In accordance with the Justice Department’s recent efforts
to disrupt business email compromise (BEC) schemes that are designed to
intercept and hijack wire transfers from businesses and individuals, including
many senior citizens, the Department announced Operation Keyboard Warrior, an
effort coordinated by United States and international law enforcement to
disrupt online frauds perpetrated from Africa.
Eight individuals have been arrested for their roles in a widespread,
Africa-based cyber conspiracy that allegedly defrauded U.S. companies and
citizens of approximately $15 million since at least 2012.
Acting Assistant Attorney General John P. Cronan of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney D. Michael Dunavant of
the Western District of Tennessee and Executive Assistant Director David T.
Resch of the FBI, made the announcement today.
Five individuals were arrested in the United States for
their roles in the conspiracy including Javier Luis Ramos Alonso, 28, a Mexican
citizen residing in Seaside, California; James Dean, 65, of Plainfield,
Indiana; Dana Brady, 61, of Auburn, Washington; Rashid Abdulai, 24, a Ghanaian
citizen residing in the Bronx, New York, who has been charged in a separate
indictment; and Olufolajimi Abegunde, 31, a Nigerian citizen residing in
Atlanta, Georgia. Maxwell Atugba Abayeta aka Maxwell Peter, 26, and Babatunde
Martins, 62, of Ghana and Benard Emurhowhoariogho Okorhi, 39, a Nigerian
citizen who resides in Ghana, have been arrested overseas and are pending extradition
proceedings to face charges filed in the Western District of Tennessee.
The indictment also charges Sumaila Hardi Wumpini, 29;
Dennis Miah, 34; Ayodeji Olumide Ojo, 35, and Victor Daniel Fortune Okorhi, 35,
all of whom remain at large. Abegunde had his detention hearing today before
U.S. District Court Judge Sheryl H. Lipman of the Western District of
Tennessee, who ordered him detained pending trial, which has been set for Oct.
9.
“The defendants allegedly unleashed a barrage of
international fraud schemes that targeted U.S. businesses and individuals,
robbing them to the tune of approximately $15 million,” said Acting Assistant
Attorney General Cronan. “The Department of Justice will continue to work with
our international partners to aggressively disrupt and dismantle criminal
enterprises that victimize our citizens and businesses.”
“Today, the FBI and our partners are announcing indictments
as part of Operation Keyboard Warrior,” said FBI Executive Assistant Director
Resch. “Following the success of
Operation WireWire in early June, these indictments continue to demonstrate the
FBI’s commitment to working with our partners around the globe to disrupt and
dismantle criminal enterprises that target Americans and their businesses. This should stand as a warning that our work
is not over, and we will continue to work together with our law enforcement
partners to put an end to these fraud schemes. I want to thank all the agents
and analysts at the FBI, our partners at the Department of Justice, and our
Ghanaian partners at the Economic and Organised Crime Office for all their
tireless work to continue to pursue this issue at every turn.”
The indictment was returned by a grand jury in the U.S.
District Court for the Western District of Tennessee on Aug. 23, 2017, and
charges the defendants with conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud,
conspiracy to commit money laundering, conspiracy to commit computer fraud, and
aggravated identity fraud.
The indictment alleges that the Africa-based coconspirators
committed, or caused to be committed, a series of intrusions into the servers
and email systems of a Memphis-based real estate company in June and July
2016. Using sophisticated anonymization
techniques, including the use of spoofed email addresses and Virtual Private
Networks, the coconspirators identified large financial transactions, initiated
fraudulent email correspondence with relevant business parties, and then
redirected closing funds through a network of U.S.-based money mules to final
destinations in Africa. Commonly
referred to as business email compromise, or BEC, this aspect of the scheme
caused hundreds of thousands in loss to companies and individuals in Memphis.
In addition to BEC, some of the Africa-based defendants are
also charged with perpetrating, or causing to be perpetrated, various romance
scams, fraudulent-check scams, gold-buying scams, advance-fee scams, and credit
card scams. The indictment alleges that
the proceeds of these criminal activities, both money and goods, were shipped
and/or transferred from the United States to locations in Ghana, Nigeria, and
South Africa through a complex network of both complicit and unwitting
individuals that had been recruited through the various Internet scams. Some of the defendants are also charged with
concealing their conduct by, among other means, stealing or fraudulently
obtaining personal identification information (PII) and using that information
to create fake online profiles and personas.
Through all their various schemes, the defendants are believed to have
caused millions in loss to victims across the globe.
An indictment is merely an allegation and the defendants are
presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of
law.
The FBI led the investigation. The FBI’s Transnational Organized Crime of
the Eastern Hemisphere Section of the Criminal Investigative Division, Major
Cyber Crimes Unit of the Cyber Division, the Legal Attaché in Accra, and
International Organized Crime Intelligence and Operations Center all provided
significant support in this case, as did the Ghanaian Economic and Organised
Crime Office, INTERPOL Washington, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the U.S.
Attorney’s Offices of the Northern District of Georgia, Western District of
Washington, Central District of California, Southern District of New York, and
the Northern District of Illinois.
Senior Trial Attorney Timothy C. Flowers of the Criminal
Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section and Assistant U.S.
Attorney Debra L. Ireland of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western
District of Tennessee are prosecuting the case, with significant assistance
from the Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs.
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