Covenant University graduate Stephen Emmanuel Jack, who now studies in
the UK, has been jailed for 3 years for seducing six women on dating
websites and cheating them out of £186,000, according to a report by
UK Mirror. Find the report below...
A lonely hearts conman was jailed for three years after cheating six women out of £186,000 through dating websites. Police
believe student Emmanuel Jack, 26, claimed to be an architect, engineer
and gem broker, while talking them into handing over the money.
Using aliases including John Creed, John Windsor and Johnnie Carlo Rissi, the cash was said to be needed for vbusiness purposes.
The love rat,
who was studying for a business degree at the University of Salford,
admitted 11 counts of money laundering totalling £186,000 and possession
of articles for use in fraud at Manchester Crown Court.
Two of the women who were conned are British.
Detective
Constable Stuart Donohue said: “While we strongly suspect - but cannot
prove - that Jack was the person who was communicating with these women,
what we can prove is that money totalling close to £277,000 has been
transferred through his bank accounts
“Woman from across the globe were targeted and exploited. Women, who in most cases were vulnerable and lonely.
"Some
took out loans, others lost life savings, they believed they were
speaking with a man who had genuine feelings for them, a man who loved
them and wanted to be with them and who they genuinely believed to be a
soul mate.”
The first victim met a man who claimed to be John
Creed - a self-employed architect and building contractor on a dating
website in August 2011 when she was aged 61.
The pair exchanged e-mails over several days before Creed began expressing his love.
He
then claimed to have two contracts: one for log homes in Shropshire and
the other for the renovation of flats in Sweden and sent her his
contract allegedly worth £950,000.
He told her his feelings were
“too strong to ignore” before asking for £1,500 to help pay for supplies
for his project. She agreed to transfer some funds to the account.
At
the same time another woman who was aged 52 at the time and who was
vulnerable, began chatting with a man over the same website.
The man claimed to be living in Spain and working as an architect and building contractor.
After
a couple of weeks he again asked for £1,500 to repair damaged machinery
and cash to pay tax bills and money to pay his workers.
The woman took out a loan and paid the money to accounts that resulted in the money being transferred to Jack’s account.
Following the reports from the two women, an investigation was launched by fraud officers from Greater Manchester Police.
Officers
linked up with with Kentucky state police who took a statement from a
woman, who died in August 2013. She said she met a man with the profile
name John Windsor through another dating site around January 2012.
Windsor
told her he was an engineer who had been awarded a contract to
redevelop Wick Airport runway in Scotland. The funds were sent to bank
accounts by money transfers and in the form of Rolex watches through the
post.
Officers also liaised with Delta police in relation to a victim from Ohio.
She
met a man who called himself John or Johnnie Carlo Rissi who was from
America but had moved to England to set up as a gem broker he requested
money to help with a tax issue and for assistance with payroll, along
with various other excuses. Nine transfers totalling £18,924 were sent.
A Proceeds of Crime Act hearing is scheduled to take place on May 16.
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