Nigerian Valentine Iro Sentenced to 11-Years In US Federal Prison Over $25m Money Laundering Scheme

Valentine Iro, a Nigerian man who was the head of an international money laundering scheme was sentenced to 11 years in a US federal prison.

He was also ordered to pay US$1.4 million in restitution.

Valentine Iro pleaded guilty to a single count of conspiracy to engage in money laundering in October 2020, after being indicted alongside 79 others, including a number of Nigerian nationals. 

So far, 21 of those indicted have been convicted.

Valentine Iro and his group operated between October 2014 and August 2019 before he was arrested by FBI agents in 2019 in Los Angeles. 

In that time, the group laundered over US$25 million in funds obtained through a number of fraudulent means, including business email compromise attacks and online romance scams. Iro and two other co-conspirators operated as go-betweens for criminals operating outside of the US and the main operation. Iro and his group used money mules to open bank accounts to move funds through and filed a number of fake business name statements to assist in laundering the funds.

“Defendant Iro masterminded this international money laundering scheme for years and, in the process, stole money and identities from hundreds of victims, including some who were led to believe they were in a romantic relationship only to learn they were being scammed,” said Donald Alway, the assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office.

“As we continue to investigate this case and look for fugitives, we urge Americans to learn how to identify BEC, romance, and other schemes, which have increased dramatically in recent years.”

One co-conspirator, Chuks Eroha, fled to Nigeria in 2017.

Operators of business email compromise scams use a range of tactics, including the use of money mules, who are often tricked into believing they are helping someone with a legitimate transaction. The Australian Federal Police offered some advice on how to avoid such scams last year and what to look out for.

A scammer who has successfully begun a fake relationship — business or romantic — with someone might ask for help transferring money in an emergency, claiming some technical limitation and needing help solving the problem, for instance.

The scammer then transfers the money to their victim, who then passes the money on to another scammer.

“Criminals will invest a significant amount of time — sometimes years — building what seems to be a legitimate relationship with their victim,” Chris Goldsmid, the AFP’s Commander of Cybercrime Operations, said.

Who Is Valentine Iro?

Valentine Iro was at a time the number one most wanted man on an FBI list of most wanted Nigerians.

Alongside Chukwudi Igbokwe, 38, the FBI named them as the lead suspects following a three-year FBI investigation of romance scams, business e-mail compromise, wire fraud and money laundering.

At the end of the investigation, about 80 Nigerians were indicted, with some of the accomplices still in Nigeria.

Valentine Iro and Igbokwe’s role was to ensure the laundering of money deposited by a victim into a bank account or a money services account.

In August 2019, Iro was spotted in a video living an opulent lifestyle.

In the nine-second video that has now gone viral, a man with “Val Iru” written at the back of his jersey was seen dancing with his partner while people spray them with foreign currencies.

There was a carpet of dollar bills on the floor while Iro and his party guests danced on it. 

Source: Nigeriabombshell.com/ Various

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