Police swoop on visa racketeers,arrest suspect with 120passports

Date: 14-05-2010 6:41 pm (13 years ago) | Author: ades tiam
- at 14-05-2010 06:41 PM (13 years ago)
(m)
Sometime in August 2005, a combined team of both policemen and operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ( EFCC), launched an onslaught on the notorious Oluwole Market located in the commercial nerve centre of Lagos State. Then it was a notorious enclave for criminals, who specialized in forgeries and sophisticated crimes such as international passport racketeering, credit card fraud, drug cartel, fake certificates, currency and visa forgeries; among others

At the end of the exercise, over 20 persons were arrested and fake items such as, cheque books and traveller’s cheques belonging to different financial institutions, international passports of different countries, travelling documents, certificates of various higher institutions, various official stamps of government parastatals, corporate bodies, federal ministries, banks among others were recovered from various parts of the Market.

The exercise was an offshoot of the then President Olusegun Obasanjos’s anti-corruption crusade geared at changing Nigeria’s reputation and also creating an enabling atmosphere for foreign investments. Unfortunately, it did not last long as some of the fraudsters shifted their operational base from the popular Oluwole market to a remote but unknown area in the Lagos island, known as Lewis Street.

Investigation by Crime Alert revealed that the reputation of this new operational base at Lewis Street grew quite fast, as fake documents of any kind, raging from travellers cheques, work permit, visa or school certificates could be acquired without pains. That was how Lewis Street took over from Oluwole.

Some of the patrons who had visited the street recently have many stories to share. A middle-aged man who simply identified himself as Omoshe, a resident of Kirikiri town, Lagos, during an interaction with Crime Alert, said he was swindled of the sum of over N450,000 by some visa racketeers operating at the notorious street who had provided a fake British Visa to him. According to him, he was scared of the notorious Oluwole and he was also scared of confronting the embassy for visa.

“I was introduced to one Chuks by a friend and he assured me that I can get a visa even without going for interviews. He also assured me that I can process the visa without paying all the money and I will have to pay when my visa is ready. I was highly convinced and I gave him N50,000 for a start and he assured me that the process would take just three weeks, because I was desperate to travel abroad. I pressurized him and before the time the visa came out, I gave him the balance before boarding my plane.

“I was filled with joy because I was about leaving this land of frustration for good and I also thought that my visa was original. It was when I got to Heathrow Airport that I realized that my visa was fake. I was checking in when the immigration officer who went through my green passport discovered some anomalies and she alerted the authorities. I was arrested and taken into a waiting room where I was interrogated. My elder brother who was at the airport to receive me came in and discovered that I have been arrested and he could not take me home. I was deported back to Nigeria, and I had to start over again. I made little effort in recovering my money, because I alerted the police and I went looking for Chuks but he was no where to be found”.

Another victim of the notorious street was one Mr. Michael, an importer. In his case, his Turkish Visa was stolen and it was sold off at the Lewis Street. But Mr. Michael’s case did not end like others. This time, he had some little share of luck on his side. After reporting the case to the police at the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad, FEDSARS, they swooped on the street and succeeded in recovering his stolen visa while one of the kingpins was arrested with over 120 Nigerian and ECOWAS passports with stamps belonging to various financial institutions.

The suspect identified as Emeka Olisa (39) who is currently cooling off at the dreaded cell of the FEDSARS told Crime Alert that he specialized only on visa racketeering and travellers cheques.

The Delta State-born, who spoke in a sober mood confessed that he charges as much as N750, 000 from his victims and the stamps were used to procure travellers cheques.

“ I have been in this business for over seven years and I also have a fashion designing outfit in Lagos but I wasn’t meeting up. That was why I ventured into this act. The deal that brought me to this place was on a Turkish Visa that was given to me to sell by one Emma. I didn’t know the visa was stolen until the police came. But before I took the visa from Emma, I gave him about eight passports to get visas on them. I also gave him part payment, but he went away with this passport and he did not return them at the agreed date.

And owners of these passports were on my neck and they were seriously asking for their visas. I called Emma and I told him that the owners were on my neck but he would not listen.

At one time, he brought back photocopies of the visa and told me that they were ready but I can’t get them because one of our men at the embassy wants to lay low for a while. When he said this, he told me that he has a Turkish visa that he wants me to sell. I asked him to send it over which h

e did but I refused to sell the visa because he was owing and I intended using the visa as a leverage for my eight passports. I was at my office at 67, Lewis when the police came and arrested me”.

When asked how he would have sold the visa and if he did, what will the buyer do with it? Emeka, emphatically said that, the visa will be sold to some one that looks more like the person on the visa.

The spokesman of the FEDSARS (ASP), Lekan Ogundare who confirmed the story said they have spread their drag nets all around the notorious Lewis Street which he described as ‘safe haven for fraudsters and forgers’ assuring that they are poised to curb their criminal activities.

Posted: at 14-05-2010 06:41 PM (13 years ago) | Newbie
- humbleprince at 17-09-2011 10:31 AM (12 years ago)
(m)
 Huh? Cool Cool Roll Eyes
Posted: at 17-09-2011 10:31 AM (12 years ago) | Newbie
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- purityjustice at 17-09-2011 11:02 AM (12 years ago)
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can't take a glance
plz summarize in a nut shell.
Posted: at 17-09-2011 11:02 AM (12 years ago) | Gistmaniac
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- PoliticxGuru at 20-08-2015 07:52 PM (8 years ago)
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Dis kind thieves na wa ooo
Posted: at 20-08-2015 07:52 PM (8 years ago) | Hero
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