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KC Man Sentenced for 0,000 Romance Fraud | Forum

Topic location: Forum home » General » Scam
billyHill Moderator
billyHill Oct 21 '20

https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdmo/pr/kc-man-sentenced-900000-romance-fraud


KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A Kansas City, Missouri, man was sentenced in federal court today for his role in a romance fraud scheme that bilked victims across the United States and overseas of nearly $900,000.

Ronayerin K. Ogolor, 51, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Nigeria, was sentenced by U.S. Chief District Judge Beth Phillips to three years in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered Ogolor to pay $871,739 in restitution to his victims.

On Oct. 23, 2019, Ogolor pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Ogolor admitted that he participated in a conspiracy since 2013 that targeted people, some of them elderly, in search of companionship or romance through online websites such as Facebook, ChristianMingle.com, or Hangout.com.

The perpetrators of the romance scams created several profiles on online dating sites. Conspirators then contacted men and women throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe, with whom they cultivated a sense of affection and often romance. Having established relationships with the victims, the perpetrators of the romance scams ultimately requested money for hospital fees, travel fees, “customs expenses,” “gold import taxes,” or investment opportunities. Conspirators directed the victims to wire transfer or deposit money into various bank accounts, including accounts established and maintained by Ogolor. Often after the victims transferred money into the specified accounts, conspirators claimed more money was needed, “to release the package” or “to pay customs expenses” on money or gold.

On other occasions, conspirators fraudulently obtained checks through business email compromise, and had the victims deposit the checks into their accounts and wire and deposit money into various accounts, including accounts established and maintained by Ogolor. In a business email compromise, the conspirators hack into a business email account, and then send an email from what appears to be an employee with authority to approve payments, instructing that a check be disbursed in the victim’s name and sent to the victim. By using victims to deposit the checks and distribute the money, the conspirators distanced themselves from the business email hacking and fraud.

In furtherance of the scheme, Ogolor opened several bank accounts in his name and in the names of sham businesses. The romance fraud victims wired and deposited their money and money from counterfeit or fraudulently obtained checks into Ogolor’s accounts. Soon after receiving the fraudulently obtained wires or deposits, Ogolor wired money to co-conspirators and/or withdrew the money in cash.

Court documents refer to 13 victims (in Alabama, Ohio, Washington, Arizona, Florida, Illinois, California, and Italy) who each sent tens of thousands of dollars to Ogolor. One victim (a widow in Indiana who received a friend request on Facebook) believed a co-conspirator was a widower working on an oil rig off the coast of Louisiana; she lost a total of $450,000 to Ogolor and others. Another victim in Texas, who believed a co-conspirator was a widower and U.S. Army general deployed in Afghanistan, lost at least $300,000.

This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kathleen D. Mahoney. It was investigated by the FBI, the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department and Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI).



spectrumAU Moderator
spectrumAU Oct 22 '20
Only 3 years? He's destroyed lives.  

#sigh#

billyHill Moderator
billyHill Oct 22 '20

yes Louise, you wouldn't believe what has happened to the justice system here lately.   Open your business to try and support your family they fine you more than you could possibly pay..... but something like this (likely considered a non violent crime) is more like a speeding ticket.


And what I found noticeably missing was that they stated he started the scams in 2013, but did not say when law enforcement got involved. 6 or 7 years to investigate?? No mention of when or if he was arrested, bonded out or whatever, none of that useful information.

spectrumAU Moderator
spectrumAU Oct 25 '20
Yes I can Billy, the same is happening here and other countries as well.  Although I can see the point from both sides.  People need to support their families but that wont happen if they catch the virus and die. If they spread the virus then even more families are without a supporter.  Vicious circle. So many families destroyed already, we don't need scum taking our savings as well.
billyHill Moderator
billyHill Oct 26 '20

While I can also understand both sides of the story, there are extreme points of enforcement and regulation that I fail to agree with. I also don't think that the justice system should be as closely tied to the health care system as it seems to be. The guy in the story above is likely never going to pay off nearly $1,000,000 to the victims they found, so that will keep him on parole for the rest of his life. Or until he leaves this country anyhow.


California (Los Angeles County specifically) is one of those states that is next to completely locked down still, therefore I don't have a job because of it. the only restaurants open are for take out (if the establishment isn't bankrupt). or in some places al fresco dining is permitted. Even Disneyland in Orange County is still the only Disney property in the world closed completely.


I figure that you take a chance every day after waking up that something bad will happen. If that bad thing does happen then either you take the responsibility for it, blame it elsewhere as the case may be, or stay stuck inside your own house until the Government says it is OK to go out and play again?? I don't like those choices. If the Gov't is protecting us from ourselves to that extent, then 1984 (George Orwell) is here and I don't want to see what comes next.


I don't want to rant and rave too much in this topic because it isn't the place for it.

Willi
Willi Feb 16 '21
This entire story is almost ridiculous. So he pleaded guilty to just ONE case of wire fraud ? And the courts believed him ? With a mild sentence of only 3 years it is no wonder, that there are so many scammers out there preying on unsuspecting victims. Some time ago I had contact with a scammer, who contacted me on a social networking site and pretended to be from another state here in the USA, not too far away from me. This "woman" told me about the intention to come and see me soon, but first wanted to go on a vacation in Ankara ,Turkey. I was asking to use WhatsApp instead of SMS texting, but the reply was, that there was a problem installing it on the relatively recent iPhone from Sprint, a poor excuse indeed. Scammers don't like using WhatsApp, because it does not allow them to hide their real phone number. I always use a virtual phone number (from TextFree or TextNow) for messaging people I never met just to be a little safer, so made a call from a different virtual number to that phone in the middle of the night, andy suspicion was confirmed: the number I was corresponding with was from Google ! Of course my contact pretended to travel to Turkey, and we remained in contact by text only. Big mistake by the scammer, because that gave him away. Why ? Well, Sprint uses the CDMA phone system, which only is compatible in the USA and Canada. Turkey uses GSM, and a CDMA phone will simply not connect there even if a local SIM card is used (which would then change the phone number anyway). Promptly, after a few days in Turkey my contact was apparently robbed of practically all money and valuables including the passport and the return airline tickets. Here is the funny thing: the rather expensive iPhone was miraculously not taken, so it was possible to ask me to send several thousands of dollars to help her out. Of course I did not send anything but used plenty of excuses why I could not send money. However I gave detailed instructions about how to contact the US embassy to get help, and it would only a matter of getting an emergency passport, go the the airline office and have the stolen ticket replaced. That's when the scammer ran out of excuses and gave up. I kept him busy for about 3 months for no financial gain. I still have all the conversation neatly saved in files, just in case they are needed as evidence. And yes, I am very careful and don't even tell about my true location before I know someone well enough to trust them. 

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