A
Nigerian man is facing federal charges in the U.S for preying on and targeting
hundreds of them including residents of the St. Louis area, using fake dating
profiles in order to extort money from them.
OLAYINKA ILUMSA SUNMOLA, 32, on Wednesday, March 2, pleaded guilty to eight
counts of a federal indictment and admitted that he was the ringleader of a
group that successfully wooed hundreds of women online, and then convinced them
to send cash to bail him out of phony emergencies.
ILUMSA seduced women online by creating fake online profiles using photos and
names of real American men, including claiming to a former U.S. soldier. He
sent flowers, candies, stuffed animals and more to his victims, conning them
into believing that each was his true love. Once the women were convinced of
his love for them, he would request money from them claiming phony emergencies.
Some of the women sent thousands of dollars.
The victims were not named but lived around the country, including in Mascoutah
and Bond County in Illinois and St. Charles and St. Louis counties in Missouri.
In one case, ILUMSA tricked one woman into cashing counterfeit or stolen
traveler’s checks. She contemplated suicide when arrested. He lured another
into performing sexual acts, which he recorded via webcam, they said. He then
threatened to ruin her life by publishing the recordings online if she didn’t
send him cash, warning that by the time he was done with her she would want to
kill herself.
A Bond County woman bought electronics and shipped them to ILUMSA, reshipped
items he’d bought using stolen credit card information and took out cash
advances on a credit card, forcing herself into bankruptcy with debts of at
least $98,000, the indictment claims.
The investigation included the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the Federal
Trade Commission, Homeland Security Investigations, the U.S. Secret Service and
the Illinois Attorney General’s Office, as well as South African officials, who
investigated ILUMSA’s activities there and started forfeiture proceedings for
his assets there.
ILUMSA was indicted in U.S. District Court in East St. Louis in 2013 on mail
fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy, and interstate extortion charges. He was
arrested in August 2014 by Scotland Yard as he was about to board a flight from
London to South Africa, then extradited here to face the charges.
“Basically, the evidence established that ILUMSA, a citizen of the federal
Republic of Nigeria, was a ringleader of a criminal organization operating within
South Africa that targeted and stole from hundreds of women across the United
States,” Acting United States Attorney James Porter stated.
“Our office will continue to pursue justice for these victims in ILUMSA’s
prison sentence and in our never-ending efforts to get restitution.” Porter
added.
Sentencing has been set for June 17, 2016. ILUMSA could
get up to 127 years and a fine of $250,000 for each count he faces.
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