Tampa, Florida – U.S. District Judge James Moody today
sentenced Okechuwku Desmond Amadi (39, Garland, TX), a/k/a Desmond Amadi, to 11
years and 3 months in federal prison for conspiracy to commit money laundering
and money laundering. As part of Amadi’s sentence, the court also entered a
forfeiture order of $833,625 against him, representing the proceeds of the
charged criminal conduct, and ordered Amadi to pay $1,358,500 in restitution to
the victims.
A jury had found Amadi guilty on November 7, 2018.
According to the evidence presented at trial, Amadi worked
with an international criminal organization based in Nigeria that defrauded
dozens of victims across the United States with multiple schemes and then
laundered the funds through a complex network of bank accounts. The
organization, known as the Neo Black Movement of Africa or the Black Axe Group,
coordinated the fraud and money laundering activity around the globe via cells
or “zones” in Nigeria, Canada, the United States, and elsewhere.
The Black Axe fraud schemes took several forms. Many of the
organization’s victims were widowed or divorced elderly women. Conspirators
posed as fake suitors on dating websites to develop relationships with the
victims. They then convinced the women to wire money, often consisting of their
retirement savings and cash taken out from home equities, to bank accounts in
the United States as part of a supposed investment opportunity. The
conspirators also defrauded title companies with fake cashier’s checks in phony
real estate transactions.
The organization’s victims were instructed to wire their
money into funnel accounts held by conspirators in the United States, known as
“money mules,” and the funds were then quickly moved to other accounts in the
United States and around the world before the victims could discover the fraud.
Bank records presented at trial demonstrated that, from 2012 to 2015, several
millions of dollars in wire transfers were funneled into Black Axe accounts to
be laundered. Amadi, a real estate investor and insurance broker in Texas, used
his own bank accounts to launder more than $833,000 in fraud proceeds that
victims had sent to accounts controlled by his associate in the Dallas area.
Amadi wired much of that money overseas, including to Canada and Nigeria, to
promote the conspiracy and conceal the source of the funds.
This case was investigated by the FBI, with assistance from
various federal and local law enforcement partners, including the Toronto
Police Service (Ontario, Canada) and the Toronto Strategic Partnership. It was
prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Patrick Scruggs and Diego
Novaes.
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