After a long-running court
trial, Olayinka Olaniyi, a Nigerian, has been pronounced guilty of
defrauding universities in the United States, and is due to be sentenced to
jail.
Olaniyi and Ibiwoye were
convicted of sending scam emails targeted at college and university employees,
after which they obtained their login details, which they used to steal payroll
deposits. They also engaged in online dating scams to lure innocent victims
into releasing their account details, into which deposits from the
illegally-obtained funds were made.
While Olaniyi is scheduled
to be sentenced on October 22, 2018, at 10a.m. before US District Judge Steve
C. Jones, Ibiwoye, who had earlier pleaded guilty to the offence, had been
sentenced on January 31, 2018 to three years and three months in prison, to be
followed by three years of supervised release.
Sharing information on
their arrest and subsequent convictions, a release by the Department of
Justice, US. Attorney’s Office, Northern District of Georgia, dated Monday,
August 13, 2018, quoted US Attorney Byung J. ‘BJay’ Pak, as saying: “These
defendants used trickery to lure and exploit their unsuspecting victims, but
they will now face the consequences of their scheme in federal prison.”
According to Pak, the duo
were behind “phishing scams” that targeted institutions in the US, including
the Georgia Institute of Technology (“Georgia Tech”) and the University of
Virginia.
The statement read: “A
‘phishing scam’ is the act of sending fraudulent emails that appear to come
from legitimate enterprises for the purpose of tricking the recipients into
providing personal information, including usernames and passwords.
“Olaniyi and Ibiwoye
directed phishing emails to college and university employees. Once they had
possession of employee logins and passwords, they were able to steal payroll
deposits by changing the bank account into which the payroll was deposited.
Also, while logged into the university system through the stolen logins and
passwords, these defendants were able to gain access to employee W2 forms,
which they used to file fraudulent tax returns. The attempted theft was over $6
million.
“The stolen funds were
routed into U.S. bank accounts, and the evidence showed that access to these
bank accounts was acquired through the use of romance scams, where fraudsters
pose on dating sites and apps as potential partners to gain the trust of their
victim. At some point, the fraudster will make a request to deposit money into
their victim’s account and claim to need all of the account information,
including their account number, routing number, passwords, and answers to
security questions. In this case, all of that information was then used to
funnel the proceeds of theft through those accounts and out of the country.”
Speaking on the arrest,
J.C. ‘Chris’ Hacker, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Atlanta Division,
expressed his organisation’s determination to “arrest criminals who believe
they can hide out on the internet, protected by geographic boundaries, and prey
on the American people and our institutions”.
He also praised what he
described as “the benefits of global cooperation between the United States and
international law enforcement”.
According to
the release, the case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
while Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey A. Brown, Deputy Chief of the Complex
Frauds Section, and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Laura D. Pfister handled
the prosecution.

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