The suspect, Kelechi James,
along with four other co-conspirators ran a business e-mail compromise
scheme, duping victims of over $5 million, a statement released in New
york by the US agency says.
The FBI is also offering a reward of $1,000 for information that could lead to his arrest.
The statement reads:
"James
is known to frequent the Brooklyn neighborhoods of East New York
(Crescent Street and Loring Avenue; Vermont Street between Blake Avenue
and Dumont Avenue), Brownsville, Bedford-Stuyvesant (MacDougal and Hull
Streets), Crown Heights (Park Place and Utica Avenue), Flatbush (E 29th
and Avenue D), and East Flatbush (East 51st and Winthrop Street). The
FBI is offering a $1,000 reward for information that leads to his
arrest.
"James is 32 years old, 6’0″
tall, and approximately 175 pounds. He is a Nigerian national, has brown
eyes and black hair, and may have a beard. Anyone with information as
to the whereabouts of James is urged to contact law enforcement
immediately. The FBI can be reached 24 hours a day at (212) 384-1000. He
is not considered to be violent in nature.
"As
alleged in a complaint sworn out of the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York, James, along with four other
co-conspirators, ran a business e-mail compromise scheme that resulted
victim losses of more than $5 million for their victims.
"As
part of scheme, James and his co-conspirators defrauded victims across
the U.S. by tricking them into wiring money to bank accounts the victims
believed were owned by family members, friends, or business associates.
They did this in two ways: by overtaking an e-mail account of an
individual trusted by the victim and then requesting money be wired to a
bank account; or by developing a relationship of trust with victim like
an Internet romance and then asking the victim to wire money. As soon
as the money was wired, it would be moved from one account to another,
and the funds would be withdrawn. James’s role in this scheme was to
withdraw the money from bank accounts."
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