Nigerian man arrested in $60m e-mail scam
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Nigerian man arrested in $60m e-mail scam

LAGOS. — A Nigerian accused of scamming $60 million from companies around the world through fraudulent e-mails has been arrested after months of investigation, Interpol and Nigeria’s anti-fraud agency said on Monday. One target paid out $15,4 million, according to a statement. The statement said the ringleader of a global scamming network, identified only as a 40-year-old called Mike, was arrested along with a 38-year-old accomplice in Nigeria’s oil capital, Port Harcourt, in June.nija

He is on administrative bail, which implies that officers do not yet have enough evidence to charge him in court. The man is accused of leading a criminal network that compromised e-mail accounts of small and medium-sized businesses around the world including in the US, Australia, Canada, India, Malaysia, Romania, South Africa and Thailand. The statement didn’t name any of the targets.

The network involved about 40 people in Nigeria, Malaysia and South Africa who provided malware and carried out the frauds, with money-laundering contacts in China, Europe and the US providing bank account details.

A supplier’s e-mail would be compromised and fake messages sent to a buyer with instructions for payment to a bank account under the network’s control, the statement said. Or the e-mail account of a high-level executive would be taken over and a request for a wire transfer sent to an employee responsible for handling such requests.

Such crime “poses a significant and growing threat, with tens of thousands of companies victimised in recent years,” Noboru Nakatani, executive director of the Interpol Global Complex for Innovation, said in a statement.

“The public, and especially businesses, need to be alert to this type of cyber-enabled fraud.” Nigeria is notorious for Internet fraud. The US embassy says it receives inquiries every day from Americans who have been defrauded. — AP.

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