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Nigerian Serving 78-month Prison Term In US Seeks Buhari’s Intervention - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Nigerian Serving 78-month Prison Term In US Seeks Buhari’s Intervention by FreeEfJay: 10:31am On Mar 29, 2022
A 36-year-old US-based Nigerian, Olufolajimi Abegunde, who is currently serving a 78-month prison term in Tennessee, on Friday called on the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), to intervene in what he described as his unfair imprisonment, insisting that he was a victim of racism.

Abegunde was arrested on February 7, 2018 and jailed by Sherly Lipman.

He was sent to West Tennessee Detention Facility and is currently at Reeves County Correctional Facility 3.

In a statement he made available to our correspondent from his Memphis, Tennessee prison cell, Abegunde, appealed to the President to institute a commission of inquiry to investigate the circumstances that led to his incarceration.

He urged the Federal Government to put pressure on the US Government to embark on a re-trial without bias.

“My request today is simple. I have been contending with two major challenges for almost 60 months. The first challenge is that as absurd as it may sound, in the United States, there is no mechanism in place to hold Federal Prosecutors, and to a large extent FBI Agents accountable for egregious misconduct in general. That is why they have acted with this degree of impunity in my case. They hide behind what is called ‘qualified immunity’.

Read full story here: https://www.free-efjay.org/story

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Re: Nigerian Serving 78-month Prison Term In US Seeks Buhari’s Intervention by Truvelisback(m): 10:39am On Mar 29, 2022
FreeEfJay:
A 36-year-old US-based Nigerian, Olufolajimi Abegunde, who is currently serving a 78-month prison term in Tennessee, on Friday called on the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), to intervene in what he described as his unfair imprisonment, insisting that he was a victim of racism.

Abegunde was arrested on February 7, 2018 and jailed by Sherly Lipman.

He was sent to West Tennessee Detention Facility and is currently at Reeves County Correctional Facility 3.

In a statement he made available to our correspondent from his Memphis, Tennessee prison cell, Abegunde, appealed to the President to institute a commission of inquiry to investigate the circumstances that led to his incarceration.

He urged the Federal Government to put pressure on the US Government to embark on a re-trial without bias.

“My request today is simple. I have been contending with two major challenges for almost 60 months. The first challenge is that as absurd as it may sound, in the United States, there is no mechanism in place to hold Federal Prosecutors, and to a large extent FBI Agents accountable for egregious misconduct in general. That is why they have acted with this degree of impunity in my case. They hide behind what is called ‘qualified immunity’.
If na Buhari u dey wait for, u go grow Moses.

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Re: Nigerian Serving 78-month Prison Term In US Seeks Buhari’s Intervention by Maxymilliano(m): 10:50am On Mar 29, 2022
He urged the Federal Government to put pressure on the US Government to embark on a re-trial without bias.
Lol ... You better save your plea and serve your time with equanimity ...

Nigerian Citizen Sentenced for Role in International Cyber-Fraud Scheme

A citizen of Nigeria residing in Atlanta, Georgia, was sentenced to 78 months in prison yesterday for his role in an international cyber fraud scheme, announced Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney D. Michael Dunavant of the Western District of Tennessee.

Olufolajimi Abegunde, 32, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Sheryl L. Lipman of the Western District of Tennessee who also ordered Abegunde to pay $57,911.62 in restitution to the victims of his offense. Abegunde and Javier Luis Ramos-Alonso, 29, were convicted in March after a seven-day trial in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Tennessee. Ramos-Alonso previously received a 31-month sentence for his role in the scheme.

Abegunde and Ramos-Alonso participated in a criminal organization in which members “spoofed” emails and created fake profiles on dating websites in order to fool victims into sending money to bogus bank accounts under the control of members of the conspiracy. The proceeds would be laundered and subsequently wired out of the United States to destinations including West Africa. The organization as a whole is believed to have caused more than $10,000,000 in damage to U.S. citizens and businesses.

The evidence presented at trial showed that Abegunde, who received an MBA from Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas, engaged in black-market currency exchanges over the life of the conspiracy. Purporting to hold himself out as a legitimate businessman, Abegunde claimed association with a business entity that was not yet operational in late 2017, so for his primary source of income he relied on his off-the-book currency exchanges. Through this network, Abegeunde played a key role, along with Ramos-Alonso, in laundering fraud funds from an Oct. 3, 2016, business email compromise (BEC) of a land title company located in Bellingham, Washington. The proceeds of another BEC perpetrated in July 2016 upon a real estate company in Memphis, Tennessee, also moved through parts of the same criminal organization.

Abegunde, who faced numerous account closures from banks in the United States, used a complicated network of third-party bank accounts to disguise his illicit activity. The proof at trial established that Abegunde told people that he could not receive payments into accounts that could be “tracked,” and that he preferred to engage in cash transactions because they were easier to clean and “eliminated the risk.”

In addition to his financial activities, Abegunde also engaged in a conspiracy to commit marriage fraud. Abegunde was married during his studies at Texas A&M, but divorced his wife in 2016 to marry a U.S. service member through whom he could obtain immigration and health care benefits and also open new bank accounts. He continued to live with his first wife in Atlanta while his U.S. service member wife was deployed to South Korea. While incarcerated and awaiting trial in the Western District of Tennessee, Abegunde continued his conspiratorial activities, trying to convince his fake spouse, who has since filed for divorce, to refuse to testify against him. Abegunde also engaged in witness tampering by sending a self-written Motion to Dismiss bearing his former attorney’s name and professional attestation. The evidence at trial established that Abegunde drafted and sent the motion, which his attorney expressly did not authorize, to his faux spouse in an effort to deceive her into not testifying against him.

Five other individuals have pleaded guilty to being involved in the scheme. Additionally, several foreign nationals are awaiting extradition to the United States to face trial. Others are still at large.

The FBI’s Memphis Field Office investigated the case with assistance from agents in Atlanta and San Jose, California. Senior Trial Attorney Timothy C. Flowers with the Department of Justice’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Debra L. Ireland prosecuted the case. The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs is handling the extraditions.

For more information or to view a list of aliases used by members of the conspiracy on dating websites and social media, visit

https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdtn/victim-witness-program.

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