Five Nigerian students have been arrested and detained in Malaysia over
their alleged involvement in an internet fraud amounting to
N125.2million (RM2.4 million) in Selangor and Kuala Lumpur.
The five
students, aged between 20 and 30, and pursuing Information Technology
courses in a leading private college in Kuala Lumpur, were arrested on
June 30, 2015 at different areas in that country including Petaling
Jaya, Cyberjaya, Damansara and Kuala Lumpur.
Following
the arrest of the five students, police also detained the two local
women, aged 40 and 55, who are the owners of the accounts used by the
syndicate said Penang Commercial Crimes chief ACP Azmi Adam.
ACP Azmi
said police also seized five laptops, 20 hand phones, ATM cards, SIM
cards and documents believed to have been used to con their victims.
He
said police launched ‘Ops Merpati’ after receiving a report from the
owner of an ice producing factory owner in George Town who claimed he
had been cheated by the syndicate. The 62-year-old victim said he had
received an e-mail from the syndicate in March, informing him that he
was among 50 recipients selected to receive RM15.9 million from the
government of the United States.
“The e-mail requested the victim
to follow certain procedures to ensure he did not miss the opportunity.
Convinced by the contents of the e-mail, the victim carried out 51
transactions involving money, to accounts numbers given by the syndicate
before realising it was a scam. He later lodged a police report,” he
said.
Azmi said initial investigations revealed that the
syndicate had conned several victims to a tune of RM2.4 million. Police
have also found transactions involving up to RM1 million that were
banked in from a neighbouring country."


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