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Nigerian Fraudsters caught for £10million scam in the U.K and faces jail
Gang of Nigerian fraudsters face jail for using the identities of
MPs, judges and police officers to con the taxpayer out of more than
£10m
Scammers used stolen personal details from Civil Service Sports Council
Gang stole £2,500,000 before staff at HMRC spotted abnormal claims
Adedamola Oyebode and Oluwatobe Emmanuel Odeyemi ran scheme
Pair worked with Oluwagbenga Stephen Odeyemi and Kayode Sanni
A
gang of Nigerian fraudsters are facing jail for for using the
identities of MPs, judges and police officers during a £10million scam.
The crew stole personal details from the Civil Service Sports Council (CSSC), to make fraudulent claims over a four-year period.
Member
lists were ‘stolen to order’ from CSSC and used to place orders for tax
credit starter packs used in fraudulent claims over a four year period.
The
gang managed to get away with nearly £2,500,000 before staff at Her
Majesty’s Revenue and Customs spotted the ‘extraordinarily high rate’ of
claims being made by civil servants.
If the scam had not been stopped it could have reaped more than £10,260,525.
CSSC
events manager Adedamola Oyebode, 30, stole membership lists and passed
them on to her brothers-in-law Oluwatobe Emmanuel Odeyemi, 34, and
Oluwagbenga Stephen Odeyemi, 39, who ran the fraud with Kayode Sanni,
38.
Sanni, an illegal immigrant, denied being involved in the
fraud and told Old Bailey jurors ‘my conscience is clear’ as he stood
trial alone.
But he was convicted of one count of conspiracy to
become knowingly concerned in a fraudulent act between 10 March 2009 and
11 June 2013.
Judge Michael Topolski QC remanded him in
custody and said: ‘I’m quite satisfied at this stage that there is a
significant risk that if he were released on bail he would fail to
attend.
‘In my judgement the situation has changed drastically.
‘He chose to contest this matter against what I considered to be overwhelming evidence.
‘His incentive to stay in this country has now diminished.’
Emmanuel
Odeyemi, Gumbs and Adedamole Oyebode have already pleaded guilty and
will be sentenced with Sanni at the Old Bailey on 6 July.
Prosecutors have dropped charges against Emmanuel’s wife Oluwatosin Oyebode.
Prosecutor
Allison Hunter QC said: ‘These defendants went to exceptionally complex
and sophisticated lengths in their orchestration of this fraud.
‘They
themselves operate under a number of fluid pseudonyms and false
identities, operate a multiplicity of email address, have access to a
number of mobile phone numbers and have spread the conduct of this fraud
over computers and electronic storage devices sufficient to stock a
small warehouse.’
Ms Hunter said the investigators began by
identifying one of the multiple false tax credit claimants as Chantelle
Gumbs, who has admitted her part in the scam.
The source of the
stolen identity was traced to the CSSC in Chadwick Street, Westminster,
where six staff had password protected access to members’ details.
Adedamole
Oyebode, who worked for the CSSC between August 2008 and August 2010,
has since admitted supplying lists of members and their details in
return for payment.
She also made calls to the tax credit helpline to obtain application packs.
Further
investigation revealed the fraudsters had used the details to create
false identities, buy online insurance and open false bank accounts to
receive the cash.
The profits of the scam were then transferred
out into either their own accounts or through Western Union facilities
set up by Sanni and Emmanuel Odeyemi.
Jurors were told that two
of the gang, Stephen Odeyemi and his wife Oluwatumininu Banjo, 40, have
fled to Nigeria and are wanted abroad.
Ms Hunter said: ‘These
individuals conspired together to obtain in excess of £10,260,525.33 in
fraudulent tax credits using the identities of 10,300 police officers,
MPs, members of the judiciary, and civil servants for example, whose
personal data and information was stolen from the Civil Service Sports
Council.
‘The CSSC provides leisure events and activities
together with sporting and fitness facilities to approximately 120,000
Public Sector employees or pensioners, including civil servants, local
government employees, the NHS, teachers, police officers, fire fighters
and HM Armed Forces personnel.’
Sanni, from Leeds, denied but conspiracy to become knowingly concerned in a fraudulent act - but was convicted of the crime.
Adedamola
Oyebode, from Bellingham, southeast London, Stephen Odeyimi from
Dagenham, Essex and Chantelle Gumbs, will be sentenced alongside him for
fraud charges on 6 July at the Old Bailey.
Oluwatumininu Banjo, also from Dagenham, and Emmanuel Odeyemi, from Gravesend, Kent, are believed to be on the run in Nigeria.
Simon
York, Director of Fraud Investigation Service at HMRC, said: 'We have
dismantled an organised criminal attack on the tax credits system. HMRC
officers and our counter-fraud checks identified the attack, and our
investigators uncovered those behind the fraud, preventing £8 million of
false claims being paid to the criminals. A further £2.4 million in tax
credits claimed by the fraudsters was paid before we could stop the
crime group and prevent further fraud.
'Tax Credits are paid to
some of the most vulnerable people in our society. We have to strike a
balance between making it easy for people to receive what is due, and
having procedures in place to identify and stop fraudulent claims. Our
investigation was made more difficult as the criminals had hijacked real
identity details to make the fraudulent claims.'
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