-count indictment -- two of whom were
Nigerian citizens residing in the Netherlands -- were
arrested in Amsterdam by Dutch authorities on February 21,
2006, based on a criminal complaint filed in the United
States. They are being held by the Dutch authorities pending
extradition to the United States. The fourth defendant, also
a Nigerian citizen, is a fugitive.
Nnamdi Chizuba Anisiobi (a.k.a
Yellowman, Abdul Rahman, Michael Anderson, Edmund Walter, Helmut
Schkinger, Nancy White, Jiggaman and Namo), Anthony Friday Ehis (a.k.a
John J. Smith, Toni N. Amokwu and Mr. T), Kesandu Egwuonwu (a.k.a
KeKe, Joey Martin Maxwell, David Mark) and John Doe 1 (a.k.a Eric
Williams, Lee, Chucks and Nago) are charged with one count of
conspiracy, eight counts of wire fraud and one count of mail fraud.
Anisiobi is also charged with one count of bank fraud. The
indictment was returned by a federal grand jury in Brooklyn, New
York yesterday.
As part of a massive advance-fee
scheme, the defendants allegedly sent spam e-mail to thousands of
potential victims in which they falsely claim to have control of
millions of dollars located in a foreign country that belongs to an
individual with a terminal illness. The defendants allegedly
solicited the help of the potential victims to collect and
distribute the funds to charity. In exchange for the victims' help,
the defendants allegedly promised the victims a share of a large
inheritance, and inform the victims that they must pay a variety of
advance fees for legal representation, taxes or bogus documentation.
After the victims wire-transfer funds to pay the "required fees,"
the defendants do not deliver the funds as promised. The victims
lost more than $1.2 million.
"The defendants in this scheme
allegedly fleeced many unsuspecting American victims with promises
of charitable contributions and personal riches," said Assistant
Attorney General Fisher. "We cannot allow these scam artists to prey
on innocent victims in this country, and we will work across the
globe to knock out these fraudulent get-rich-quick schemes."
"Global fraudsters need to know
that we are determined to find and prosecute them," said U.S.
Attorney Mauskopf. "Potential victims need to know that any email
offering millions of dollars that requires that they send money to
receive this windfall is a scheme. Delete it."
The investigation was initiated by
Dutch authorities. After identifying victims in the United States,
Dutch authorities notified the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, which
opened its own investigation. Dutch authorities, as part of
"Operation Dutch Treat," arrested three of the defendants on a
criminal complaint filed in the Eastern District of New York.
The maximum penalty for mail and
wire fraud is 20 years in prison, and the maximum sentence for bank
fraud is 30 years in prison. The conspiracy charge carries a maximum
penalty of five years in prison.
The case was investigated by the
U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and prosecuted by Fraud Section
Senior Litigation Counsel Richard Weidis, Trial Attorney Mary (Kit)
Dimke and Assistant U.S. Attorney Tanya Hill of the Eastern District
of New York