Tuesday 11 July 2017

RE EMPLOYEES OF NIGERIAN BANKS AND THEFT OF CUSTOMERS' MONIES

In an earlier article: EMPLOYEES OF NIGERIAN BANKS AND THEFT OF CUSTOMERS' MONIES, I quoted a New York Times report thus:

"As concerns over identity theft and foreign cyber attacks rise, customers are largely in the dark about a growing threat just around the corner: bank tellers and managers with instant access not only to their critical personal information, but also to their cash.
Though much of the focus on bank fraud has been on sophisticated hackers, it is the more prosaic figure of the teller behind the window who should worry depositors, according to prosecutors, government officials and security experts."
The report further stated that the Manhattan District Attorney's office approximately files at least a case a month against a bank teller. This indicates that such cases of theft are now common place in Manhattan.

In the article, I also wondered about the scale or extent of theft of customer's monies by bank employees in Nigeria and concluded that the scale is unclear or unknown. I also cited in the article, two instances of bank employees in Nigeria pilfering customers’ funds. However, it appears there are more of such cases occurring and it seems the employees of Nigerian banks are trying to catch up with their colleagues in Manhattan. This seems so because of a report in the Punch. According to the spokesperson of the Special Fraud Unit of the Nigeria Police, ASP Lawal Audu as quoted in the report:
“The work of the network provider suspects was to assist the bankers to swap the SIM cards of the targeted bank customers so that they were unable to receive alerts of any transactions on their accounts within the period that money was stolen from their accounts.
The suspects, after successful withdrawals of the money, transferred the money into about 40 different accounts to avoid being detected. They carried out their operations at weekends and public holidays so as to evade being detected by the bank monitoring mechanisms or the owners of the accounts. They defrauded their victims to the tune of over N150m.”
This fraud story by the Punch is somewhat similar to the one reported in the Times of India. In that story a bank employee stole personal details of customers, got a police report indicating that the customers’ SIM cards were lost and then requested for a SIM cards from the network providers. He then transferred from those customers accounts and they could not get debit alerts sent to their phone numbers.

For more on bank employees in Nigeria stealing from customers’ account see the following:
Banker jailed 39 years for stealing N30m from dead customer-

Banker arrested for withdrawing N50m from customers’ accounts- http://www.informationng.com/2013/12/police-arrest-banker-for-stealing-n50m.html

Banker accused of stealing customers’ N8.4m-

Rogue bankers steal customers’ funds online-

In view of the foregoing, it might not to be out of place to make a freedom of information request to the Nigeria Police and other relevant authorities for information on the number of bank employees standing trial and those convicted for theft of customers' funds or hacking into customers' accounts. This would enable one to have a better idea of the scale of such thefts or hacking of customers' accounts by bank employees in Nigeria.

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