Friday, 19 October 2018

Police Arrests Billionaire Fraudsters Cloning Websites of Major World Banks from Lagos

Police Arrests Billionaire Fraudsters Cloning Websites of Major World Banks from Lagos

…Scammers Target Wells Fargo, CBN, IMF, UBA others

A cell of international fraudsters fleecing depositors of millions of dollars at banks across the world have been uncovered at a hideout in Ajah area of Lagos.

Targeting accounts with big limits of between $1million and $5million, the fraudsters, allegedly led by one Remijus Ekpe, were found to have swept huge sums from depositors’ funds using cloned websites of the Central Bank of Nigeria, United Bank for Africa (UBA), Union Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and those of American financial institutions including Chase Bank, USAA, and Wells Fargo & Company (WFC).

The cyber-crime syndicate, with foreign partners, was located and infiltrated by detectives at the Anti-fraud Unit of the Force Criminal Investigations and Intelligence Department (FCIID) Alagbon Close, Lagos, led by CP Dan Okoro, an officer with a reputation for cracking hard cases including murder and financial fraud.

According to Okoro, the fraudsters were working with insiders at the banks to obtain account and credit card details to defraud their victims.

Through what they called a coded advanced undercover investigation and high-tech forensic, the police found that the fraudsters targeted $130million in a particular bank account after receiving information from insiders at the bank.
“These frauds are going on and the banks are not informing members of the public, the customers, and innocent depositors,” Okoro said, as he disclosed that one Ifeanyi who clone websites for the gang is now in police net.

In one instance, a victim was fleeced of $1million which members of the syndicate shared using what they called 40-20-20-20 formula.

More than 50 audio recordings and videos have been retrieved from the mobile phone of the 42-year-old suspect, along with loads of forged documents of IMF, CBN, UBA; approvals from the Federal High Court, Abuja Division, and documents bearing the signature of a former President of Nigeria used in defrauding victims some years back.

Some of the documents allegedly recovered from the suspects
NewsmakersNG obtained the forensic voice interception and voice evidence of the conversations of the fraudsters with their contacts inside the banks.

In one of the recordings, the leader of the syndicate was heard giving instructions to members to get a Union Bank account with a visa card and clone both sides of the card.

“All your guys working at Union Bank, talk to them,” the voice barked out an order.
The voice also requested for American, Canada, and UK credit cards, reminding the members in a conference call that “Yahoo is our only source of Income in Nigeria. It can never stop”.

He warned the members of a Facebook upgrade that facilitates the retrieval of a scammer’s status.

From the conversations, NewsmakersNG found that accounts with ATM cards are those prone to attacks and all the fraudsters needed from the insiders were the account information and bank details.

Hoping to pave the way for further development of police detectives at FCIID to effectively combat cyber-criminals the commissioner of police and his men today paid a visit to Cybersoc, a Lekki-based incident response and security services firm with capacity for thorough investigation and deterrence of cyber-criminals involved in fraud and identity theft with hacking or phishing.

The team of detectives were received by the Managing Director of Cybersoc, Mr David Dan, who told the visitors that the risk of cyber attacks would always be there, as he urged that Nigerians should take action, build knowledge and capacity.

CP Okoro, right, in a handshake with the MD of Cybersoc, Mr David Dan, on his side is Mr Alabi, ACP Sola Oketunji, and left, Mr Yaniv Ovitz and ACP Olusegun Ajamolaya, during a visit with his team
After a tour of the firm, Okoro thanked Dan on behalf of the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mr Ibrahim Idris. He described the visit as a huge educational process.

Speaking during the visit, Mr Gbade Alabi, the Chairman of CBC EMEA, a leading Technology and ICT player in Africa specializing in integrating ICT Systems and providing technology solutions, said, “The war is not the physical war anymore; it’s the cyber-war.”

Addressing reporters in his office at Alagbon, Okoro said, “The Anti-fraud unit of the Force CID has unravelled the circumstances surrounding fake bank documents, corporate bodies documents, Federal High Court documents, CBN documents, individual and multi-national documents, that a group of syndicates have been circulating to members of the public and multi-nationals on-shore, off-shore, and this group of persons dwell in areas of forging these documents and circulating. People should be wary of these documents – clearance documents, and final payment documents from the banks… These documents that are purported to be genuine documents are being issued out to the members of the public…

“We’ve made arrests and the case is still being investigated, but we want to quickly warn members of the public to be very careful of such syndicates who are now demanding for credit cards and account numbers with the assistance of their collaborators who are insiders at the banks and corporate offices.

“People should keep their identities as secret as possible; that’s why they are called passwords and pin numbers. These syndicates are operating generally within the shores of this country and outside. Some of them are with us now, and we have been able to investigate them; they clone domain of people and clone websites, and they continue to operate as if they are members of the corporate bodies whose websites have been cloned.

“We are now investigating most of these areas that are in question. We have documents to show members of the public and those of them whose documents are shown should come forward for us to be able to streamline what is really going on. There are serious cyber-attacks going on now.

“We also stumbled on those who operated from Banana Island, in the name of transferring huge sums of money. We have equally arrested a young man from Union Bank in Bayelsa, who moved millions of money in the name of transfer. It was found to be a fraudulent transfer. The monies have been recovered and handed over to the owners. We are trying to get those operating in the names of some banks in the country. Lots of people who are insiders in these banks are concerned.
“The scammers’ clone ATM cards. 

Members of the public should be careful with their ATM cards. They buy ATM cards, pin numbers, passwords; these are the numbers used to source for penetration. Account officers divulge information from the banks.”

Ekpe, who slumped when he was arrested by the police, was found to have spent three years in jail, in Spain, before setting up his base in Nigeria.

APMT Abandons Badagry Deep Seaport, Invests Billions In Ghana, Liberia

APMT Abandons Badagry Deep Seaport, Invests Billions In Ghana, Liberia

APM Terminals is investing billions of dollars in West Africa seaports - but not in Lagos, the current (and much-maligned) container port hub for the region.

In Liberia, Maersk's terminal division has put $110 million into its port at Monrovia in line with a concession agreement with the government.

According to country director George Adjei, these expenditures include $50 million for wharf improvements and $60 million for equipment.

The investment is already near the total amount that APMT promised to put into the port over the entirety of its 25-year lease, according to local outlet Liberian Observer.

APMT and its partners are also spending $1.5 billion on a greenfield multi-purpose port in Tema, Ghana, located on a site adjacent to the current seaport. Tema's port handles about 70 percent of Ghana's trade, and it is overwhelmed by cargo traffic.

The new facility will have 3.5 million TEU of capacity, 17 berths and enough depth for neopanamaxes of up to 13,000 TEU - many times larger than the biggest vessels that currently call at Tema. About 20 percent of the total investment will go not to the port, but to improvements to the highway that connects Tema with Ghana's capital, Accra. Construction on the port is under way, and it is expected to open next year.

APMT also holds an existing lease at the Apapa terminal in Lagos, Nigeria, the busiest container terminal in all of West Africa.

However, it has not announced major plans to invest in its operations there.

Lagos is notoriously congested, due in large part to the unusually poor state of the Oshodi-Apapa Expressway.

Potholes give sections of the highway the appearance of an offroad racetrack; gridlock is a near-permanent condition; and truck drivers routinely park their vehicles and take up residence in the road. 

When traffic is at its worst, car and minibus drivers have taken to driving on the wrong side, headed against the flow, in order to bypass jammed lanes.

In July, Nigeria's government reportedly blamed Maersk and Cosco for the congestion.

“Like many ports in Europe and the United States, Lagos grew from a port into a city and at some point, the limitations of that combination is reached,” said Peder Sondergaard, Africa-Middle East Region Head for APM Terminals, in a statement in August.

To bypass these limitations, APMT said that it was negotiating with Nigeria's government to build a $2.6 billion multipurpose facility at Badagry, 35 miles to the west of Lagos and 30 miles east of Cotonou, Benin.

Many Nigerian importers have begun to land their cargoes in Benin in order to avoid Lagos, especially since Cotonou Port has made significant improvements in productivity in recent years. A brand new port at Badagry would create a modern alternative to Lagos, but closer to market than Cotonou and located within Nigeria's borders.

However, Maersk's ambitions at Badagry face headwinds. Badagry's free trade zone component received government approval in 2017, but little progress has been made since, and Drewry has noted that falling container volumes in Nigeria have undercut the business case for greenfield port projects in the region.

Even if it were built, the highway between Badagry and Lagos would not be much of an improvement over the Oshodi-Apapa: even Nigeria's government admits that it is in a "deplorable state."

The Badagry port development consortium's website was online as recently as late August, but it is no longer available.

SON Confirms Human Flesh In Chinese Drugs

SON Confirms Human Flesh In Chinese Drugs

The Standard Organisation of Nigeria (SON) has confirmed the receipt of a letter sent on Chinese Drugs reported to be made from human flesh.

The National Intelligence Agency (NIA) earlier alerted the SON, National Agency for Food Drugs and Administration Control (NAFDAC), Nigerian Customs Service on a Chinese drugs made with human flesh.

The Technical Assistant/Head, Public Relations of the organisation, Mr Bola Fashina, explained that his organisation is on the lookout for the products even though he explained it is the primary responsibilities of both NAFDAC and Customs Service.

In vestigations revealed that the capsules were filled with powdered flesh from dead babies.

They were made in North Eastern China from babies whose bodies were chopped into small pieces and dried on stoves before being turned into powder.

Thousands of the drugs were first confiscated in South Korea in 2012.
However, according to NIA, “the South Korean Customs Service, on 30th September 2018 revealed that it has seized 2,751 Chinese drugs/capsules, containing human remains from foetus, infants and flesh imported into the country by some Chinese nationals.

“The manufacturers claims that the drugs/capsules can boost stamina, cure cancer, diabetes and some other terminal diseases.

“The capsules were smuggled in suitcases and through international mail.”

The agency revealed that South Korean Ministry of Food and Drug Safety indicated that 18.7 billion viruses, including hepatitis B virus were found the capsules.

It stressed that the making of the human remain drugs and consuming them are crimes against humanity, which can also lead to serious health challenges.

NIA explained that it was monitoring the situation for detailed information.
“However, it is important for all relevant health regulatory agencies in Nigeria especially the Federal Ministry of Health, NAFDAC, NDLEA and SON to sensitize Nigerians of this development and warn them of the inherent dangers of patronizing drugs imported from China.

“The Customs Service, NIPOST and other mail delivery services should also step up monitoring of cargoes and packages with drugs imported into Nigeria.”

In 2011, Chinese officials launched investigations into the production of drugs made from dead fetuses.
The capsules were disguised as stamina boosters and some people believe them to be a panacea for disease.