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Romance fraudsters who pretended to be lovers with victims to persuade them to give them more than £240,000 have been jailed.
Using internet dating sites, the group hid behind false personas of “Kevin Churchill” and “Kevin Thompson”, pretending to be wealthy businessmen with international lifestyles to target women.
Over time, the fraudsters would get to know their victims and ask to borrow money to help pay for everything from veterinary bills, to legal fees and travel costs.
Believing they were in a loving relationship, two victims handed over £240,000 between 2016 and 2017.
The money was passed through various bank accounts.
Detective Constable Rebecca Mason, from Surrey Police's economic crime unit, said: “This type of crime plays mercilessly on personal emotions.
“These women have gone from the high excitement of being in love to the extreme low of realising they have been victims of crime and their trust and generosity has been completely abused.
“I can't emphasise enough, having got to know them throughout this case, that these are both intelligent, sensible women who were taken advantage of by a cunning, cruel and highly manipulative gang of fraudsters."
The three ringleaders who were sentenced included Yaw Sarpong, 22, from Hampshire, who was given 15 months' imprisonment for conspiracy to commit fraud by false representation.
Nicholas Adade, 23, from Stoke-on-Trent, was sentenced to three years and seven months for conspiracy to commit fraud by false representation and money laundering, and 14 months for money laundering to run concurrently.
The third ringleader, Eric Ocansey, 35, from Birmingham, was sentenced to two years' imprisonment for conspiracy to commit fraud by false representation, and 14 months for money laundering to run concurrently.
The other group members included Obed Addo, 37, from Roehampton, south-west London, who was jailed for 21 months for money laundering.
Daniel Keh, 25, from Enfield, north London, was jailed for 10 months for converting criminal property and supplying articles to be used in fraud, and six months for money laundering to run concurrently.
Makeda Stair, 23, from Enfield, will be sentenced on August 9.
In a statement, one of the victims named “Sharon”, a mother of two children, said: “I lost my sense of self-worth and my integrity, which through the help of victim support and the support of my children, I've managed to restore. (Yahoo News, UK)