Cyber crime, known in Ghanaian parlance as SAKAWA, is on the ascendancy in Ghana, particularly prevalent among the youth.
More than 80% of the cases before FPACC fall into this category.
Last Friday on ABCNews investigative program ‘20/20’ in the United States, it was revealed that some Ghanaian youths scammed some foreigners in various sums, on a popular dating site Match.com.
20/20 team was able to track down the criminals to Accra, Ghana. They met a young man of about 25 years of age who goes by the name Don Moore, in a Facebook profile (see picture attached). The young man did not only admit the crime but also was trying to convince the investigators into joining him and his team.
We at FPACC urge the government to take this threat seriously since it is not only destroying our youth, the future of Ghana, but also giving a bad image to Ghana in the international scene and hence overshadowing Ghana’s modest gains in good governance and democracy. BAD News, they say, travels faster than GOOD NEWS.
An edition of ABC News’ 20/20 won the 10 p.m. hour averaging a 3.2 rating with 9.2 million viewers overall. This shows the negative publicity Ghana is receiving due to these miscreants’ activities.
FPACC
Go to http://www.fpacc.org for the Video
Read the story below:
Match.com, one of the country's most popular dating websites, takes credit for "more relationships and more marriages than any other site." But not every connection made on Match.com has a fairytale ending -- and Joan Romano found that out the hard way.
Romano, 53, from Lynbrook, N.Y., a busy and divorced single woman, said that she didn't have time to go out and meet people. On the advice of friends, she joined Match.com. She soon found herself chatting online with a man named "Austin Miller." Miller identified himself as a decorated soldier based in Kabul, Afghanistan. When Miller sent her a picture of himself in uniform, Romano was impressed.
She thought, "Wow, I hit the jackpot. (He was) a nice-looking guy," Romano said. "I'm like, this is too good to be true."
As Romano and Miller stayed in touch, Romano found herself falling "deeper and deeper" into the online relationship. When Miller asked for a new laptop, she was eager to help a soldier in need.
"I am very patriotic and I worked in the World Trade Center on 9/11," she said. "So to me, if it's for a soldier to help, I'll do whatever I can."
The laptop cost her $1,000. Miller instructed Romano to send it through FedEx to Ghana. Romano said she was a little suspicious of the mailing address -- Ghana is a continent away from Afghanistan -- but Miller told her that a man in Ghana would ultimately deliver the laptop to him.
Romano's generosity to the "soldier" didn't end there: She sent him a total of $25,000 within a six-month time span before realizing that she had fallen victim to a scammer.
"Everyone can form their own opinion, but you'll never know until it happens to you. And unfortunately, it happened to me," she said.
To bring some closure to Romano's story, "20/20" posted the picture that "Austin Miller" sent Romano online and we asked viewers to help us find him. We received more than a hundred responses in a matter of four hours, and one of the messages led us to our answer. Angie Gordon, a viewer form Northern Virginia, picked up on a subtle clue.
"I was able to tell which branch he was affiliated with in the Army and it kind of narrows the field," she said.
With Gordon's information, "20/20" was able to track down the man in the picture. His real name was Jeffrey Miller and we found him at the Wainwright Army Base in Fairbanks, Alaska. He was a lieutenant in the U.S. Army whose identity was stolen, right off MySpace, and was just about to be deployed for a second tour in Afghanistan.
Miller was shocked to learn that someone had apparently been using his picture to run a scam.
"It's a shame, it's disgusting, that even somebody could even as low as to betray a U.S. soldier and use that as an excuse to take advantage of these women or anybody for that matter," he said.
To help Romano find her scammer somewhere in Ghana, "20/20" asked her to send one final email to the so-called "Austin Miller." With a few arrangements from a "20/20" undercover producer in Ghana, we tracked down her scammer. He admitted to our undercover producer that he was a conman and even tried to convince him to join him in his scam.
"We can even get up to $15,000 to $20,000 more from her," he told our producer.
The FBI said it gets thousands of complaints a year from people like Romano, who have been scammed by people they meet on online dating websites.