TRENDING
El Hadji Diouf sentenced to jail over child maintenance case • The war on Iran will likely end in American retreat • From fact-finding to fact-proving at the ICJ: The Gambia v Myanmar and the court’s coming reckoning on evidence, interventions, and intent • President Barrow meets Senegal’s Chief of Staff Wade • Shoe vendor kills colleague in Colobane • Senegal conference targets Africa’s costly debt pricing bias • SSHFC GIVEN PERFORMANCE BONUS AFTER REGISTERING OUTSTANDING GROWTH, STRONG SERVICE DELIVERY • Senegal refers 37 money laundering cases to prosecutors • Champion of human dignity and winner of millions of hearts: the global legacy of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez • From rifts within Pastef to regional security challenges • Top 10 highest paid CEOs in Nigeria 2025 • فى حضرة رجل مسكون بالفعل (محمد عثمان ادريس امتحانات النيل الابيض) • الجزء الثاني: رصد المحتوى السلبي السوداني على تيك توك • Gurhan Kiziloz’s Spartans.com Becomes 10th Largest Crypto Casino in the World • Scottish title finale latest, Coleman to leave Everton, Fletcher slams City Youth Cup ‘parade’ – football live • Premier League news: Howe hints at Gordon farewell as Senesi heads for Bournemouth exit • Online Jili Games: How GameZone Improves User Experience Today • 229 polytechnic students to be withdrawn over poor performance • Stop anti-people agreements with France – Timi Frank warns Nigerian, African leaders • Man plotting brother’s abduction reportedly lands in kidnappers’ den [VIDEO] • El Hadji Diouf sentenced to jail over child maintenance case • The war on Iran will likely end in American retreat • From fact-finding to fact-proving at the ICJ: The Gambia v Myanmar and the court’s coming reckoning on evidence, interventions, and intent • President Barrow meets Senegal’s Chief of Staff Wade • Shoe vendor kills colleague in Colobane • Senegal conference targets Africa’s costly debt pricing bias • SSHFC GIVEN PERFORMANCE BONUS AFTER REGISTERING OUTSTANDING GROWTH, STRONG SERVICE DELIVERY • Senegal refers 37 money laundering cases to prosecutors • Champion of human dignity and winner of millions of hearts: the global legacy of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez • From rifts within Pastef to regional security challenges • Top 10 highest paid CEOs in Nigeria 2025 • فى حضرة رجل مسكون بالفعل (محمد عثمان ادريس امتحانات النيل الابيض) • الجزء الثاني: رصد المحتوى السلبي السوداني على تيك توك • Gurhan Kiziloz’s Spartans.com Becomes 10th Largest Crypto Casino in the World • Scottish title finale latest, Coleman to leave Everton, Fletcher slams City Youth Cup ‘parade’ – football live • Premier League news: Howe hints at Gordon farewell as Senesi heads for Bournemouth exit • Online Jili Games: How GameZone Improves User Experience Today • 229 polytechnic students to be withdrawn over poor performance • Stop anti-people agreements with France – Timi Frank warns Nigerian, African leaders • Man plotting brother’s abduction reportedly lands in kidnappers’ den [VIDEO]
Nigerian jailed 115 months for $700,000 romance scam in US
Back to Home

Nigerian jailed 115 months for $700,000 romance scam in US

Punch Nigeria about 5 hours 1 mins read
A Nigerian man has been sentenced to 115 months in a U.S. prison for a decade-long romance scam and money laundering scheme that defrauded 23 victims. Read More: https://punchng.com/nigerian-jailed-115-months-for-700000-romance-scam-in-us/

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Drug Trafficking

View All

Kidnapping & Banditry

View All
AD
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.