Nigerian Fintech company owners jailed in the US over $160m proceeds of fraud including fake-romance scams sent to African countries

Nigerian Fintech company owners jailed in the US over $160m proceeds of fraud including fake-romance scams sent to African countries
The founders of Ping Express US LLC, Anslem Oshionebo and Opeyemi Odeyale
The founders of Ping Express US LLC, Anslem Oshionebo and Opeyemi Odeyale

DALLAS (Texas, US), July 19 (NNN-AGENCIES) — The founders of Ping Express US LLC, a Texan payments corporation with connections to the United Kingdom, were given a 27-month prison term for allegedly sending $160 million in proceeds of fraud to Nigeria through the business.

Anslem Oshionebo, 45, and 43-year-old Opeyemi Odeyale were sentenced after being found guilty of failing to maintain effective anti-money laundering controls and unlicensed money transmitting.

The money was sent over a period of nearly three years, citing US judicial documents.

Remittances from Dallas-based Ping Express customers were sent to Kenya, Nigeria, and other countries in Africa.

In one three-year period highlighted by the DoJ, the firm failed to flag a single suspicious transaction to regulators despite processing a “significant amount” of them, though it filed a batch of reports later.

One customer used the firm to move funds they made from fake-romance scams, with victims including a woman in Indiana who sent $15,000 to a supposed roughneck oil worker in the Gulf of Mexico, and another who sent $6,300 to a purported Irish sea captain.

Another customer moved more than $80,000 in a single month, far more than the company’s $4,500 limit, court filings show.

Ping Express faces five years of probation and a fine as high as $500,000 after pleading guilty to a similar charge, while another executive received a 42-month sentence, the Department of Justice said. — NNN-AGENCIES

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