The police in Abuja has
smashed a syndicate who specializes in stealing ATM cards from bank customers
across the country.
The
Nation report continues:
The
suspected members of the syndicate were identified as David Wuese, Chika
Okenyi, Omotayo Bamidele and Akura Godwin.
They
were arrested after complaints from members of the public to the Inspector
General Police Ibrahim Idris, who deployed his operatives at the Special
Intelligence Response Team (IRT) to trail and arrest the suspects.
Our
source also disclosed that the suspects were trailed to hideouts in Enugu,
Benue and Nasarawa states where they were arrested and over 70 ATM cards were
recovered from them.
A
source disclosed that the syndicate, who confessed to the crime during
interrogations, said that they normally stole ATM cards from unsuspecting
victims while pretending to help them solve problems at ATM machines.
It
was gathered that a member of the syndicate would approach an ATM user who was
having difficulties with the machine. They would then swap the unsuspecting
customer’s ATM card with another one from their own pockets after they must
have got the PIN of the ATM card of the unsuspecting customer.
The
suspects would then take the stolen ATM card to the nearest ATM machine where
they would check the balance in the victim’s account, after which they would
then proceed to purchase expensive mobile phones from the account. In other
cases, the suspects will also make withdrawals to the limits of the account.
The leader of the syndicate, Wuese (27), said in an interview that the
syndicate was formed in Markurdi, Benue State from where they took their
activities to several states in the country.
He
said: “The idea behind our operation was a collective one. I cannot tell who
actually brought it. But before then, we had read something similar in the
newspapers, and we modified it. “Some of the ATM cards found in our possession
were all invalid, and that was what we were using to steal from our victims.
“We don’t operate in one state.
We
move from one state to the other, and after we had succeeded in stealing a
victim’s card, we would take the card to a machine where we would check the
balance in the owner’s account. “If the money in it was less than ₦20,000, we
would leave the money and move on to look for other victims. But if the amount
in the account was huge, we would withdraw up to the ATM limit, then we would
go to any shop where phones are sold and by phones, which we would resell at
cheaper prices.
“Sometimes, we take the ATM cards to night clubs and hotels where we paid with cards. “In our last operation, we bought three Samsung Galaxy Edge for ₦245,000 each and we sold them for ₦215,000. We also bought three Blackberry Passport for ₦130,000 each and sold them for ₦90,000. We bought two Infinix phones for ₦82,000 each and sold them for ₦60,000. “I can’t count the number of operations we have done, but we normally share all the money we have made equally. “I have succeeded in buying a Toyota Camry with my own share of our loot, but I don’t know what my friends have done with theirs.
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