Wanted Fugitives by FBI


The FBI is leading the national effort to investigate high tech crimes, including cyber-based terrorism, computer intrusions, online sexual exploitation, and major cyber fraud. To stay ahead of emerging trends, gather and share information and intelligence with partners from public and private sectors worldwide.


CYBER CRIMES FUGITIVES  
                                                                                                       
   

BJORN DANIEL SUNDIN & SHAILESHKUMAR P. JAIN
Wire Fraud; Conspiracy to Commit Computer Fraud; Computer Fraud
REWARD: The FBI is offering a reward of up to $20,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction.
 
Bjorn Daniel Sundin, along with his co-conspirator, Shaileshkumar P. Jain, is wanted for his alleged involvement in an international cybercrime scheme that caused internet users in more than 60 countries to purchase more than one million bogus software products, resulting in consumer loss of more than $100 million. It is alleged that from December 2006 to October 2008, through fake advertisements placed on legitimate companies’ websites, Sundin and his accomplices deceived internet users into believing that their computers were infected with “malware” or had other critical errors in order to encourage them to purchase “scareware” software products that had limited or no ability to remedy the purported defects.
On May 26, 2010, Jain was indicted in Chicago, Illinois, by a federal grand jury for the United States District Court, Northern District of Illinois. He was indicted for wire fraud, conspiracy to commit computer fraud and computer fraud. That same day, a federal warrant was issued for Jain’s arrest.

Jain is a United States citizen who has ties to Brazil, Canada, India and the Ukraine.





HARRISON AMADIN EKPETIN
Bank Fraud; Wire Fraud; Conspiracy

Harrison Amadin Ekpetin is wanted for his alleged involvement in several incidents of Home Equity Line of Credit fraud originating in the continental United States, often in New Mexico, from 2009 to 2011. It is alleged that Ekpetin illegally gained access to bank accounts and successfully executed a series of fraudulent transactions resulting in funds being wired to banks overseas. The fraudulent activities allegedly resulted in more than $4 million in losses to financial institutions in New Mexico, Virginia, New York, and elsewhere in the United States. On April 27, 2011, a federal warrant was issued for Ekpetin's arrest by the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico, after he was charged federally with bank fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy.
Ekpetin has ties to Brooklyn and the Bronx, New York; Locust Grove, Georgia; and Nigeria and Ghana.


JIE DONG
Mail Fraud and Wire Fraud (Internet Related)


Jie Dong is wanted for defrauding Internet auction site users out of approximately $800,000. In the fall of 2003, Dong allegedly offered items on the auction site and collected money from the purported winning bidders. Dong is alleged to have never produced the promised merchandise to the nearly 5,000 victims. Dong is believed to have later fled from the United States to China and may now be in Hong Kong.
The case is being investigated by the Electronics Crimes Task Force, comprised of FBI and U.S. Secret Service agents and state law enforcement authorities in California. On August 20, 2004, a federal arrest warrant was issued in the Central District of California charging Dong with mail fraud and wire fraud.


ALEXANDR SERGEYEVICH BOBNEV
Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud; Conspiracy to Commit Money Laundering
 

Alexandr Sergeyevich Bobnev was indicted in the Southern District of New York on November 26, 2008, on one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering. Bobnev was indicted for his alleged participation in a money laundering scheme involving unauthorized access to the accounts of a major provider of investment services. Bobnev allegedly accessed compromised accounts and wire transferred funds out of these accounts to money mules in the United States. These mules were then responsible for transferring the money back to Bobnev. Between June of 2007 and August of 2007, Bobnev allegedly wired or attempted to wire over $350,000 from compromised accounts.


Bobnev has a Russian Passport and has ties to Russia.

REFERENCE
Federal Bureau Investigation. (n.d.) Wanted Fugitives by FBI

Cyber Crime Unit Unveiled

The Daily Conversation. (2012, january, 3). Cyber Crime Unit Unveiled. (Video file). Retrieve from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JksHHwOvH14



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