Email Phishing Scam: Ambassador Brian Wesley Shukan, United States Ambassador to Benin

Ambassador Brian Wesley Shukan
Ambassador Brian Wesley Shukan

 

From: Ambassador Brian Wesley Shukan

Email: crincont1@libertadores.edu.co

Subject: RELEASE OF YOUR UNPAID COMPENSATION FUNDS

Hello Dear Beneficiary,


I am Brian Wesley Shukan, the newly appointed United States Ambassador
to Benin. After successful tenure and service in Sudan,  President Joe
Biden nominated me to be the next United States Ambassador to Benin
due to my committed effort to the service. After the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee held hearings on my nomination, I was confirmed
and sent to take over activities here in the U.S Embassy Cotonou,
Benin on May 5, 2022.

I am not happy with what I discovered here at the embassy. Upon my
resumption, I have noticed numerous unpaid scam victims compensation
funds belonging to several beneficiaries. The past administration of
the embassy did not do enough to disseminate these funds to the
rightful  owners. I understand that this may be due to corruption in
the system which I stand against. I have personally swore to deliver
these funds to the beneficiaries with immediate

The United Nations in agreement with the United States ordered
Benin-Republic to pay a compensation amount of $3M USD to each scam
victim for what they suffered in the name of their country, but so
far, not a good number of people have been paid. A Lot of
beneficiaries have not gotten their payments and the authorities are
sitting on it. I have made it a point of duty to personally see to the
disbursement of these funds to the rightful owners and it's on this
note that I decided to contact you for the release of your
compensation funds to you.


Kindly re-confirm the following

1. Name:
2. Address:
3. Phone:
4. Occupation:
5. Age:
6. Country:
7: How much you lost to the impostors:

I look forward to hearing from you.


Yours in Duty
Ambassador Brian Wesley Shukan
Newly appointed United States Ambassador to Benin

Email Phishing Scam from Linda Redmond

 

Linda Redmond
Linda Redmond

From: Linda Redmond
Email: naomialfa233@gmail.com
Subject: Today at 2:39 AM

My brethren in Christ my name is Linda Redmond, I am a owner of Bieber
company limited in New York and I have a house in California City and
I also have a hotel mina in my account I have 100 million US dollars I
have a very big investment I also have a company in Poland I am an
orphan, I have no brother I have no sister but I really have a problem
I have a kidney problem and doctor say that I have only 3 months to
leave in the world so my brethren in Christ and I asked God if I die
today who will eat my sweat and I decided to help the innocent people
and the poor people my brethren in Christ please I am here to bless
everyone  please my brethren in Christ whatever you need to help your
life please my brother in Christ just tell me right now I will do it
for you I am here to help you if you need money I will give you money
like I said I have 80 billion US dollars in my account I want to share
it with the free people I want to help the innocent people please
anything you need just let me know I am ready to help thank you my
brethren in Christ.

Sincerely
Linda Redmond

Key phrase used: my brethren in Christ

U.S. Marshal Faces Federal Charges for Money Laundering: 119 Victims, Many Seniors Scammed

U.S. Marshal is Facing Federal Charges for Money Laundering: 119 Victims, Many Seniors Scammed

A special deputy U.S. Marshal was caught defrauding the elderly in romance scams and is facing federal charges. Find out how he was caught.

Image made from copyright-free images

Love found on dating sites can be tricky to trust, unless you first perform a background check. Fake profiles are proliferating among real profiles. Behind them are scammers, working hard to steal your money.

When a person is lonely and is seeking a companion, they let their guard down. That is when they are most vulnerable. Scammers prey on the weak and vulnerable. They pretend to be interested, but quickly pivot to their intended agenda. They manipulate their way into your investment and savings accounts, in the name of love.

"How much money do you have in your bank account?" (Not a good Tinder question.) Swipe left.

Upset Senior Citizen; Photo by Kindel Media on Pexels

119 Victims of Romance and Veteran Scams

Isodore Iwuagwu, from Upper Marlboro, Maryland, was a Special Deputy U.S. Marshal and Department of Justice contractor and was caught for his role in romance scams during the period of October 2015 to July 2021.

There were at least 119 victims that sent a combined $1.9 million USD to Isodore Iwuagwu's controlled financial accounts.

Isodore Iwuagwu, 35, is facing a federal charge of conspiracy to commit money laundering. Money laundering is when a person obtains money illegally, and is moving money around through foreign banks or even through businesses to legitimize the money as legal.

U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland, Erek L. Barron plans to do everything he can to seek justice for these victims, many being senior citizens.

"If you find yourself in an online relationship and you're asked for a bunch of money, it's probably fraud not love. We're prosecuting elder fraud, including romance scams, to the fullest extent of the law." -Erek L. Barron, U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland

Who caught him?

The criminal complaint was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Erek L. Barron; Special Agent in Charge Andrew Hartwell of the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General Fraud Detection Office (DOJ-OIG); and Acting Postal Inspector in Charge Tira Hayward of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service — Washington Division (USPIS). (Source: Justice.gov)

Isodore Iwuagwu first appeared in U.S. District Court on Wednesday, 10 August 2022.

The Scams — Stealing from the Kindness of Others

Isodore Iwuagwu or other individuals involved in the scams would pose online as a U.S. service member that was having financial difficulty, a doctor, and a lawyer.

Oftentimes senior citizens would give to this fake account found on social media or from people scammed on dating sites. Not every person scammed by Iwuagwu and his associates was a senior citizen, but many were.

Some cases were noted as romance scams and took advantage of people simply being lonely and wanting to find love on dating websites. First, they would pretend to be interested in someone, then convince the victims to send large amounts of money to one of Iwuagwu's 30 bank accounts.

The scammers frequently posed as deployed members of the U.S. Armed Forces and have personal hardships.

One time, the fake account was an attorney for a Major General in the U.S. Army. The victim sent Iwuagwu more than $300,000 USD.

Another time, the fake account posed as a Spanish doctor living in California, about to depart on a ship to provide medical treatment in other countries, such as Doctors Without Borders. The fake doctor didn't have access to their bank account and asked the victim to send $1,120. The victim then subsequently sent more money through wires and the mail, totaling $51,880 USD sent to Iwuagwu.

When this victim began to express doubts, the person running the scam sent the victim a photo of Iwuagwu's Department of Justice contractor credentials. (Source: Justice.gov)

Meanwhile, Iwuagwu would go to work his full-time job as a special deputy U.S. marshal and Justice Department contractor, likely getting paid a generous salary for his day job, while raking in the dough with his side hustle.

What a terrible human being. Iwuagwu's scams eventually caught up to him, and deservedly so.

The Money Laundering Caught up to Isodore Iwuagwu

Money coming in: Out of the 119 individuals scammed, Iwuagwu raked in $1.9 million USD and was caught managing 30 different financial accounts, and received an estimated $1.65 million in wire transfers.

Iwuagwu was not aware that law enforcement was monitoring these 30 accounts between 2013 and 2021. (Source: FOX 5 NEWSJustice.gov)

Money going out: Iwuagwu wired more than $1.5 million out of his bank accounts, with at least $200,000 going to a Nigerian company, and withdrew over $511,900 in "structured" ATM cash withdrawals. (Source: FOX 5 NEWS)

With all of these money transactions taking place, it is no surprise that authorities were taking notice of all of these strange transactions that a typical person would not be doing. This is how he was caught.

The Guilty Sentence: If Isodore Iwuagwu is found guilty, he faces up to a maximum of 20 years in prison for conspiracy to commit money laundering.

It never pays to steal money from others.

Disclaimer: If you are aware of elder abuse, please call the National Elder Fraud Hotline at 1–833-FRAUD-11 (1–833–372–8311) for elders who have been financially exploited.

Sources

CBS Baltimore Staff. "U.S. marshal from Maryland accused in multi-million dollar romance scam." CBS BALTIMORE. 10 August 2022.

FOX 5 DC Digital Team. "Maryland man accused of laundering millions from multiple victims in romance scam." FOX 5 NEWS. 11 August 2022.

Hilton, Jasmine. "Deputy U.S. marshal accused in romance scams that bilked $2M from seniors." The Washington Post. 10 August 2022.

Press Release: "Special Deputy United States Marshal Facing Federal Charges for Money Laundering Related to a Romance Scam Involving More Than 20 Victims." Justice.gov. 10 August 2022.


Lt Kim Castro Phishing Scam Email

 

Asian woman
Photo by Joel Mott on Unsplash


From: LT KIM CASTRO

Subject: ATTENTION DEAR

ATTENTION DEAR

Am Lt Kim Castro, from united state of American

Once again I am united state of American soldier working as United
Nations peacekeeping troop in Syria, on war against terrorism.

I am a single woman and an orphan
I have very vital information to give to you, but first I must have

your trust before I review it because it may cause me my job and also
my life, so
I need somebody that I can trust for me to be able to review the secret to you.
please get back to me via ( ww.kim.castro@gmail.com )

Best regard
Lt Kim Castro

Email Phishing from Bedroom

Email Phishing from Bedroom