A Federal High Court in Lagos on Monday heard that two former employees of First Marina Trust Ltd. cloned the emails of several customers and defrauded them to the tune of over N1.3 billion.
Mr Anthony Onyeoghane, a witness for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) which is prosecuting the case, gave evidence at the resumed trial of two former staff of First Marina Trust Ltd., Adeyemi Oluwaseun and Suleiman Yusuf.
The EFCC charged them on four counts bordering on conspiracy to commit identity theft, impersonation, and cybercrime.
They were first arraigned in June 2018 before Justice Chuka Obiozor and pleaded not guilty to the charge.
The court granted them bail.
However, Obiozor was transferred from the Lagos Division of the Federal High Court, and the case was re-assigned to Justice Tijani Ringim.
Following the re-assignment of the case, the defendants were on May 12, re-arraigned before Ringim
They, again, pleaded not guilty to the charge, and Ringim allowed them to continue on their earlier bail.
When the trial resumed on Monday, prosecution counsel, Mr Nnaemeka Omenwa, called the witness for examination-in-chief.
The witness told the court that he worked as a Chief Risk Officer at First Marina Trust Ltd., a financial institution regulated by the Central Bank of Nigeria.
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He identified the defendants as his former colleagues who served as marketing operators and relationship managers, respectively.
The witness told the court that he had chaired a committee set up to investigate a case of internal fraud within the company and orchestrated by the defendants, from May 3, 2016.
He told the court that both defendants connived to create email addresses of customers in a bid to defraud them.
According to him, the defendants conspired to change the email address of a customer named Chinedu Ohamuo, whose email address is chimexohanuo@yahoo.com.
The witness said that the defendants changed same as chimexohamuo1@yahoo.com.
He said that following a change of the email, the second defendant, acting as a customer of the company, wrote an email to himself in his official email address, instructing N15 million should be liquidated from the customer’s investment account.
He said that the second defendant also instructed that the funds should be transferred to one Olufemi Ajala, his childhood friend.
The witness said that the second defendant printed out the email address as required by the company’s policy, wrote on it “email received”, dated and signed it with his signature.
“He then took the said email to the first defendant who, upon verification, uploaded the request to the electronic payment system known as GAPS.
“The sum of N15 million was, therefore, transferred from the unsuspecting customer’s account to Olufemi Ajala. They used the same tactics in 19 other transactions.
“The defendants transfered from unsuspecting customers’ investment accounts, the sum of over N1.3 billion .
The witness testified that the only difference between the 19 other transactions and the one to Olufemi Ajala was that Olufemi Ajala was removed from the “equation” and replaced with a bureau de change.
“On May 16, 2016, a customer known as White App Resources Ltd., also saw his investment account defrauded by the defendants to the tune of N186.2 million, using computer system.
“On May 17, 2016, the same cyber fraud was committed by the defendants on the same customer, and the sum of N237.2 million was stolen. On May 27, 2016, the sum of N500.2 million was also stolen,” he said.
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The witness told the court that the same fraud happened on June 9, 2016, June 22, 2016, and Sept.8, 2016, during which various sums of money were transferred.
He told the court that the first defendant confessed to the investigative committee, that he provided the accounts of the bureau de change into which the monies were transferred.
According to the witness, while on the run on Sept. 19, 2016, the second defendant sent an email to the managing director of the company, confessing to the crime and promising to use his “last blood” in making sure that he refunded the money.
The witness told the court that the proper procedure for liquidating a company’s account was by a hand-written letter or email, requesting same.
“The said letter or email is sent to the relationship manager of that particular customer, who is to confirm the letter or email by calling the customer to verify,” he said.
According to the witness, upon verification, the officer is to write “email or letter confirmed”, then signs and hands it over to the treasury operation staff, who in turn verifies same before uploading it in the electronic payment system.
The case has been adjourned until Feb. 14, 2023, for the continuation of trial.
The EFCC alleges that the defendants obtained sums of money from unsuspecting customers of the company by altering their email addresses.
The EFCC said that the offences contravene the provisions of Sections 13, 22(4), 27(a) and 27(2) of the Cyber Crimes (Prohibition, Prevention) Act, 2015.
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