A Kenyan Amis Hassan Raage has pleaded guilty to fraudulently receiving
Sh75 million from the University of California San Diego in internet
scam. PHOTO | FILE
A Kenyan has pleaded guilty to fraudulently receiving Sh75
million from the University of California San Diego (UCSD) in a computer
phishing scheme.
Mr Amis Hassan Raage will be sentenced before US District Judge Gonzalo P. Curiel on October 11, 2019.
He
will be charged with conspiracy to commit Wire Fraud, in violation of
Title 18 United States Code, Sections 1349 which attracts a maximum
penalty of twenty years in prison.
BOGUS MAIL
On
July 23, 2018, the UCSD received a spear phishing email from a
fraudulent Dell email account instructing the institution to redirect
its payments meant for Dell equipment and services to Raage’s Wells
Fargo bank account in Minnesota, US.
Believing that the email was from a legitimate Dell employee, UCSD followed the instructions and redirected payment.
The email actually originated from one of Raage’s
co-conspirators in Kenya. From August 8 through September 12, 2018, UCSD
sent Raage 28 payments totalling $749,158.37.
Spear-phishing
is when an unwitting victim responds to a bogus email, which the victim
believes is from a trusted sender, and reveals confidential information
to the fraudsters.
WITHDRAW
Each
time UCSD wired money to Raage’s account, the suspect would promptly
withdraw the money or transfer it to another account. When UCSD learned
of the fraud, it halted payments.
Raage and his
co-conspirators perpetrated a similar scheme on another university in
Pennsylvania which also redirected its Dell payments to a bank account
in Minnesota again controlled by Raage.
In January
2018, the Pennsylvania University wired six payments totalling
$123,643.77 (Sh12,364,377) to Raage’s bank account before the university
was alerted to the fraud and stopped payments.
After
the bank froze Raage’s accounts, he fled to Kenya on September 22, 2018
but was arrested on May 7, 2019, and extradited back to the United
States on May 23, 2019, to face prosecution for his involvement in the
theft.
Spear phishing activity has been on the rise,
especially for universities, local governments and other entities with
procurement paperwork available on-line.
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