Kenyan woman, 36, pleads guilty to swindling $4MILLION in romance scam | #whatsapp | #lovescams | #phonescams


A Kenyan national living in Massachusetts has admitted to her role in an elaborate romance scam that prosecutors say defrauded multiple men out of more than $4million.

Florence Mwende Musau, 36, who previously resided in Canton, pleaded guilty on Monday to federal counts of conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud, the US attorney’s office in Boston said.

She faces a maximum of 30 years in prison when she is sentenced on October 14. 

Musau is pictured depositing a check under a fake name in June 2020

Con artist: Florence Mwende Musau, 36, a Kenyan citizen, has pleaded guilty to federal counts of conspiracy to commit wire and bank fraud. Musau is pictured right depositing a check under a fake name in June 2020

Musau, who used at least two aliases, including the name Catherine Muthoki, has admitted to her role in a romance scam that prosecutors say defrauded men out of more than $4million

Musau, who used at least two aliases, including the name Catherine Muthoki, has admitted to her role in a romance scam that prosecutors say defrauded men out of more than $4million

Musau used fake passports (pictured above) to open bank accounts in the Boston area to collect and launder the proceeds of the romance scams

Musau used fake passports (pictured above) to open bank accounts in the Boston area to collect and launder the proceeds of the romance scams

Musau was one of six people, among them four Nigerian nationals, who were charged in March.

Musau is pictured performing a bank transaction connected to an account under the name Precious Adams

Musau is pictured performing a bank transaction connected to an account under the name Precious Adams 

Musau participated in a string of romance scams designed to con victims into sending money to bank accounts controlled by her and her alleged accomplices, according to authorities.

She used fake identities on dating apps and social media sites, and created the illusion of a romantic relationship with the victims to steal money from them, prosecutors said. 

She also used fake passports and at least two aliases, using the names Precious Adams and Catherine Muthoki, to open bank accounts in the Boston area to collect and launder the proceeds of the scams, prosecutors said.

When Musau withdrew the money, it was often in amounts less than $10,000 in an effort to evade detection and currency transaction reporting requirements. 

Musau and her alleged accomplice, 41-year-old Nigerian national Mark Arome Okuo, have been accused of swindling people out of $1.3million since 2018 as part of romance cons

Okuo is pictured withdrawing money from an account opened under a fake name in 2020

Musau and her alleged accomplice, 41-year-old Nigerian national Mark Arome Okuo (left and right), have been accused of swindling people out of $1.3million since 2018 as part of romance cons 

Prosecutors say Okuo used the alias Anthony Terry and pretended to be a US Army serviceman and an oil industry worker

Prosecutors say Okuo used the alias Anthony Terry and pretended to be a US Army serviceman and an oil industry worker 

Musau and one of her alleged accomplices, 41-year-old Nigerian national Mark Arome Okuo, were accused of transferring or depositing $1.3million in fraudulent proceeds, since 2018, into various bank accounts, including $195,000 obtained through five romance scams.

A criminal complaint obtained by DailyMail.com details how Okuo would allegedly meet women on dating sites and pretend to be a US Army soldier serving in the Middle East or Africa. 

As the relationships developed, Okuo claimed that he needed the women to wire him money so that he could leave the military and return to the US to marry them, according to the court documents. 

In one case, a victim was said to have transferred $137,000 to bank accounts controlled by Okuo and Musau, thinking it would help her groom-to-be to obtain his military retirement benefits early. 

In one case, a victim was said to have transferred $137,000 to bank accounts controlled by Okuo (pictured) and Musau

In one case, a victim was said to have transferred $137,000 to bank accounts controlled by Okuo (pictured) and Musau

Okue would tell women that he was serving or working overseas, and that he needed money to return to the US to be with them, court records allege

Okue would tell women that he was serving or working overseas, and that he needed money to return to the US to be with them, court records allege 

In another case, Okuo allegedly told a woman from Georgia that he lived in Kuwait and worked in the oil industry, but was in love with her and needed $4,700 to return to the US to be with her. The victim promptly wired the sum to an account controlled by the accused con man. 

As part of the dating scam, Musau swindled a California resident she met on social media out of $7,800 by claiming that she was a United Nations refugee camp worker who needed the money to return to the US to start a new life with him.  

The bank accounts opened by the accused con artists also were used to collect a further $20,000 through pandemic unemployment benefits in the names of unsuspecting Massachusetts residents who did not apply for such benefits.   



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