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View Full Version : Nigerian student gets 19 years' jail for love scam


TheCount
03-16-2009, 05:14 PM
LAGOS (Reuters) – A Nigerian undergraduate has been sentenced to 19 years in prison for obtaining $47,000 (33,382 pounds) from an Australian woman by convincing her over the Internet that he was 57 years old, white, and madly in love with her.

Lawal Adekunle Nurudeen met his victim on the Internet in 2007 and convinced her that he was a British widower called Benson Lawson. He said he was an engineer working in Lagos whose wife and only child had been killed in a car accident.

"The victim, a 56-year-old woman from Australia, told the convict that she wanted a husband and all the men she had met always disappointed her," said the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nigeria's anti-corruption police.

"The convict, who is married with three children, instantly replied and told the victim she had met her Mr Right ... He sent the picture of a white man to foreclose any suspicions."

The woman sent Nurudeen money for medical treatment and travel costs to visit Australia. He spent the funds on two plots of land and a Honda Prelude car.

Nigerian confidence tricksters have a long history of extorting money via the Internet through "419" scams, named after the clause that outlaws them in Nigeria's penal code. Many are never caught.

The EFCC said Nurudeen was ordered to pay around $10,000 immediately and a further $250 a month to his victim until the full amount stolen was returned. She would also receive the proceeds of the sale of his land and car.

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I still think it takes someone really dumb to fall for these schemes, but it looks like the Nigerian government isn't messing around about this stuff at least, if they can track the guy down and the low level police don't simply get bought off.

Bob Sacamano
03-16-2009, 05:27 PM
looks like countries are putting pressure on Nigeria to act

vta
03-16-2009, 05:32 PM
Good Lord.

MetalHead
03-16-2009, 07:51 PM
Sounds like the same people who bought into Hope and Change.

TheCount
03-17-2009, 07:44 AM
looks like countries are putting pressure on Nigeria to act

All that crap has been illegal there for years and years, but I don't imagine their ability to track down computer users is all that advanced.

SuspectCorner
03-17-2009, 08:08 AM
Lawal Adekunle Nurudeen, Wall Street could use you.






The rest of us? Not so much.

JBond
03-17-2009, 10:34 AM
Sounds like the same people who bought into Hope and Change.

:lmao2:

Bob Sacamano
03-17-2009, 01:58 PM
All that crap has been illegal there for years and years, but I don't imagine their ability to track down computer users is all that advanced.

it's a poor country, so I can imagine some officials have dipped into it and got in it themselves

plus not being that advanced of a country, I don't even think that they bothered to really act on it

zrinkill
03-17-2009, 02:01 PM
Sounds like the same people who bought into Hope and Change.


:laugh2:

TheCount
03-17-2009, 02:46 PM
it's a poor country, so I can imagine some officials have dipped into it and got in it themselves

plus not being that advanced of a country, I don't even think that they bothered to really act on it

Well parts of it are advanced, but yeah, some parts are pretty destitute. I've been there on several occasions.

However, I don't think anyone in the US has ever been sentenced to 19 years for stealing $50,000 bucks without killing someone, so I'd say that's a pretty stiff punishment and a good sign they are taking it seriously when they have the ability to actually enforce the law.

BrAinPaiNt
03-17-2009, 03:48 PM
Sounds like the same people who bought into Hope and Change.

You mean the people who sentenced him...or the people in the USA in charge during the time he did it...you know like W. :laugh2:

You guys are a riot.