Man tries to swindle S’African
of $185,000
By OLUBUKOLA ADEBAYO
Thursday, January 24, 2008
A bid by a man to swindle a South African of the sum of
$185,000 has landed him in the net of security agents.
Louis Ihegworo, 34, had forged documents, impersonating the
chairman, African Development Bank (ADB) with a promise to
credit his victim, one William Roux Mouton’s account
with the sum of $3.9 million if he paid a non-refundable fee
of $185,000.
Ihegworo, who is a mere school certificate holder, also posed
as the Attorney-General of the Federation, Secretary to the
Federal Government of Nigeria and the Accountant General of
the Federation in his correspondence with his unsuspecting
victim.
Other documents recovered from him include certificate of
legality from the Federal High Court of Justice, letter from
the Minister of Finance, and a document allegedly endorsed
by the chairperson, Senate Committee on Foreign payments.
However, the end of the road came for the conman as officials
of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) intercepted
the documents at a TNT Courier Service after he had endorsed
the relevant portions. He was consequently arrested by the
NDLEA operatives, who also alerted the South African authorities.
The suspect disclosed that he used to sell vehicle parts until
he was robbed of his capital on the way to the market to buy
goods. The incident made him jobless for some time before
he was forced into the fraudulent business. According to him,
“I entered the yahoo business just to survive after
I was robbed of all my money. There is money in yahoo but
one is not always lucky. Some times in two months you can
make 200 dollars but we pray for a big catch.”
Ihegworo hails from Umudim town in Ikeduru Local Government
area of Imo State. He will soon be transferred to the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for further necessary
action, an NDLEA source said.
The Chairman/Chief Executive of the NDLEA, Ahmadu Giade, said
in a statement signed by the agency’s public affairs
officer, Ofoyeju Mitchel, that “the country’s
image must be protected by all citizens. Save for my officers’
timely intervention, the suspect’s action would have
negatively affected the reputation of the country. This is
bad and must be condemned.”
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