Nigerian Court Sentences Crypto Fraudster to One Year in Jail, Accused Given Option to Pay Fine

Nigerian Court Sentences Crypto Fraudster to One Year in Jail, Accused Given Option to Pay Fine

Nigerian Court Sentences Crypto Fraudster to One Year in Jail, Accused Given Option to Pay Fine

A Nigerian court has convicted and sentenced a man to one year in prison who is accused of duping an unsuspecting cryptocurrency investor. On its charge sheet, the prosecution said that the man had contravened Nigeria’s anti-fraud laws and hence should be punished accordingly.

Fake Cryptocurrency Investment Scheme

A court in Nigeria has convicted a man accused of using a bogus cryptocurrency platform to defraud $680 from an unsuspecting investor, a report has said. In its ruling, the Port Harcourt Zonal Command of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said the man, Obu Ebibo, whose alias is Kenneth Gibson, must serve one year in jail.

The court however said the accused has an option to pay a fine of $1,180 (N500,000) which he can deposit into the government’s consolidated revenue account. According to a PM News report that details the accused’s alleged crimes, by committing the alleged offenses, Ebibo was in contravention of Nigeria’s anti-fraud laws.

“That you Obu Gabriel Ebibo (alias Kenneth Gibson) on or about the 1st November 2021, in Port Harcourt, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court with intent to defraud obtained an aggregate sum of Six Hundred and Eighty United States Dollars ($680.00 USD) on the pretence that, the money was meant for cryptocurrency investment, a pretext you knew to be false and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 1 (2) of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud-Related Offences Act 2006 and punishable under Section 1 (3) of the same Act,” the accused’s charge sheet states.

Noting that Ebibo had pleaded guilty, the prosecution counsel only identified as F.O. Amama is reported to have requested the court to sentence the accused accordingly. However, Ebibo’s lawyer argued that since his client had accepted charges against him, the court should show mercy to the first-time offender.

In handing down the sentence, the judge reportedly ordered that the mobile device used by the offender be forfeited to the state.

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