How crooked medics steal from dying tycoons

Cascabel

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Detectives are investigating a scandal involving healthcare workers at four leading hospitals in Nairobi who are suspected to be colluding with criminals to siphon money from accounts of terminally ill tycoons.

According to the Director of Criminal Investigations (DCI), George Kinoti, the fraudsters collude with unscrupulous health workers to obtain financial details of ailing rich people before hacking into their bank accounts and withdrawing millions of shillings without the knowledge of the victims’ family.


The detectives, according to Kinoti, are currently investigating three cases, including one involving former Presbyterian Church of Africa (PCEA) Secretary General the late Rev Peter Kania Kariuki and businessman Amos Ngata Muiruri, who died late last year.

The third case involves a prominent Kiambu tycoon who died several months ago while the fourth case involves a prominent personality from the Rift Valley from whose account the fraudsters siphoned Sh7 million.

“We stumbled upon one case, which has opened a Pandora’s box. Our preliminary findings reveal the deep involvement of some employees of hospitals that are highly regarded,” Kinoti told People Daily yesterday.

Callous business Kinoti disclosed that though their focus at the moment is on the four hospitals, they discovered that “the callous underworld business has been thriving for a long time”.


He disclosed that detectives had made a major breakthrough in investigating the scam through which millions of shillings belonging to both the dead and the living have been lost through Sim card-swap fraud.

Detectives now believe the wealthy in Kenya have become a major target of fraudsters who collude with crooked employees in well-equipped hospitals that offer quality medical care.

The crooked medical staff, in collusion with the criminals, target personal details of the critically ill tycoons admitted in the hospitals which they use to withdraw huge sums of money from the patients’ accounts upon their demise.

Three of the hospitals are private while the fourth is a public facility. Apart from the healthcare workers, the racket also involves some bank employees and people working for communication service providers.


Using the Sim card swap facility, the cybercriminals use the victim’s telephone number to gain access to their sensitive personal data and bank details including accounts, using the Mobile Banking Apps available on Android and other smartphones.

IT experts explain Sim card swapping as a complicated system which enables cybercriminals to “steal” an individual’s telephone line and using the person’s details obtained without their knowledge. In collusion with crooked employees of a communication service provider, the fraudsters proceed to reactivate the stolen line.

Once they take control of the swapped SIM card, the crooks insert it in their phone, access the financial accounts and transfer the money to other scammed telephone numbers.

Detectives say once the crooks have withdrawn the cash, they switch off the stolen phones, frustrating efforts by sleuths to track them down.

The scam first came into the fore two weeks ago when family members of the late PCEA cleric and Muiruri discovered huge sums of money being withdrawn from accounts of the deceased persons. Kariuki died of Covid-19 complications on July 26, 2020, while Muiruri passed away after a botched surgery on November 22, 2020.

One of Muiruri’s sons discovered that his late father’s telephone line, which he used for mobile bank transactions when he was alive, had suddenly gone dead a week after his burial in Ndunyu Njeru, Nyandarua county.

The line was swiftly activated on another phone. The family was puzzled to discover that more than Sh2.8 million had been stolen through various banking apps operated by different banks.
 
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