A scammer who was the ringleader of a fraud gang has been ordered to repay nearly £1million which he stole from the life savings of an innocent victim. Rilwan Oshodi bought Karen Budow's bank account details for just £3,200 and spent her savings on cheeseburgers, bottles of champagne and top-of-the-range computers.
He now claims he is so broke he can't even pay his lawyers - but a judge told him today that if he doesn't return his ill-gotten gains he'll have to spend four more years in prison.
Nigerian
Oshodi, 31, bought Ms Budow's Santander details from an Egyptian hacker
Tamer Abdulhamid, who had persuaded her to hand them over as part of a
fishing scam.
His
girlfriend Annette Jabeth (pictured above right) then posed as the victim and withdrew her
£1million life savings, which the gang spent in a three-day shopping
splurge in the New Year sales in January 2012.
Detectives
said that their purchases had ranged from cheeseburgers to high-end
computers and gold', while Oshodi spent £1,134 on taxis and bought
expensive gadgets including a MacBook and an iPhone.
One
picture of him even appears to show him holding a 'money sandwich',
with Nigerian banknotes stashed between two slices of bread.
Oshodi with Nigerian banknotes in between slices of bread |
He
was jailed for eight years in 2013 after being convicted of two counts
of conspiracy to defraud and conspiracy to conceal criminal property.
Appearing
at Southwark Crown Court for a confiscation hearing today, Oshodi
insisted he had not profited from the scam, and denied hiding money in
overseas bank accounts.
He said: 'If
I have hidden the goods, if I have got money how come I can't pay my
solicitor, how come I can't rent a house, how come I was still broke,
how come I am still broke, how come I am still poor?
'Wouldn't I get myself a new car, would I not buy myself some new clothes, Louis Vuitton or something?'
But judge
Stephen Robbins said: 'I reject what he said today... he was the main
mover and architect of this fraud and he has hidden assets most likely
outside this jurisdiction.
'He said he got nothing from it at all, no benefit directly.'
Determining
Oshodi to have made £940,820.34 in profit from the fraud, the judge
ordered that he repay the total sum within six months or face a further
four years in jail.
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