Jailed: Oluwamayola Ajayi, pictured, conned a series of single women out of more than £120,000 using dating website match.com
An acclaimed gospel singer who used a dating site to steal more than £120,000 from lonely women by posing as a pilot, oil executive and grieving widower has been jailed for six-and-a-half years. Conman Oluwamayola Ajayi, 31, preyed on four single women on popular dating website Match.com using a series of aliases and outlandish stories to fleece them of their cash. He even sent email threats, purportedly from a captor, claiming he had been kidnapped and would be killed if a ransom was not paid.
Ajayi, who was nominated for best international act at the 2011 Gospel
Music Awards under his stage name MaioJoe, was jailed for conspiracy to defraud
at Snaresbrook Crown Court with Judge Sarah Paneth saying that it was clear he
intended to defraud his victims 'for much more money' than he did. He blew all
the money on a luxury lifestyle, including a holiday to South Africa. Judge
Paneth added: 'This was not money these women had to spare, it was money they
needed back urgently. Having spent all of their money you pursued them for more
by saying you would be killed if they did not pay.'
The court heard how he gained the women’s trust before persuading them
to hand over their savings to fund business enterprises insisting the cash
would be repaid. His victims, who all live in America and Canada, were
‘completely taken in’ by his elaborate lies. They were left humiliated and some
were financially ruined by the scam, which ran between November 2009 and August
2010. One victim handed over more than $125,000 (now £78,662) from her
late husband’s life savings and dead mother’s estate, which she had earmarked
for retirement.
Conned: the women who were fleeced by Ajayi all used the popular dating website match.com
Another disabled woman from Nova Scotia was duped into giving Ajayi
almost $38,000 (£23,913) after he pretended to be Travis David McFly, a United
States Airforce pilot serving in Iraq. Prosecutor Markus Rickard said:
‘He told a story to her about some gold bars he had found and that he wanted to
get them out of Iraq so they could secure their financial future. ‘This
inevitably led to the woman having supply money via an intermediary in London,
to enable the gold bars to be taken from Iraq. She was completely taken in
by him and intended to spend the rest of her life with him. At one point,
she arranged to meet him at an airport and waited for five hours for him, but
he did not turn up. This has left her flat broke and deeply embarrassed.’
Ajayi pocketed around $30,000 (£18,873) from another Internet lover,
leaving her in financial dire straits. The singer also posed as a project
manager in the oil and gas industry to fleece $7,000 (£4,404) from his final
victim, telling her he needed the cash for expenses including a ‘Crude Oil
Lifting Licence’. He told all but one of the women that he was a white
widower with children from Britain called Mark West, who was currently living
in the US. Ajayi funnelled his ill-gotten gains through false bank
accounts, mainly using the fictional identity of Jose Fernando
Rodrigues-Guedes.
Conman: Ajayi, pictured, used a string of identities including posing as a pilot, oil executive and grieving widower to fleece four women out of their cash
Mr Rickard added: ‘The defendant systematically and repeatedly misrepresented himself to lonely females using the internet and cheated them out of £120,000 from November 2009 until August 2010. The victims of his deceptions have been left embarrassed and fearful and they have all suffered substantial financial loss or ruin.’ Ajayi was arrested last August at the home he shares with his wife in Chadwell Heath, Essex. During interview in a prepared statement, he insisted one of his victims was the girlfriend of a friend who owed him money. He claimed he used an account in the name of Rodrigues-Guedes as he did not have one in his own name.
The computer equipment on which police found scores of emails with money
transfers; credit card details, bank statements, personal information and
photographs belonged to the ‘real’ Rodrigues-Guedes, Ajayi claimed. But
Rodrigues-Guedes has never been found, prompting police to believe he is simply
an identity dreamed up by Ajayi to carry out his con. Ajayi denied
conspiracy to defraud, fraud, concealing criminal property, using criminal
property and two counts of possessing articles for use in frauds.
He was unanimously convicted by a jury on all counts after a trial after
admitting a single count of possessing a false identity document with intent. A
spokesman for match.com today urged users to follow its safety guidelines when
online dating. He said: 'Sadly the tiny minority of people who try to exploit
others is not confined to dating sites or even the Internet, it’s across all
walks of life. We urge our members to follow the safe dating
guidance we provide across our site and via email when meeting new people,
whether that’s online, through friends or in a bar. Most importantly
requests for money or financial assistance are not acceptable. You should never
send money to anyone you meet online; just as you would never give money to
someone you recently met in a pub or cafe.'
Source: Daily Mail UK
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