close
Thursday, April 24, 2025

Lagos fraudster Yomi Olaleye nabbed in U.S., convicted of $10 million COVID-19 fraud

Lagos-based fraudster Yomi Jones Olayeye faces up to 20 years in U.S. prison after pleading guilty to COVID-19 unemployment benefits fraud.

• April 24, 2025
Inmates in U.S. prison
Inmates in U.S. prison

Lagos-based fraudster Yomi Jones Olayeye faces up to 20 years in U.S. prison after pleading guilty to COVID-19 unemployment benefits fraud that netted him more than $1.5 million in illegal proceeds.

According to court documents, Mr Olayeye had travelled to the United States without any prior knowledge of the financial fraud and conspiracy indictment awaiting him on American soil.

He arrived at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York from Nigeria in August 2024, when he was immediately arrested and taken into custody.

He was charged with defrauding three pandemic assistance programs administered by the Massachusetts Department of Unemployment Assistance and other states’ unemployment insurance agencies: traditional unemployment insurance, Pandemic Unemployment Assistance and Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation between March and July 2020.

Authorities said that Mr Olayeye admitted that he and his alleged co-conspirators carried out their fraudulent activities by buying personally identifiable information of their victims from fellow criminals online, which the gang then used to apply for UI, PUA and FPUC benefits, claiming they are eligible state residents affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

He also confessed that the gang used those stolen information to open U.S. bank accounts and prepaid debit card accounts to receive the assistance payments, which were then rerouted to banks controlled by the scammers in Nigeria.

They also recruited U.S.-based account holders to receive and transfer the fraud proceeds via cash transfer applications, which Mr Olayeye and his accomplices then used the fraudulent proceeds to purchase Bitcoin through online marketplaces.

In total, Mr Olayeye and his co-conspirators allegedly applied for at least $10 million in fraudulent UI, PUA and FPUC benefits from Massachusetts, Hawaii, Indiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Montana, Maine, Ohio and Washington but were only able to steal an estimated $1.5 million in assistance.

Meanwhile, Mr Olayeye is scheduled to be sentenced in August this year.

He faces 20 years’ imprisonment for wire fraud and wire fraud conspiracy charges, three years of supervised release and a fine of $250,000 or twice the gross gain or loss, forfeiture and restitution.

We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.

More from Peoples Gazette

Abubakar Kyari

Agriculture

FG tasks ECOWAS on leveraging financing strategies for agroecology

The federal government has urged stakeholders in the agriculture and finance sectors in the West Africa region to leverage financing strategies to enhance agroecology practices

Katsina State

Politics

Katsina youths pledge to deliver over 2 million votes to Atiku

“Katsina State is Atiku’s political base because it is his second home.”

Court room

States

Two brothers face prosecution over alleged attempt to steal motorcycle

The trio pleaded not guilty to the charges levelled against them.

Bola Tinubu

Opinion

Daniel Bwala: Eight ways Bola Tinubu transformed Nigeria’s economy in two years

This is one of the longest and most consequential two-year periods in Nigeria’s peacetime history.

Health

Rising outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases in over 50 countries threatening progress, say WHO, UNICEF, Gavi

The groups noted that funding cuts to global health could have negative impact on the gains of consistent vaccination in the past five decades.

President Donald J. Trump

Economy

Trump to make exemption for auto tariffs

The exemptions, FT said, would, however, leave in place a 25 per cent tariff imposed by Mr Trump on all imports of foreign-made cars.

A morgue used to illustrate the story

States

Ibadan DisCo: Electrician electrocuted in Eruwa

The corpse of the electrician was recovered from the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company’s high-tension cable.

Agriculture

World’s coral reefs under largest bleaching event

Bleaching occurs when rising ocean temperatures expel the algae living within coral tissues.