A United States Federal court has
convicted a Nigerian, Wiseman Oputa, who set up a number of bank
accounts with bogus passports over a year, in which he managed to steal
at least $500,000 through wire fraud and Internet scams.
The court convicted Oputa of one count of wire fraud, the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Southern District of Texas announced.
Wiseman Oputa, 25, pleaded guilty to opening bank accounts in the area surrounding Houston, using counterfeit passports.
Once
the accounts were created, Oputa and his associates conducted a number
of Internet scams from romance schemes to hacking into company email
accounts to make their phishing efforts appear more real.
The
victims sent at least a total of $500,000 to these bank accounts via
checks and wire transfers, which Oputa and his associates controlled.
He would then use the bogus passports to withdraw the money from the accounts.
Oputa
is scheduled to be sentenced on July 6 and faces up to 20 years in
federal prison and a potential maximum fine of $250,000.
Here is the full statement by US Attorney’s Office, Southern District of Texas:
A
25-year-old Nigerian man who was residing in Houston has pleaded guilty
to perpetuating a wire fraud scheme involving various Internet scams,
announced Acting U.S. Attorney Abe Martinez.
Wiseman Oputa pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud.
Beginning
Jan. 1, 2016, until Jan. 25, 2017, Oputa used counterfeit passports to
open bank accounts in the greater Houston area. The passports contained
photographs of Oputa but had different names and identification
information. He then worked with others to lure victims into sending
money into these bank accounts.
These funds were obtained
through a variety of internet scams, including business email
compromise, romance schemes and unauthorised intrusions into company
email accounts. Checks or wire transfers were then sent from the
company’s accounts payable to accounts Oputa or others controlled. Oputa
would then use the counterfeit passports to retrieve the fraudulently
obtained funds.
In one instance in December 2016, Oputa opened an
account at Regions Bank with a counterfeit Ghanaian passport as
identification. Shortly thereafter the account received a wire transfer
of $40,000 from a victim who had been told to send money for taxes on
money he had won in Spain. USAA Bank identified the fraudulent and was
able to recall the wire.
U.S. District Judge Alfred H. Bennett
accepted the guilty plea and has set sentencing for July 6, 2017. At
that time, Oputa faces up to 20 years in federal prison and a possible
$250,000 maximum fine. He will remain in custody pending that hearing.
The
U.S. Postal Inspection Service conducted the investigation along with
Department of State – Diplomatic Security Service and the Secret
Service. Assistant U.S. Attorney Suzanne Elmilady is prosecuting the
case.
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