US denies Hushpuppi committed internet fraud from prison

This picture taken on July 16, 2021 shows Melissa using her mobile phone to message her virtual boyfriend - a chatbot created by XiaoIce, a cutting-edge artificial intelligenc
This picture taken on July 16, 2021 shows Melissa using her mobile phone to message her virtual boyfriend - a chatbot created by XiaoIce, a cutting-edge artificial intelligenc Copyright WANG ZHAO/AFP or licensors
Copyright WANG ZHAO/AFP or licensors
By Rédaction Africanews
Share this articleComments
Share this articleClose Button

The US government has dismissed claims that the detained Nigerian influencer Ramon Abbas, known as Hushpuppi, executed a $400,000 (£304,000) internet fraud from prison.

ADVERTISEMENT

The US government has dismissed claims that the detained Nigerian influencer Ramon Abbas, known as Hushpuppi, executed a $400,000 (£304,000) internet fraud from prison.

Hushpuppi, 37, was arrested in the United Arab Emirates in 2020 for crimes that cost victims almost $24m and is currently in a US jail awaiting sentencing having pleaded guilty to money laundering.

On Thursday, a document emerged on social media claiming that the FBI filed new evidence against Hushpuppi on Wednesday for defrauding Americans using prison internet facilities.

It is not clear where the document originated from yet it has gone viral on Twitter and been reported by many news organisations.

However, an official of the US Department of Justice says the US Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles, which filed the case against Hushpuppi, has not filed any such document.

"The document appears to have been fabricated... We have checked with the FBI who supposedly authored the document, and they confirm it is a fake," an official said.

the US authorities, added prisoners have limited access to the telephone, video, internet and computer use because of their right to privacy in a court filing.

like the rest of the detainees, Hushpuppi was granted access to the computer network, according to the authorities.

Hushpuppi is known for posting photos of his lavish lifestyle on Instagram, where he has 2.5m followers. In one scheme, Hushpuppi attempted to steal more than $1.1m from someone who wanted to fund a new children's school in Qatar, court documents said.

Share this articleComments

You might also like

Judge orders Trump to pay $355 million for lying about his wealth in staggering civil fraud ruling

Protests against 'fraudulent' elections continue in Belgrade

Spanish tennis star Arantxa Sánchez Vicario found guilty of multi-million euros fraud