Instagram scamster Hushpuppi has
been handed over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the US, Dubai
Police said on Thursday.
According to a statement,
Christopher Wray, Director of FBI, praised the role of Dubai Police in
arresting Raymond Abbas (Hushpuppi) and Olalekan Jacob Ponle aka Woodbery, and
handing them over to the US.
“Director of FBI expressed his
thanks for the exceptional efforts (of Dubai Police) in fighting organised
cyber crimes and arresting Hushpuppi and Woodbery,” Dubai Police said in the
statement.
According to Dubai Police, Hushpuppi
and Woodbery, wanted for a series of crimes like money-laundering, fraud,
hacking of websites and accounts, impersonation, banking fraud etc.
Hushpuppi and Woodbery were arrested
with 10 other suspects on allegations of fraud, involving huge money.
AED 150 million ($40.9 million) in Cash Was Seized From
Hushpuppi and Gang - Dubai CID
Their arrest in an operation
codenamed Fox Hunt 2 came after about four months of painstaking investigations
into their activities., during which their social media activities were
monitored by the highly trained police unit.
The video posted by the Dubai Media
Office said their police were able to track the locations of the suspected
fraudsters using their social media activities.
Police said the raid
resulted in the seizure of incriminating documents pertaining to a well-planned
international fraud worth Dh1.6 billion – N169 billion.
They were accused of
leading an “international” online fraud network that was committing crimes
outside the UAE, including money-laundering, cyber fraud, hacking, criminal
impersonating, scamming individuals, banking fraud and identity theft.
“The team also seized
more than AED 150 million ($40.9 million) in cash, 13 luxury cars with an
estimated value of AED 25 million ($6.8 million) obtained from fraud crimes,
and confiscated 21 computer devices, 47 smartphones, 15 memory sticks, five
hard disks containing 119,580 fraud files as well as addresses of 1,926,400
victims”, director of Dubai CID, Brigadier Jamal Salem Al Jallaf said.
In May, the United
States Secret Service said in a memo that fraudsters were targeting American
states. Their operations, the Secret Service said, was traced to Nigeria.
A California-based
cybersecurity firm Agari said on Tuesday, May 19, that “some if not all” of
those who committed the fraud are part of a Nigerian fraud group, Scattered
Canary.
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