
Nigeria’s Fraud Watchdog Links Four Kenyans to the CBEX Crypto Scam
- Published By The Statesman For The Statesman Digital
- 5 hours ago
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of Nigeria has named four Kenyans suspected of involvement in the collapsed online trading platform called Crypto Bridge Exchange (CBEX) that was a Ponzi scheme disguised as a crypto investment platform.
- Nigerian authorities have notified the public that the four Kenyans being pursued are John Okiroh Otieno, Israel Mbaluka, Joseph Michiro Kabera, and Serah Michiro.
- The EFCC also listed four Nigerians — Seyi Oloyede, Emmanuel Uko, Adefowora Oluwanisola, and Adefowora Abiodun Olaonipekun — linked to the scam.
- The collapse of CBEX, a fast-growing digital Ponzi scheme disguised as an investment platform operating across Kenya, Nigeria, and Egypt has seen investors lose over US$840 million.
“The public is hereby notified that the persons whose photographs appear below are suspected foreign accomplices wanted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for fraud allegedly perpetrated on an online trading platform called Crypto Bridge Exchange (CBEX),” EFCC published in a notice.
CBEX, which marketed itself as a crypto-powered trading platform offering 100% monthly returns, abruptly restricted withdrawals on April 9 before shutting down entirely. It sustained the illusion of profitability by using funds from new investors to pay earlier ones—a basic Ponzi scheme — and incentivized its users to refer others and offered bonuses and rewards based on the scale of one’s referral network.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in Nigeria emphasized that CBEX was never licensed and that its operations are a criminal offense under the Investment and Securities Act, signed into law earlier this year. CBEX associated itself with a legitimate Chinese company that shares the same name but new reports indicate that this was untrue.
The EFCC announced that it will collaborate with the INTERPOL to nab both domestic collaborators and foreign nationals believed to be behind the operation. In Kenya, regulatory watchdogs and investigation agencies have not released any statement addressing the CBEX scam despite some Kenyans falling victim.
Share on
SHARE YOUR COMMENT
MORE STORIES FOR YOU
Trending Stories
DJ Mo’s former illicit lo...
- Published By Jane
- January 15, 2024
Mapenzi! Zari and Tanasha...
- Published By Jane
- October 24, 2023
Zuchu Speaks on Diamond P...
- Published By Jane
- October 12, 2023
Hio Ni Upumbavu Wasituche...
- Published By Jane
- November 8, 2023
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
Melanin Does Crack: Garni...
- Published By The
- April 21, 2025
The genetic mystery of wh...
- Published By The
- April 21, 2025
The Invisible Chains: Why...
- Published By The
- April 23, 2025
Severance to Adolescence:...
- Published By The
- April 21, 2025
Latest Stories
Trump calls Jeff Bezos as...
- Published By The
- April 30, 2025
NCBA Bank Tanzania’s Prof...
- Published By The
- April 30, 2025
Betting Control & Licenci...
- Published By The
- April 30, 2025
Nigeria’s Fraud Watchdog...
- Published By The
- April 30, 2025