An Ogun State court sentenced a convicted fraudster to 10 years imprisonment without the option of fine this week after finding him guilty of defrauding investors of approximately N15 million through a fake high-yield investment scheme that promised unrealistic returns and disappeared with deposited funds.
The EFCC’s Ibadan Zonal Directorate prosecuted the case, with the commission describing the conviction as part of its sustained effort to hold investment fraudsters accountable and deter the proliferation of Ponzi schemes and fake investment platforms that have caused significant financial harm to ordinary Nigerians in recent years.
The judge, in delivering the sentence, said the defendant had shown no remorse for the harm caused to the victims, many of whom had invested life savings and borrowed funds on the basis of promises that the defendant knew to be false. The court said the severity of the sentence was intended to send a clear message that investment fraud would not be treated leniently.
Victims Struggle to Recover Losses
Several victims of the scheme who attended the sentencing told journalists outside the court that the prison term, while welcome, could not restore the financial losses they had suffered. One victim said she had invested her retirement savings in the scheme and had been unable to recover any of the funds. EFCC officials said they would pursue asset recovery proceedings to attempt to return some of the fraudulently obtained funds to victims.
Furthermore, the conviction comes against the backdrop of a significant increase in investment fraud cases across Nigeria, fuelled by the proliferation of digital platforms that allow fraudsters to reach large numbers of potential victims quickly. The EFCC said it had recorded a sharp rise in complaints related to fake investment schemes in 2025 and 2026, with perpetrators increasingly using social media, WhatsApp groups, and messaging apps to recruit victims.
However, consumer protection advocates said that criminal prosecution alone was insufficient to address the scale of investment fraud in Nigeria. They called for stronger regulatory oversight of investment platforms, mandatory registration requirements for any entity soliciting funds from the public, and better financial literacy programmes to help ordinary Nigerians identify fraudulent schemes before they invested. Still, the EFCC said conviction rates in financial crime cases were improving as its investigative capacity strengthened. Notably, the Ogun conviction followed the earlier death sentence for kidnapper Chelynor Halim, the life sentence for the Owo church attackers, and the ongoing Blessing CEO prosecutions, all pointing to a judiciary and prosecution service working at greater pace on financial and violent crime cases. Consequently, the accumulation of high-profile convictions is building a deterrent narrative that the EFCC has been working to establish over several years.
Abuja Police Arrest Suspected Drug Kingpin
In addition, Abuja Police arrested a suspected drug distribution kingpin in the Wuse area of the FCT, recovering large quantities of cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine from a property linked to the suspect. The arrest was described as one of the largest drug seizures in the FCT in 2026. As a result, security agencies across Nigeria were pursuing simultaneous enforcement actions on financial crime, violent crime, and drug trafficking throughout the Democracy Day period.
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