Vol No: 80,
Home spacer About Us spacer Editorial spacer Top Stories spacer Business News spacer Sports spacer Advertise spacer Health Corner spacer Agony Aunt spacer Subscription spacer Feedback spacer Contact Us
spacer
Business News
Letters to the Editor
Archives
 
 

Blue watch
 

spacer
Ghanaian pleads guilty for smuggling aliens into America
A GHANAIAN national, named Sampson Lovelace Boateng also known as ‘Pastor’, 53, is pleading guilty in a US court to conspiracy and alien smuggling charges into the US. He faces between five and 15 years in prison plus a fine of $250,000 in addition to deportation after serving the sentence.

According to an official court report, some of the aliens were smuggled in the compartments of buses, and that the services of DHL and Western Union were exploited in facilitating the illegal dealing. Mr. Boateng, who operated out of Belize in Mexico, and his co-conspirator, Mohammed Kamel Ibrahim, were jointly charged on a 28- count indictment returned by a federal grand jury in the District of Columbia on October 31, 2007. Mr. Boateng admitted that between June, 2006 and February, 2007, he conspired with others to smuggle unauthorized aliens to the United States by providing them with fraudulently obtained visas which cost $500, the court report said.

Mr. Boateng and his coconspirator housed the aliens for several days or weeks in Mexico before they were smuggled into the US and that smuggling fees totalled approximately $5,000 per person. These documents, which he obtained through a corrupt employee of the Mexican Embassy in Belize, enabled East African aliens to travel to Mexico and reach a point where they could be smuggled across the southern US border.

According to the court report, Mr. Boateng, who was formally arrested in the US on November 5, 2007 reportedly operated as a car dealer while in Belize. He was extradited from Belize after he and two Ghanaians – Frank Boateng, 28, and Kwame Boakye, 26, as well as his wife, a Belizean woman by name Irma Valencia, 49, were arrested in connection with what police has said was a major immigration scam. On November 2, 2007, Belize police and immigration officers raided two houses in the city, one on Smith Street, Kings Park, and the other at the corner of Cemetery Road and Partridge Street, Lake I, and found passports for various nationalities, as well a collection of immigration papers and a computer they believed was being used in the scam.

“They were also accused of placing immigration stamps inside the passports to make it appear as if the holders of the passports had visited Belize, when it was not so”, the report said. Mr. Boateng’s wife Valencia was employed as a secretary at the Mexican Embassy while the scam was ongoing. In the indictment made last year, the US court said that under the scheme, aliens were brought from places like Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya and Nepal.

Source: Gye yame Concord
 

Please email your comments to
editor@africanecho.co.uk

 
spacer spacer




 
Suite C, Queensway House, 275-285 High Street, Stratford, London, E15 2TF, UK
Tel: +44 (0) 208 534 2255 (Editorial), +44 (0) 208 534 2299 (Advertisements)
Fax: +44 (0) 20 8519 5564 Email: info@africanecho.co.uk
Terms & Conditions : Privacy Policy
Powered by:Alt N Solutions