Operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission have arrested 30 suspects during a raid on a Hotel in the Lekki area
of Lagos State.
The operatives
were alleged to have gained entry into the occupants’ rooms by seizing the
master cards from the management of the hotel at gunpoint.
It was gathered
that some of the occupants were naked under the duvet when the operatives
gained entry into the rooms.
One of the victims, while lamenting the invasion, told
the Peoples Gazette, “I was naked, and I had to beg them (for me) to put
something on. I am actually hypertensive, but I put myself together because I
am not a criminal in any way.”
An eyewitness said
to the publication, “They broke into the hotel and threatened to shoot the
receptionists and management workers if they didn’t immediately release the
master access card to them. So, the hotel workers had to comply immediately.”
According to the
newspaper, it was learnt that no fewer than 13 guests were whisked away by the
EFCC operatives during the raid.
Wilson Uwujaren, the spokesperson for the EFCC, later
confirmed the raid in a statement.
He said the operatives acted on verified intelligence
targeted at suspects at Parktonian Hotel, adding that 30 suspects were arrested
during the raid.
He said,
“Operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, acting on verified
intelligence, carried out a sting operation targeted at cybercrime suspects at
Parktonian Hotel in the Lekki area of Lagos State in the early hours of
Tuesday.
“During the
exercise, 30 suspects were arrested. Of this number, 24 have been established
to be involved in internet-related fraud. The operation was executed without
incident as the facility had been under surveillance for weeks during which the
commission was able to isolate the rooms where the suspects were lodged.
“Access to the
rooms was seamless as the commission has standard procedure for accessing such
facilities without application of force or discomfort to guests. No guest of
the hotel was molested.
“But the
commission observes a disturbing trend in which cybercrime suspects now employ
kept ladies who feign nakedness as a decoy to distract operatives of the
commission to enable them to destroy incriminating evidence before arrest.”
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