Ever heard that Nigeria is endowed with rich human and natural
resources? A lot of people hear human resources and think more along the
lines of those people who have been able to use their brains, talents
and potentials to do things which have improved the nation in terms of
the economy and caused her to stand indeed as the giant of Africa.
What about those who used their brains and talents to dispossess
others of their hard-earned money without the aid of a gun? Not just
referring to the everyday pickpockets or fraudsters, but the mafias of
the 419 game.
One of them is Emmanuel Nwude.
Emmanuel Nwude.
In today’s world where advanced fee fraud or 419 is as much a part of
Nigeria’s identity as Jollof or an ailing president, financial crime is
one of the biggest concerns, for individuals and governments the world
over.
In 2017, the only thing standing between your bank account and a zero
balance is a hard-working hacker, the right software and a VPN to
disguise the location of the numerous young fraudsters who have made
cyber-crime into an art and an industry.
As intimidating as it may sound, years before the internet swam its
way into Nigeria on the back of telcos, a Nigerian bank official secured
a bounty that would inspire the most secluded yahoo boy to shoot a
series of music videos.
In a series of events that is credited as the third largest financial
crime in World History, Emmanuel Nwude, a director at Union Bank,
defrauded Nelson Sakaguchi and the Brazilian bank, Banco Noroeste Brazil
of the sum of 242 million dollars with a scheme that, in retrospect,
seems like something out of an episode of Impractical Jokers.
According to a Newswatch editorial dated Monday, July 07, 2003,
Emmanuel Nwude was, at the time he was caught, one of the wealthiest
Igbo businessmen in Nigeria.
Popularly known as the Owelle of Abunuga, Nwude is said to have owned
a 10-storey building in the heart of Lagos. In a manner consistent with
his wealth and flashy luxury, he lived on the top floor of the building
while the bottom floor housed a commercial bank.
Every meter of space in between those two floors was dedicated to his private concern, Euro-Holdings.
Nwude was said to own buildings across Nigeria and cities in the
United States. He was also reported to be a major financier of the
People’s Democratic Party and as Newswatch reported, a close ally of
former Vice-President, Atiku Abubakar.
Anyone who wondered about his wealth would have found a simple
convincing response. Nwude owned millions of shares as the singular
largest equity holder in Union Bank. Until 2001, he was also a member of
the board of directors of the bank.
The
fraud was only discovered when officials from Santander conducted due
diligence ahead of the planned purchase of Banco Noroeste. (Santander)
It was in this capacity that Nwude pulled off one of the most daring and outrageous schemes that the world has ever seen.
According to Nuhu Ribadu, who was EFCC’s chairman at the time of his
conviction, the swindle took place over a four-year period starting in
1995.
His main tactic was impersonation. Nwude posed as the CBN governor at the time, Paul Ugwoma.
His accomplice, Ikechukwu Anajemba posed as Rasheed Gomwalk who was
the CBN’s Director of International Remittance. Anajemba’s wife, Amaka
posed as Gomwalk’s wife, completely the unholy trio.
Ikechukwu Anajemba would die in 1998, as the proceeds of the scam were finally delivered, leaving his wife to take his share.
Together, the trio and a host of ancillary accomplices presented a
proposition to the head of International Finance at Brazil’s Banco
Noroeste Brazil, Nelson Sakaguchi.
Using false correspondence and Nwude’s access to confidential,
high-level documents, they convinced Sakaguchi that the Nigerian
government was seeking investors to build an airport in Abuja, the new
capital.
If Sakaguchi could provide the first investment of 242 million dollars, they said, he would be entitled to a commission of 10%.
The deal has not been presented as a corporate offering so Sakaguchi
did what he thought he had to do; he illegally into his bank’s funds and
began to make a series of payments to accounts around the world.
He and Nwude agreed that he would pay some of the 242 million as cash and the rest in some form of facility.
Between 1995 to 1998, Sakaguchi transferred 191 million in cash to
Nwude and his accomplices. The rest was conveyed as some form of
outstanding interest.
During this period, Nwude and his accomplices spent lavishly. Amaka,
Anajemba’s wife, became known as a socialite, erecting massive edifices
in her hometown of Enugu and making forends among Nigeria’s political
class.
The fraud was only discovered in 1997 when the victim bank was the subject of a buy-out by the Spanish bank, Santander.
At a joint board meeting in 1997, an official from Santander inquired
about why a large sum of money, two-fifths of Noroeste’s total value
and half of their capital, was sitting in the Cayman Islands
unmonitored.
This discovery led to extensive criminals investigations in five continents.
The effect on Banco Noroeste was fatal. The owners had to pay the
missing 242 million dollars out of their pockets to for the purchase to
go ahead, but that narrow escape did not secure its future. In 2001,
Banco Noroeste collapsed.
Nwude and his accomplices enjoyed their loot for years, but in 2003, a
trail created by years of reading the fine print and making connections
from the Cayman Islands landed in Lagos.
Newswatch reported that Nwude was picked up early June 2003 at his
residence in Ikoyi, Lagos. Seven of his exotic cars were also taken to
the premises of the EFCC on 15, Awolowo Road, Ikoyi.
Amaka
Anajemba, one of Nwude’s accomplices, was made Managing Director of
Enugu Waste Management Agency by Governor Ugwuanyi. (GLTrends)
So began a series of trials with the Central Bank of Nigeria and the
newly created Economic and Financial Crimes Commission on the one hand,
and Emmanuel Nwude and his accomplices on the other.
In February 2004, Amaka Anajemba, Emmanuel Nwude, Emmanuel Ofolue,
Nzeribe Okoli, and Obum Osakwe, with Ikechukwu Anajemba post-humously
mentioned, were all charged in the Federal Hgh Court, Abuja with 86
counts of “fraudulently seeking advance fees” and 15 counts of bribery
related to the case.
They all pleaded not guilty.
Their trial only got more eventful from thereon out.
By early 2004, it almost appeared that judicial bureaucracy had
brought the trial to a stalemate. In a report dated Tuesday, July 20,
2004, the BBC reported that the presiding judge, Lawal Gumi declared
that the elements of the crime had not taken place in Abuja, and as
such, he lacked the jurisdiction to hear the case.
“It is my considered view that the appropriate place for the trial of
the accused on those charges is the high court of Lagos. For these
reasons… I do decline and strike out the case from my list,” Gumi is
quoted as saying.
Nwude and his accomplices were released, only to be re-arrested outside the court and taken to Lagos.
The next year, with the trial nearing a definitive conclusion, underhanded tactics began to play out.
Nwude allegedly attempted to bribe the EFCC head honcho, Nuhu Ribadu
with 75,000 dollars in cash. He was charged with additional counts for
his trouble, in addition to a five-count charge for an incident where a
prosecution witness was almost kidnapped.
In September 2005, a bomb scare during his trial caused the court-house to be evacuated and the trial adjourned.
Resolution finally came in its first form when Amaka Anajemba admitted
to helping her husband. She was sentenced to two and a half years in
prison and ordered to repay $25.5 million.
Weeks after, Sakaguchi, the object of Nwude’s fraud offered first-hand testimony in a Lagos high court.
With little room to manoeuvre, Emmanuel Nwude and Nzeribe Okoli
pleaded guilty to the charges against them. They had conceded grounds in
hopes of getting a lenient sentence. That did not seem to matter much;
both were sentenced to 37 years in prison collectively.
According to Reuters, Emmanuel Nwude was sentenced to 25 years and Nzeribe Okoli to 12 years for their part.
Emmanuel Nwude is led to the court-house, ahead of one of his many trial dates. (Archive)
Reading his final judgement, Justice Joseph Oyewole was reported as
saying: “The activities of the accused persons not only led to the
collapse of a bank in a foreign country but also brought miseries to
many innocent people.”
The next Monday, according to IRIN News, EFCC chair Nuhu Ribadu made
the refund of US $17 million to William Richey, a lawyer representing
the defunct Banco Noroeste.
Nwude’s assets were confiscated and he was charged with paying a fine of 10 million dollars to the National government.
For most who followed the trial from the pages of newspapers and
television screens, the victory was somewhat short-lived. Emmanuel Nwude
was released in 2006.
In the months after, he instituted many Fundamental Rights cases
against the government for the recovery of some of his property, on the
grounds that he had acquired them before the fraud.
Nwude’s fraud put Nigeria in a delicate situation. With the advanced
free fraud of the 1970s and 80s and the internet scams of the digital
age, it is easy to see why the country suffers such a bad reputation in
the international community and Nigerians are portrayed first as
enterprising fraudsters before anything else.
For every Nwude who was caught, there are 100 affluent Nigerians
enjoying the fruit of ill-gotten gains in peace and tranquillity. It is
easy to assume that the long arm of fate will catch up with them at some
point. In truth, that is only a hopeful conclusion.
More than a decade after his release, Nwude presently sits in one of
the cells at the creatively-named Arkham Prisons, Gotham City in Anambra
State, awaiting trial for murder.
On August 19, 2016, about 200 people attacked the town of Ukpo in the
Dunukofia area of Anambra state, ostensibly as part of a land dispute
with the neighbouring Abagana, where Nwude still enjoys heavy clou.
After a midnight raid on a neighbouring community, the Anambra Police Command declared Nwude a wanted man. (Omojuwa)
The Anambra Police Command arrested him as one of the sponsors of the
attack, charging him on 27 counts of murder, attemped murder and
terrorism.
He is still in custody and the case is yet to be concluded, just like the previous one.
source from dailygossip.ng
How a Nigerian fraudster, Emmanuel Nwude sold a fake airport to an International Bank for $242 million
Reviewed by Chukwueggu Chiedozie Otunba
on
October 03, 2017
Rating: 5
No comments