Campbell and his associate, Henry Ogunde netted £730,000 in cash and goods in a variety of frauds that targeted major retailers, businesses and private individuals.
One scam involved approaching people on the streets of the West Midlands, taking them for dinner and buying them clothes in order to gain their trust. The pair then used their victims to set up bank accounts, fake companies and move cash. If they resisted they were often met with the threat of violence.
Their targets included unemployed people living in social housing or with no fixed address. They were promised up to £40,000 for their complicity but most received only a few hundred pounds.
Another scheme involved sending fraudulent emails to companies and private individuals pretending to be suppliers or customers. The fraudsters then diverted payments into a money laundering account set up and controlled by Campbell’s crime group and used their victims to withdraw and move the cash. One transaction stole £154,000 in life savings from an elderly man.
The pair and their money mules were uncovered following a complex investigation by the National Crime Agency which connected an online forum dealing in stolen credit card details with the network.
NCA Birmingham Operations Manager, Adam Warnock said:
"Marvin Campbell was a manipulative fraudster who had no regard for the vulnerable people he preyed on. Nobody should think they can avoid justice by going on the run. The NCA was determined Campbell should serve his sentence, and now he is doing that."
0 comments:
Post a Comment