Tag: FBI

  • Diaspora fraud case: Nigerian among six charged in $41m US stock manipulation probe

    Diaspora fraud case: Nigerian among six charged in $41m US stock manipulation probe

    Photo credit: The Punch

    2025-12-22 09:00:00

    A report by *The Punch* says US authorities have indicted a Nigerian and five others over an alleged $41 million insider trading and market manipulation scheme spanning multiple deals and tactics.

    The allegations include using material non-public information, creating misleading narratives for investors, and manipulating stocks linked to healthcare/biopharma names—according to the prosecutorial outline.

    If proven, the case underscores how cross-border financial crimes often blend insider access, digital coordination, and rapid trading to move money before investigators can react.

    For diaspora communities, such prosecutions can carry reputational spillover—especially when defendants are described as dual nationals and the story spreads widely on social platforms.

    The US Department of Justice press release quoted prosecutors saying the defendants engaged in “insider trading and market manipulation on a massive scale,” while the related court complaint states they “did knowingly and intentionally conspire… to commit securities fraud.”

    **Echotitbits take:** This is a reminder that global finance enforcement is increasingly data-driven and cross-jurisdictional. Watch for whether SEC civil actions follow, asset-freeze efforts expand, and whether any defendants fight extradition or challenge evidence chains.

    Source: The Punch — December 22, 2025 (https://punchng.com/nigerian-five-others-indicted-in-41m-us-stock-market-fraud/)

  • US jury convicts Nigerian man in $7.5m charity fraud case as DOJ outlines sentence exposure

    US jury convicts Nigerian man in $7.5m charity fraud case as DOJ outlines sentence exposure

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-20 14:20:00

    According to The Punch, a Nigerian national, Olusegun Adejorin, was convicted in a US federal court of defrauding two charities of more than $7.5 million, with prosecutors citing wire fraud, identity theft and unauthorised computer access.

    The report says the scheme involved compromising email accounts, impersonating staff, and manipulating withdrawal approvals to divert funds to accounts not linked to the charities.

    US authorities say Adejorin was extradited from Ghana, and sentencing is expected in 2026, with potential penalties that include lengthy prison terms for multiple counts.

    In its press release, the US Department of Justice said the defendant “faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison for each of the five counts of wire fraud.” TheCable also reported the conviction and noted he was found guilty after a six-day trial for “wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and unauthorised access to a protected computer.”

    Echotitbits take:
    Expect NGOs and payment providers to tighten verification and anti-fraud controls, which can increase friction for legitimate transactions. Watch for sentencing, restitution orders, and whether investigators identify co-conspirators or linked networks.

    Source: The Punch — December 20, 2025 (https://punchng.com/court-convicts-nigerian-of-7-5m-charity-fraud-in-us/)
    The Punch 2025-12-20

  • Finally, US Charges Hushpuppi to Court, Accuses Him of Frauds, Money Laundering

    Finally, US Charges Hushpuppi to Court, Accuses Him of Frauds, Money Laundering

    Government of the United States of America (USA) has finally charged Ramon Abbas Olorunwa Igbalode popularly known as Ray Hushpuppi to court in Los Angeles for allegedly committing frauds and laundering ‘millions of dollars from cybercrime schemes.’”

    The government, in a comprehensive affidavit on Friday by the US Department of Justice, said Hushpuppi carried out business email compromise frauds that targeted US law firm, a foreign bank and an English Premier League soccer club.

    The charges against Hushpuppi compiled by a Special Agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Andrew John Innocent, was filed before the US Magistrate Judge, Honourable Rozella Oliver.

    Though the affidavit discussed several fraudulent schemes involving Hushpuppi, it failed to disclose the identity of the law firm, foreign bank and the English Premier League club he allegedly defrauded.

    If found guilty, Hushpuppi may end up spending many years in prison in the US.

    The affidavit reads in part:

    “RAMON OLORUNWA ABBAS is a Nigerian national living in the
    United Arab Emirates (the “U.A.E.”), whose social media accounts frequently
    show him in designer clothes, wearing expensive watches, and posing in or with
    luxury cars and charter jets.

    “The FBI’s investigation has revealed that ABBAS finances this opulent lifestyle through crime, and that he is one of the leaders of a transnational network that facilitates computer intrusions, fraudulent schemes(including BEC schemes),1 and money laundering, targeting victims around the world in schemes designed to steal hundreds of millions of dollars.

    “ABBAS participated in these fraudulent schemes and money laundering in coordination with multiple coconspirators, including the persons referred to herein as Coconspirator 1 and Coconspirator 2.

    “This affidavit discusses several fraudulent schemes involving
    ABBAS. First, messages found on the iPhone of Coconspirator 1 (reviewed
    pursuant to a federal search warrant issued in this District) reflect that ABBAS, Coconspirator 1, and Coconspirator 2, with others, committed a BEC scheme that defrauded a victim in the United States of approximately $922,857.76, including 1 BEC fraud schemes often involve a computer hacker gaining unauthorized access to a business-email account, blocking or redirecting communications to and/or from that email account, and then using the compromised email account or a separate fraudulent email account (sometimes called a “spoofed” email account) to communicate with personnel from a victim company and to attempt to trick them into making an unauthorized wire transfer. The fraudster will direct the unsuspecting personnel of the victim company to wire funds to the bank account of a third party (sometimes referred to as a “money mule”), which is often a bank account owned, controlled, and/or used by individuals involved in the scheme based in the United States. The money may then be laundered by wiring or transferring it through numerous bank accounts to launder the money, or by quickly withdrawing it as cash, by check, or by cashier’s check, approximately $396,050 that ABBAS, Coconspirator 1, and Coconspirator 2 laundered while Coconspirator 2 was in Los Angeles, California.

    “Second, ABBAS and Coconspirator 1 conspired to launder funds intended to be stolen through fraudulent wire transfers from a foreign financial
    institution (the “Foreign Financial Institution”), in which fraudulent wire transfers, totaling approximately €13 million (approximately USD $14.7 million), were sent to bank accounts around the world in February 2019. Coconspirator 1 conspired with the persons who initiated the fraudulent wire transfers, and also conspired with a number of others, including ABBAS, to launder the funds that were intended to be stolen. ABBAS, specifically, provided Coconspirator 1 with two bank accounts in Europe that ABBAS anticipated would each receive €5 million of the fraudulently obtained funds.

    “Other communications between ABBAS and Coconspirator 1 indicate
    that, in addition to these schemes, ABBAS and Coconspirator 1 conspired to launder tens, and at times hundreds, of millions of dollars that were proceeds of other fraudulent schemes and computer intrusions, including a fraudulent scheme to steal from an English Premier League football club.
    III. STATEMENT OF PROBABLE CAUSE
    A. Identification of ABBAS.

    “Analysis of Coconspirator 1’s iPhone and other online accounts showed that Coconspirator 1 operated and tasked money mule crews for a number of fraudulent schemes, including BEC schemes and cyber-heists. Analysis also
    showed that Coconspirator 1 communicated with the U.A.E. phone number +971543777711 (“Phone Number 1”) about multiple fraudulent schemes and money laundering. As described below, Phone Number 1 was one of the phone numbers ABBAS used during 2019 and 2020.

    “Based on my review (pursuant to federal search warrants obtained in
    this District) of data from Coconspirator 1’s iPhone and from an online account connected to that phone (the “Online Account”), other law enforcement personnel’s review of that digital data, and from discussions with United States Secret Service (“USSS”) and FBI personnel, I know the following:

    “Coconspirator 1’s iPhone listed Phone Number 1 (+971543777711) with the contact name “Hush.” The phone also contained a contact for Snapchat username “hushpuppi5,” which listed the Snapchat contact name “The Billionaire Gucci Master!!!”

    “Searches of Phone Number 1 and the contact name “Hush” in Coconspirator 1’s iPhone revealed messaging conversations between “Hush,”
    using Phone Number 1, and Coconspirator 1. (For ease of reference, communications with this moniker and Phone Number 1 are referred to as communications with ABBAS in the remainder of this affidavit.)

    “In or around December 2019, April 2020, and June 2020, I reviewed the publicly viewable Instagram account of “hushpuppi” at www.instagram.com/hushpuppi. Based on information available on the profile page, the user of that account made more than 500 posts and had 2.3 million followers as of June 2020.

    “This Instagram account included numerous publicly viewable images
    of a man who appeared to be ABBAS, based on comparisons to photographs of ABBAS in passports and other identification documents referenced below inparagraphs 16.c to 16.c.iv. Hundreds of these images on the Instagram account showed ABBAS in designer clothing and shoes, posing on or in luxury vehicles, wearing high-end watches, or possessing other luxury items, indicating substantial wealth.

    “For example, on June 6, 2020, ABBAS posted a photograph of
    a white Rolls Royce Cullinan that included the hashtag “#AllMine.” On February 27, 2019, ABBAS posted a photograph of himself in front of two vehicles, one of which he described as his new Rolls Royce Wraith. Based on review of publicly available pricing information, the starting price for each of these vehicles is approximately $330,000.

    “More than two dozen images showed ABBAS in front of, on top of, or inside other luxury vehicles, including multiple models of Bentley, Ferrari, Mercedes, and Rolls Royce.

    “On numerous occasions, ABBAS posted photos of himself wearing items and/or holding shopping bags from luxury stores such as Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Channel, Versace, Fendi, and more.

    “On multiple dates, including April 17, 2020, June 19, 2019, and July 1, 2019, ABBAS posted images of himself inside or in front of private jets.

    “Multiple photographs also appeared to show ABBAS posing in locations around the world (such as Dubai and Paris).” and attached.

    Hushpuppi in one of his Luxurious Vehicles

    Luxury displays

    Hushpuppi Passorts