Nigerian Conman Who Defrauded Pensioners Of £5m Jailed In UK (Photos Of His Expensive Lifestyles)

    A conman funded a playboy lifestyle by cheating pensioners
    out of their life savings.
    Godwin Nwaofor, 36, kept a ‘suckers list’ of potential
    victims to send bogus letters saying they had won the Australian Lottery.
    The Nigerian national received around £1million from the
    scam and blew the money on luxury cars, gold jewellery and expensive champagne
    at top nightclubs in London.
    Nwaofor was a ‘willing and enthusiastic lieutenant’ to the
    mastermind of the con, another Nigerian, Frank Onyechonam, who was nicknamed
    ‘Fizzy’ for his love of vintage champagne.

    Onyeachonam was jailed eight years last year, after he was
    exposed as the chief player in the scam.
    He drove a Maserati and fired bubbly corks across exclusive
    private members clubs as he lived a life of fantastic luxury on his victim’s
    life savings.
    The scam started with a bogus letter to a vulnerable
    pensioner telling them they had won the Australian Lottery.
    The letters were sent by a ‘lottery agent’ targeting mainly
    American pensioners informing them they had won a life-changing prize and
    requesting a modest sum to release the funds.
    Believing they had won, victims were hooked into paying fees
    to release their ‘winnings’ through an agent who would demand ‘activation fees’
    to release their cash.
    In some cases, dupes set up businesses in an attempt to
    receive their winnings and became unwitting money mules laundering cash from
    other victims.
    Nwaofor, a father of two, regularly switched addresses to
    avoid being caught.
    One victim, a 76-year-old woman, who believed she had won
    $1.85m, tried to track down Nwaofor after the FBI told her she had fallen
    victim to a scam.
    She flew to the UK and went to the address she had for
    Nwaofor, but found that he had already moved on to another address.
    Judge Richard Hone QC said the evidence in the case, at
    Central Criminal Court, against Nwaofor was ‘overwhelming’ and showed him to be
    a proven liar.
    ‘You have a tendency to be dishonest in your dealings with
    landlords, agencies, the police, HMRC, and car hire firms’, he said.
    ‘You also moved addresses regularly to ensure your
    whereabouts remained a mystery.’
    Police identified 406 victims from two notebooks found at
    Onyeachonam’s Canary Wharf penthouse when he was arrested.
    They seized Louis Vuitton shoes, Gucci handbags, a
    collection of expensive watches and dozens of designer shoes, as well as 5,000
    pictures of Onyeachonam flaunting his wealth at exclusive upmarket venues
    including the Guvnor Bar in Docklands, east London.
    One picture shows him showering a friend with champagne, in
    others he poses with scantily clad blondes or waves wads of £50 notes.
    There was also evidence of extensive communication with
    Lagos resident Ese Orogun, nicknamed the ‘chairman’, who is thought to be the
    global mastermind of the fraud.
    He lives in a private gated community, is a ‘celebrity’ in
    the Nigerian capital and drives multiple supercars, including a Maserati and a
    Porsche.
    Detectives fear the scale of the fraud could even mushroom
    to £30million if all the details discovered in notebooks and emails can be
    traced to victims.
    Nwaofor moved to the UK in January 2006 from Nigeria and
    soon married a German citizen.
    He has two children with her, aged six and
    six-months-old. 
    He broke down in tears as he was jailed for seven years this
    morning, but the judge said he did not believe the remorse was genuine.
    ‘Just as a crocodile sheds its tears while devouring its
    prey, so the copious weeping in court is not hypocritical remorse but tears of
    frustration that in spite of your careful concealment, you have been well and
    truly rumbled’, the judge told him.
    ‘This Australian lottery scam has brought penury and debt to
    your victims who were ruthlessly milked of their hard earned savings.’
    The judge said although ten victims were traced by
    prosecutors as having fallen for Nwaofor’s scam, but that was probably the ‘tip
    of the iceberg’.
    ‘Vast sums of cash you used to fund a luxury lifestyle, with
    top of the range hire cars, large watches, gold jewellery, expensive
    nightclubs’, said the judge.
    ‘It shows you made the best part of £1m yourself.’
    Nwaofor, of Camberell Green, south London, was found guilty
    of conspiracy to defraud, converting criminal property, and acquisition of
    criminal property.

    He will serve half his sentence in prison and the remaining
    part on licence and will also now face confiscation proceeds.

                                                          His house in Nigeria

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