The
32-year-old Nigerian businessman admitted to American prosecutors that he was
involved in computer-based fraud between 2015 and 2019.
Obinwanne
Okeke, the owner of Invictus Group, who was arrested in the United States last
year for computer-based fraud, has pleaded guilty to $11 million (N4.2 billion)
fraud.
Joshua
Stueve, a spokesperson for the United States District Court for Eastern
District of Virginia, told Premium Times on Thursday evening that Mr Okeke
could spend 20 years maximum penalty in an American jail.
He would be
sentenced on October 22, Mr Stueve said.
“A federal
district court judge will determine any sentence after taking into account the
U.S. sentencing guidelines and other statutory factors,” the court official
said.
The
publication adds that Robert Krask, an American judge of the district,
certified the guilty plea on Thursday morning to clear the paths for Mr Okeke’s
sentencing.
Mr Okeke and
other alleged conspirators said to still be at large were accused of targeting
American businesses in a probe led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Unatrac, a
subsidiary of heavy equipment giant Caterpillar, was amongst the companies said
to have been targeted by the cartel in a business email compromise scheme for
several years. Over $11 million was said to have been traced to the ring,
amidst claims that Mr Okeke allegedly used proceeds of his illicit dealings to
build a business empire in Abuja and other parts of Nigeria.
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