John H. Durham, United States Attorney for the District of
Connecticut, today announced that OLUKAYODE IBRAHIM LAWAL, 36, a citizen of
Nigeria last residing in Smyrna, Georgia, was sentenced yesterday by U.S.
District Judge Jeffrey A. Meyer in New Haven to approximately 10 months of
imprisonment, time already served, for his role in a scheme to obtain the
personal identifying information of school employees in Connecticut and
elsewhere.
According to court documents and statements made in court,
special agents from the FBI’s cybercrime squad in New Haven and the IRS have
been investigating “phishing” emails that were sent to various school districts
in Connecticut in 2017.
In March 2017, an employee of the Groton Public Schools
received an email that appeared to be sent by another Groton school system
employee. The email contained a request
to send W-2 tax information for all employees of the school system. The recipient of the email responded by
sending copies of the W-2 information for approximately 1,300 Groton Public
Schools employees. After the W-2
information was emailed, approximately 100 suspicious Forms 1040 were filed
electronically with the IRS in the names of victims of the Groton phishing
scheme. The 100 tax returns claimed
refunds totaling $491,737. Approximately
three of the returns were processed, and $23,543 in fraudulently-obtained funds
were electronically deposited into various bank accounts. The other returns were not processed because
they were suspected of being fraudulent.
Lawal controlled or used certain email accounts involved in
this phishing scheme. A co-conspirator
of Lawal sent personal identifying information, including names and Social
Security Numbers, of at least 10 employees to an email account that Lawal
used. Lawal then sent the victims’
personal identifying information to another co-conspirator.
The investigation further revealed that in February 2017, in
a related scheme, Sacred Heart Academy in Hamden was victimized by a phishing
e-mail that requested W-2 forms for its employees. Approximately 103 employee W-2 forms were
compromised as a result of the phishing e-mail.
The IRS confirmed that 33 victims had fraudulent tax returns filed
electronically with the IRS, claiming refunds in the amount of $314,184. The returns were not processed because they
were suspected of being fraudulent.
Lawal entered the U.S. on a visitor’s visa on November 24,
2016, and failed to depart on his scheduled departure date of December 1,
2016. He has been detained since his
arrest on May 9, 2018. On December 20,
2018, he pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
Lawal, who is now in the custody of U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, will be removed to Nigeria.
This matter has been investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation
Division. The case is being prosecuted
by Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarala V. Nagala.
U.S. Attorney Durham thanked the FBI and IRS in Atlanta, and
the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia, for their
valuable assistance in this matter.
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