From SaharaReporters...
A jury in New York has convicted
Nigeria-born lawyer and former Deeper Life Bible Church pastor, Ifeanyichukwu
Eric Abakporo, on charges of fraud, and he could spend a maximum term of 30
years in prison when he is sentenced on November 12, 2013.
Abakporo was found guilty of
conspiracy to commit bank fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and bank
fraud. The first and third charges each
carry a maximum of 30 years in jail, while wire fraud carries a maximum of 20 years.
Abakporo’s co-conspirator, Latanya
Pierce, who was also found guilty on all three counts, faces the same
predicament. She will be sentenced
separately on December 9, 2013.
Last February, a grand jury of
the United States District Court Southern District of New York indicted
Abakporo and Pierce on the charges, and recommended that they forfeit to the
government a wide variety of properties related to their offences, as well as a
sum of money representing the approximate amount of proceeds obtained as a
result of the offences.
The jury trial of the suspects
took place on July 26 before Judge Shira A. Scheindlin, and the guilty verdict
was rendered as early as 1:00pm. Ms.
Pierce is currently out on bail, but Abakporo was remanded in custody.
It would be recalled that the
superseding indictment [Case 1:12-cr-00340-SAS filed on January 24, 2013]
charged that between 2003 and 2012, Abakporo and Pierce, who owned or
controlled several real estate-related businesses, worked together to defraud
financial institutions and mortgage lenders, property owners, property buyers
and others of real property, mortgage loan proceeds, and monies related to real
property transactions.
As part of their fraudulent
scheme, the indictment said, Abakporo and Pierce used straw purchasers and
borrowers to buy properties using mortgage loans from financial institutions
and mortgage lenders, and caused false and fraudulent documents and information
to be submitted to those financial institutions and mortgage lenders.
The properties involved were said
to include:
1. 99 – 21 215th Street, Queens,
New York
2. 50 Carnegie Avenue, Elmont,
New York
3. 143 Quincy Street, Brooklyn,
New York
4. 1308 Caton Avenue, Brooklyn,
New York
5. 1070 Saint Nicholas Avenue,
Manhattan, New York
6. 215 – 11, 111th Road, Cambria
Heights, New York, and
7. 101 – 24 197th Street, Hollis,
New York 11423
In a previous indictment, the
story was also told of how Mr. Abakporo defrauded a 78-year old American lady,
swindling her out of her property.
“Through lies and deception, these individuals abused the trust of an
elderly woman in order to perpetrate a multimillion dollar fraud,” New York
State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said, vowing they would face justice.
In May 2012, the federal
prosecutor's office announced the arrest of Abakporo and Pierce for swindling
the elderly lady out of her apartment building and stiffing a bank from whom
they fraudulently obtained a $1.8 million mortgage loan.
Previously, in 2010, Abakporo
opportunistically sued SaharaReporters for $30 million because SaharaReporters
reported a petition written by anonymous whistleblowers known as “The Patriots”
about fraudulent contracts for renovations at the Permanent Mission of Nigeria
to the United Nations in New York.
The petition had alleged that a
company called St. Cyprian Properties was fronting for Ambassador Joy Ogwu,
Nigeria’s Permanent Representative, and had benefitted from the questionable
renovation projects. "The
Patriots" insisted the renovation contracts were inflated, and that the
Permanent Mission had paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to St. Cyprian
Properties for the work.
As the heat rose in May 2012 on
the federal criminal charges for fraud which he faced, Mr. Abakporo abruptly
dropped his $30 million libel suit against SaharaReporters.
Abakporo’s case calls to mind the
recent judgement on another fraudulent Nigeria-born lawyer, Emeka Ugwuonye, who
converted to personal use the sum of $1.55 million he received from the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on behalf of the Embassy of Nigeria.
Giving judgement in that case on
July 24, Judge Barbara J. Rothstein of the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia ordered the rogue lawyer to pay to the Embassy nearly $2.2
million.
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