Posted by: Haliwud
I just returned from a reporting
trip to Nigeria, where I was traveling around the country talking to terrorism
experts, nomadic cattle herders, and government officials about how global
warming affects conflict in the country. I lucked out with an amazing fixer. As
a newswire reporter focused on the terrorist group Boko Haram, he was able to
provide crucial context for my story. But Michael* also grew up a "street
boy," meaning he was able to make fast friends in the slum villages and
farming communities we visited. He put himself through college, and after
working as a Nigerian soap opera actor and door-to-door men's clothing
salesman, he clawed his way into journalism. Before that, he used to hang out
with nomadic cow-herding kids, children who sell bottled water by the roadside
and budding scam artists. Yes, Nigerian scam artists, like the ones who send
you emails purporting to be from an African prince who will pay you to help him
move $3 million into your country, and all you have to do is give him your bank
account number. I told Michael I wanted to interview his scammer friends. He
said there was no way that his dudes would talk for less than $600. Shocker! Of
course, at Mother Jones we do not pay for interviews. But I figured
I would be doing a public service by distracting the scammers from conning old
folks for a couple hours. So I offered $100 for a rare glimpse at the human
faces behind the syntax-challenged spam. We settled on $130, and off we
went.
I sat down with Sheye and Danjuma
on the back patio of a fancy duplex in an upscale neighbourhood in one of the
country's main cities, and the two dished on their craft, constantly
interrupting each other as they downed bottles of Nigerian Star lager and
chain-smoked. Though they lie for a living, Sheye insisted, "We are
telling you the fact and the truth." Sheye and Danjuma have a name for the
advance-fee email scams, in which victims agree to send money to a stranger,
banking on the promise of love or fast money. They called these cons
"Yahoo" jobs, pronounced Ya-OO.
A scam email I received recently.
"We go on the internet; we start making friend
with you," Danjuma says, explaining that they trawl Facebook and dating
websites incessantly, looking for lonely women with money to spare. He knows if
he meets "a Saudi Arabia person," he is in luck. "They do not
know what to do with money. Whenever we want to fraud somebody, we will know
what you are worth” Danjuma says. “Where are you working?; how much you have in
your account.” They glean all this information just by developing a closed
relationship with the intending victim. If the mark is worthwhile, the scammer
works up "a level of trust," Danjuma continues. "Maybe the
person does not have a husband, and the person is looking for a husband in
Nigeria. May be you need a black man," he says; his down-sloping eyes very
serious.
At that point, the scammer will
start to "give [the victim] a process," promising to come visit her,
but asking for money to take care of a few things first: "My car has
problem," or "My father is in Italy. He did not send money for
me." "Because you love me, then you say, 'Okay, Sheye interrupts.
"I go and withdraw my money. I keep on enjoying with my girls here."
He laughed wildly.
Over the past decade or so, the United States has cracked
down on Nigerian Internet scams. Western Union, for example, would
not allow me to wire my Nigerian fixer an advance portion of his pay because,
the operator told me, I was likely the victim of fraud.
Still, Nigerian fraudsters manage
to dupe Americans into forking thousands of dollars over to complete strangers
each year. In 2011, the FBI received
close to 30,000 reports of advance fee ploys, called "419 scams"
after the section of the Nigerian criminal code that outlaws fraud. The agency received
over 4,000 complaints of advance fee romance scams in 2012, with victim losses
totalling over $55 million. Nigerians are not the only ones committing
international advance fee fraud, but nearly
one-fifth of all such scams originate in the West African country.
The scams often involve phony lottery winnings, job offers, and inheritance
notices.
Ten years ago, Sheye and Danjuma, who are both in
their mid-30s, say they could make up to $12,000 per Yahoo job, but the
"US are very wise" now, Sheye says. They typically only make
about $200 per "client" these days, though they know other scammers
who still rake in millions of naira through the email schemes. "There
is this boy in Kaduna [a city in northern Nigeria] who made over 2 million
naira" last year on 419 scams, Danjuma says. "And he is not even 18."
"We are not scared of any Minister or President.
We are not scared of him; fuck him." The two fraudsters make most of their
money duping fellow Nigerians. (They insist that tricking people is not the
same as stealing. "We do not thief," Danjuma says.) They told me
about one elaborate scam, called Elawala (or "Let us go" in
Igbo, one of the languages spoken in Nigeria), that they occasionally pull on
their countrymen. It involves a taxi cab, a "juju man," magic
charms, and a huge bag of cash (and it is way too complicated to explain here).
Another go-to scam involves a taxi cab, a French man, a locked box filled with
gold and very expensive pliers. They asked to hire me out for a day for one of
their cons because, they said my white skin would bolster their credibility.
"Black man believes that white man is real," Danjuma explains.
They make a tidy
living. Sheye and Danjuma say they are each worth about $60,000, in a
country where more than 70 percent of the population
lives on less than $2 a day. They say they have made a lot more than that, but
they blow much of their income entertaining "clients" in order to
convince the victims they are legit. They fly potential marks to Ghana and put
them up in a fancy hotel while they meet with Sheye and Danjuma's faux business
partners there. Since Ghana is a less corrupt country, they say, victims are
more likely to enter into a business deal with a Ghanaian than a Nigerian. The
two say they own homes worth about a quarter million dollars each.
The Nigerian Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission is tasked with cracking down on con men like these.
So is Interpol. The duo says they are able to skirt law enforcement because
they have a lot of people on their payroll. "They are all criminals,"
Danjuma explains. They estimate that 30 percent of their earnings go to
what they call "security" that is, the payment of bribes. "We
are not scared of any Minister or President," Danjuma says, his words
slightly slurred by the third 20-ounce bottle of Star. "We are not scared
of him; Fuck him." They justify what they do by claiming that the highest
levels of the Nigerian government are ridden with scammers. The fancy neighbourhood
where we meet backs up against a slum village. We take a stroll through it
after the interview. The shack homes are constructed of used plastic cement
bags tied to sticks. Feral dogs scamper around. A rivulet of garbage and water
runs down the central dirt road.
"The money [the government] should have used
to construct this road, they are using for personal use," Sheye says.
"That is why we are bad boys."
Culled from www.motherjones.com
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