EFCC Shuts 800 Scam email Addresses
Written by Duncan Friday, 23 October 2009
ShareIn its renewed bid in fighting crime, the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has shut down about 800 scam
email addresses and arrested 18 people who specialized in cyber crime.
This, it said, was done in its effort to clamp down on internet fraudsters through an initiative tagged “project eagle claw”.
According
to a release signed by the Commission’s spokesman, Mr. Femi Babafemi,
Chairman of the anti-graft agency, Mrs Farida Waziri, was quoted to
have made the disclosure in Las Vegas, United States on Wednesday at
the 35th Annual Convention of Black Mayors.
Top officials of the
National Conference of Black Mayors (NCBM), led by their President, Ms
Heather Hudson, had during a visit to the EFCC chairman in Abuja on
July 29, invited her to address the annual event as part of efforts to
foster greater relationship between the US authorities and the
anti-graft commission.
Speaking on “Global vision for local action:
A paradigm of connectivity in the African Diaspora”, Waziri said: “We
expect that eagle claw as conceived will be 100 per cent operational
within six months and at full capacity. It will take Nigeria out of the
top 10 list of countries with the highest incidence of fraudulent
e-mails. At the moment, eagle claw has delivered the following results:
“Over
800 fraudulent email addresses have been identified and shut down. The
EFCC is fine tuning security modalities with Microsoft and upon full
deployment, the capacity to take down fraudulent e-mails will increase
to 5,000 monthly. Further, it is projected that advisory mails to be
sent to victims and potential victims will be about 230,000 monthly.
“There have been 18 arrests of high profile syndicates operating cyber crime organizations.”
While
justifying her decision to adopt the latest strategy against cyber
crime, she said: “Project Eagle Claw is an initiative of the EFCC for
the smart use of technology in fighting cyber crime. Hitherto, the EFCC
structure for combating cyber crime revolved around cyber raids and
investigation of petitions.
“However, the proactive stance of the
new leadership required a radical departure and eagle claw was
developed. When it is fully deployed, it will afford the EFCC the
option of either monitoring or shutting down all fraudulent email
addresses. The EFCC would also have identified victims and potential
victims and advised them that their email has been compromised.”
Her address at the convention was preceded by series of meetings and interactions with top US government officials on Monday and Tuesday in Washington where issues on Nigeria’s anti-graft war and support for EFCC initiatives topped the agenda.





