Two
Nigerians, Magus Ikechukwu Kamah, 38 and Nbubusi Sunday Okeke, 34 have been
arrested and charged in South Africa after an attempted fraudulent sale of a
home in Western Austrialia.
P.M.
News reports that Kamah and Okeke were accompanied by a South African woman Asanda Zimkhitha
Cwayi, 28, all three were arrested by the South African police in Johannesburg
on Wednesday 3 July following a five-month police investigation. They were
charged with fraud, forgery and uttering.
According
to Australian Associated Press, In mid-February, a Mandurah real estate agency
that was managing a Greenfields property on behalf of its South African owner
received an email from the accused, who allegedly pretended to be the real
owner and duped the agency into changing the contact email address it had on
file.
Two
weeks later, a request to sell the property was received, and agreements were
signed with allegedly forged signatures and exchanged electronically. The
property was then put on the market.
In
March, an offer was made on the property and accepted by the pretend owner,
police said. On receiving the offer, the agency mailed documents to the real
owner’s address in South Africa.
While
the email address had been changed, the physical address on file had not, so
the real owner raised the alarm. WA Major Fraud Squad detectives worked with
the real estate agency, a settlement agent and South African police to
apprehend the three suspects.
They
are due to appear in a Johannesburg court on Friday. WA commissioner for
consumer protection Anne Driscoll said two successful and six attempted real
estate frauds had been reported to the government unit in the past six years
and seven had involved owners in South Africa. The other resided in Nigeria.
Driscoll
urged real estate and settlement agents faced with a request to change an
owner’s contact details to seek confirmation by sending a notification to the
original address, both physical and electronic.
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