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BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer - Crime - Nairaland

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BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by yinchar(m): 9:57am On Nov 20, 2018

It's a tough conversation to listen to.

The woman on the phone thinks she has a fiancé in the US. But the romantic emails she's been receiving are really coming from a small town in Nigeria.

Laura Lyons has to break the bad news.

She's a private investigator who specialises in tracking down online romance fraudsters, otherwise known as "catfish".

"When you have to go back to individuals and explain to them that this person doesn't exist, they're not real, that is really hard to do," she says.

The catfish are often based in Africa and work from pre-written romantic scripts in internet cafes.

Their stories are designed to tug at the heart strings and to empty bank accounts.

More than a quarter of new relationships now start through a dating website or app, so there's no shortage of potential victims.

Most victims are too embarrassed to go to the police, but there are still 10 catfish crimes a day reported in the UK. Those affected by such scams lose on average around £15,000.

Roy Twiggs shows me the stream of email conversations he had with someone who pretended to be a US woman called Donna.

Roy thought they were in love and were going to get married. Then she started asking for money to help with a building project in Malaysia.

"The money seemed to be for plausible things. When you're sending £3,000, £4,000, it sort of all adds up.

"After I'd worked everything out I'd actually paid her the best part of £100,000."

The 67-year-old from Doncaster should be enjoying a comfortable retirement. Instead he's paying off creditors each month using his pension.

"I'm broke. You're whitewashed, you're totally devastated, you're finished, you just don't want to be bothered anymore."

While we are filming we spot a worrying entry on Roy's calendar. He has written "$500" next to the name Sherry.

Sherry is Roy's new American girlfriend. He met her online.

When I check the messages Sherry has sent, it's clear she's using the same language and methods as the original catfish.

It's far from unusual, as catfish are ruthless with their victims. If you have been hooked once, you are more likely to be targeted again.

The bait: A fake profile used to hook someone online

I want to catch a catfish by setting up my own fake dating profile. Nearly two-thirds of reported victims are women, so I have become Kathryn Hunter - a wealthy divorcee looking for love.

It's not long before the catfish begin to bite.

Four men approach me online and they all claim to be US soldiers. It's an immediate red flag. The military profile is a commonly used cover story which gives catfish an excuse not to meet in person, as well as providing a seemingly legitimate reason to ask for money to be sent overseas.

One of the soldiers, who calls himself Paul Richard, comes on strong. On day two, he tells Kathryn he's in love. On day three, he wants to marry her.

He takes the conversation away from the dating site and bombards me with texts. There are messages late into the night and more waiting for me in the morning.

After a week, Paul Richard says he wants to speak on the phone. My producer takes on the role of Kathryn for the call. The number he rings from has a Nigerian dialling code.

After a brief silence, a man with a thick African accent comes on the line. He doesn't sound like the American soldier whose picture he is using. But Paul explains away his accent by saying he has a cold.

The easiest way to prove someone is a catfish is to find the real person whose pictures they are using. An online reverse image search can show where the pictures came from on the internet.

The first three photos Paul sends us don't work, because the meta data has been stripped from the picture. But we get a result on the fourth, a selfie Paul claims is him in his army uniform.

It leads us to the Instagram page of Juan Avalos, a real life marine whose page features the same pictures sent to us by Paul. He has uploaded a warning about catfish because so many fraudsters have been using his photos to scam people.

Juan told us: "These guys will say anything to anybody and lie. I run into so many messages, even if I show them it's not me they still don't believe it because they are so deeply in love."

For the next few weeks, my producer continues to speak to Paul Richard on the phone as I listen in.

Paul talks gushingly about their future life together and his plans to move to the UK to be with Kathryn once his army service finishes.

The conversations grow longer and more frequent, punctuated with kisses, flirtatious comments and a regular request for pictures.

There's just one thing standing in the way of our future happiness - Paul's son is sick and desperately needs medical attention. He asks for $800 (£620) to pay for young Rick's treatment.

Paul says we should pay the cash to his nanny in the US, a woman called Marcy Krovak.

It's a breakthrough because, unlike Paul Richard, Marcy Krovak is a real person.

Mule: Someone who transfers money or goods for the catfish

Catfish need real people to pick up cash for them as some form of identification has to be shown when collecting transactions. Some of these money mules are innocent victims tricked into forwarding on cash, others are in on the scam.

We don't know whether Marcy is in on it or not, so we head to Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania, where she lives.

We send her a small amount of cash to see if she will pick it up.

The next three days are spent sitting in a blacked out van outside Marcy's local Western Union.

We spot a number of women who look like her going inside but each time it's a false alarm..

Then, just as we think our sting has failed, we receive a notification telling us the cash has been picked up using Marcy's ID.

But it's been collected 400 miles away - in New York.

When we ask Marcy what's going on, she claims she's also a victim of our catfish: "I never was going to go to Western Union and pick that money up but now somebody's used my info and gone and picked it up. It was not me, I did not do it. Please find this person."

The reveal: Unmasking the catfish

It seems like we have hit another dead end, but then our catfish makes a mistake.

Paul Richard accidentally leaves a name tag - Dan Coolman - on one of his WhatsApp pictures.

We search through all the Dan Coolmans in Nigeria and we find one who runs a barbershop in Ibadan. He's using the same number that our catfish has been calling us from.

Dan Coolman is another false name, but we discover the phone is registered to Daniel Joseph Okechkwu.

We then find a Twitter account with that name and the same profile picture as the one used by Dan Coolman.

We have finally uncovered the real identity of our catfish.

We head for Ibadan, but by the time we get there he's gone. The doors to the barber shop are locked and locals say it's been closed for weeks.

There is a photo of our catfish posing with a customer on the side of the building, but no-one seems to know where Daniel Joseph Okechkwu has gone.

After three months of talking to our catfish, we decide to call him and tell him who we really are.

Surprisingly, he doesn't hang up straight away. He sticks to his story about being a US soldier and insists his name is Paul Richard. He denies scamming anybody and then ends the call.

It feels like a disappointing end to our search, but later that night he calls back.

This time, Daniel Joseph Okechkwu confesses. He claims it's the first romance scam he's ever pulled and that he has been forced to do it because of the closure of his barber shop.

He sounds sincere and he apologises for the way he has treated us.

Our catfish says he wants to stop being a romance fraudster. But he needs us to give him money, so that he can afford to stop tricking other people out of their cash.

It's a classic catfish twist. They never give up on the scam even when they have been rumbled.
@OAM4J
@Mynd44

SOURCE: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-46260729
Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by PUSSYBBQGRILLS(f): 9:59am On Nov 20, 2018
. " This time, Daniel Joseph Okechukwu confesses. He claims it's the first romance scam he's ever pulled and that he has been forced to do it because of the closure of his barber shop."


No comments.
Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by TheTourist: 10:07am On Nov 20, 2018
Hahahahaha what a good read grin grin


FP material
@lalastical

1 Like

Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by Nobody: 10:31am On Nov 20, 2018
Interesting, even after dem burst am. He still give them second format lol..

I wish Nigeria get better government, if they can tackle this cyber crime to the lowest level am sure the youths will find alternatives means of making money. Hopefully it go be legit then cos e nor go easy for then to live normal life again.

The youths are the one who can hold the government responsible for dia actions, but where dem dey? Sitting behind a laptop planning his/her next scam either local or overseas..

The amount of people wey rely on these fraudsters for survival yapa, from bank staffs to families, runs girls, stores, car dealers, cops etc etc. A cyber crime bill that was going to throw internet fraudsters to 10 - 15 years in jail never made it, it might have really change the society.

One day sha, we go see..
Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by fathomberry: 2:10pm On Nov 20, 2018
No be small 'Catfish'. grin
Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by Hoodbilonia: 2:16pm On Nov 20, 2018
bitcoins only
no traces
Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by Nobody: 6:27pm On Nov 20, 2018
fuckerstard:

The amount of people wey rely on these fraudsters for survival yapa, from bank staffs to families, runs girls, stores, car dealers, cops etc etc.
Is that all? Lol. Even churches, mosques, NGOs, companies, businesses, industries!

The way it is, our economy would collapse if for any reason, every kobo of yahoo money is withdrawn from the economy. It's mind boggling the extent of dependence of our country on these guys. They're the biggest forex earner for the country, even bigger than Nigeria's earnings from oil (believe it or not).

But unlike oil income that is concentrated within the 1% cabalistic politicians and their cronies, oil block owners, and government contractors, yahoo income is dispersed - so its impact is better felt by the majority, directly or indirectly.

Citizen-powered infrastructure
Mass property development
Our entertainment industry
The nightlife
Youth empowerment
Women empowerment
ETC.

These all depend on yahoo money at least 80%.

Then violent crime moderation (over the last decade and a half), it is entirely due to proliferation of yahoo activities.

Those of you who are old enough would remember the deadliness and prevalence of violent crimes in the mid to late 1990s, I ven before the advent of GSM, etc. The cultism, robbery and kidnapping we're seeing today is child's play. My brother, pray hard. If there wasn't yahoo, all the cold blooded Edo and Delta boys in their millions, all the Igbo and Yoruba boys, with red eyes already, my brother, Nigeria would be worse than Somalia, more violent than the gang infested regions of Mexico. It's not something you should ever imagine trust me.

1 Like

Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by Nobody: 6:48pm On Nov 20, 2018
Hedonini:


The way it is, our economy would collapse if for any reason, every kobo of yahoo money is withdrawn from the economy. It's mind boggling the extent of dependence of our country on these guys. They're the biggest forex earner for the country, even bigger than Nigeria's earnings from oil (believe it or not).

But unlike oil income that is concentrated within the 1% cabalistic politicians and their cronies, oil block owners, and government contractors, yahoo income is dispersed - so its impact is better felt by the majority, directly or indirectly.

Our entertainment industry
The nightlife
Youth empowerment
Women empowerment

These all depend on yahoo money at least 80%.

Then violent crime moderation over the last decade and a half), it is entirely due to proliferation of yahoo activities.

Those of you who are old enough would remember the deadliness and prevalence of violent crimes in the mid to late 1990s, I ven before the advent of GSM, etc. The cultism, robbery and kidnapping we're seeing today is child's play. My brother, pray hard. If there wasn't yahoo, all the cold blooded Edo and Delta boys in their millions, all the Igbo and Yoruba boys, with red eyes already, my brother, Nigeria would be worse than the gang infested regions of Mexico. It's not something you should ever imagine trust me.

Let us manage and maintain our status quo as it is.

I can't help but agree with you, I remeber the 90's in mushin. Those armed robbers can take couple of streets together one night. But we are no longer in the 90's and we can't continue to maintain this status quo like you said.

Kids from primary /secondary school already know they have to get that money any which way, they don't believe in education. The system has failed them.

1 Like

Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by ahiboilandgas: 7:12pm On Nov 20, 2018
PUSSYBBQGRILLS:
. " This time, Daniel Joseph Okechukwu confesses. He claims it's the first romance scam he's ever pulled and that he has been forced to do it because of the closure of his barber shop."


No comments.
bad guy he wants to rescam then with a final trick
Re: BBC Report: How I Set Out To Catch A Nigerian Romance Scammer by willyo(m): 11:29pm On Nov 20, 2018
Interesting...

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