Adewale Adewole, a Nigerian
immigrant who pretended to be Royal Marine commando Timmy Francis on the dating
website Match.com has successfully conned four women.
He falsely claimed to run
an orphanage in Africa and was looking for romance under the motto: 'To live
and love' and the online nickname 'Charismatic Brit'.
But after charming the
unsuspecting women, he then claimed he needed money saying he had been mugged
while attending to his 'orphanage'. The women all sent him cash and paid his
hotel bills - only for him to transfer the money into the bank account of his
wife who shared his home with their two children in Eccles, Greater Manchester.
Police who caught up with
father-of-three Adewole discovered he had used the women's cash to splash out
on iPads, TVs and designer clothes plus electronic and musical items such as a
glitter ball and a keyboard thought to be worth in total tens of thousands of
pounds.
But after he was jailed for
four years, officers auctioned off the confiscated items in a bid to repay the
victims - only for it to yield just £2,000.
It means the women will get
back only hundreds of pounds each - with one victim getting just £199. It is
not known what happened to £4,500 in cash which Adewole kept under his bed and
insisted was his. At an earlier court hearing Miss Brandon said the four
victims were registered with Match.com and did not know each other.
'They were all contacted on the dating site by
a man called Timmy Francis who had two profiles under the mottos 'To Live and
Love' and 'Charismatic Brit'. They had contact with him during the period the
fraud took place via text message, phone and email.
'He told them he had been a
captain in the army. He also said he ran an orphanage in Africa called the Hope
House Foundation, for which he set up a website including own mobile phone
number. There was a profile picture on his Match accounts and he sent some of
the women photographs of himself - all of these pictures were actually of a
Royal Marine Commander called Joshua McGowan who knew nothing of what was going
on.
'Each of the women wanted
to find out more about him and were led to believe they were in a relationship
with him. Although they arranged to meet, he never kept to the arrangements and
never did meet any of the victims.
Miss Brandon added:
'He told the women that on
a trip to Africa he was the victim of a crime and needed money. The crime meant
he could not access his own funds. He said they would get their money back and
would be sent letters from the World Health Organisation to show that he would be
able to pay them.
These letters were sent,
but from an M30 Manchester postmark. He also sent them links to websites which,
when logging in with details he gave them, appeared to show that he had a huge
bank balance and would eventually be able to pay them back.
'One woman was asked to pay
for a hotel for him. When she rang the number he gave her for the hotel, they
also confirmed the information and she agreed to pay it. She later received a
cheque addressed to him for £35,000 to prove he had money, but this was later
discovered to be a stolen cheque forged in his own handwriting.
'Over a number of months
each woman transferred significant sums of money via bank accounts and Western
Union money grams and sent items to the defendant's home address. They bought
electronic items, took out credit cards and loans and bought clothes from Next.
Many of the goods were sent to his home address in Eccles from where the
victims believed they would be forwarded on to the defendant in Nigeria. 'When
the women stopped sending money they never heard from him again.'
The court heard the total
amount stolen including the value of the household goods and Western Union
transfers was £98,140.00
Adewole was arrested in
October 2012 at his flat and £4,500 in cash was found under his bed. A digital
camera was found purchased by one of the victims, but containing pictures of
the defendant and his wife and children. Designer clothes and shoes were also
found worth £2,000 alone.
Adewole's wallet was also
seized and contained several SIM cards, some of which contained the phone
numbers of the victims. His two Blackberry phones were also seized - on these
three different email accounts were in use which were linked to the two Match
accounts. He was bailed and later tried to call one of the woman again under
the name Timmy Francis and was arrested again.
When questioned he claimed
to know nothing of the orphanage but that the £4,500 was his. He said the
majority of the items found in his flat were to go to his mother in Nigeria. He
admitted he had used Match.com in 2010, 2011 and 2012 but could not remember
when exactly.
The victims known only as
Miss E, Miss A, Miss W and Miss H will get back just £863.38, £332.07, £199.26
and £819.10 respectively.
Defence counsel Mr Khadim
Al'Hassan said: 'I'm surprised by the amount from the auctions, it must have
been a really bad day because they were all new items.'
Mailonline
A disgrace to himself not Nigerians.
ReplyDeleteogbologbo
ReplyDeleteOjo gbogbo ni ti ole
ReplyDeleteSmooth operator no smooth anymore
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