The group, according to the police, is believed to have scammed people of $64,000 in five different cases in Singapore and eight other cases in Malaysia involving 3.7 million Malaysian ringgit (about N365.5 million) in losses.
Singapore police on its website announced that its Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) of the Singapore Police Force worked with the Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) of the Royal Malaysia Police (RMP) to jointly cripple the Internet love scam syndicate.
The six Nigerians were arrested during raids on two locations in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in late June. One Malaysian woman was also arrested during one of the raids.
Eight laptops, 17 mobile phones, three thumb drives, two ATM cards, two modems, two WIFI routers and two passports were seized from the suspects.
Their arrest came after a Singaporean female victim lodged a police report in February that she could have fallen prey to an internet love scam.
The group, according to the police, is believed to have scammed people of $64,000 in five different cases in Singapore and eight other cases in Malaysia involving 3.7 million Malaysian ringgit (about N365.5 million) in losses.
Singapore police on its website announced that its Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) of the Singapore Police Force worked with the Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) of the Royal Malaysia Police (RMP) to jointly cripple the Internet love scam syndicate.
The six Nigerians were arrested during raids on two locations in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in late June. One Malaysian woman was also arrested during one of the raids.
Eight laptops, 17 mobile phones, three thumb drives, two ATM cards, two modems, two WIFI routers and two passports were seized from the suspects.
Their arrest came after a Singaporean female victim lodged a police report in February that she could have fallen prey to an internet love scam.
The group, according to the police, is believed to have scammed people of $64,000 in five different cases in Singapore and eight other cases in Malaysia involving 3.7 million Malaysian ringgit (about N365.5 million) in losses.
Singapore police on its website announced that its Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) of the Singapore Police Force worked with the Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) of the Royal Malaysia Police (RMP) to jointly cripple the Internet love scam syndicate.
The six Nigerians were arrested during raids on two locations in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in late June. One Malaysian woman was also arrested during one of the raids.
Eight laptops, 17 mobile phones, three thumb drives, two ATM cards, two modems, two WIFI routers and two passports were seized from the suspects.
Their arrest came after a Singaporean female victim lodged a police report in February that she could have fallen prey to an internet love scam.
The group, according to the police, is believed to have scammed people of $64,000 in five different cases in Singapore and eight other cases in Malaysia involving 3.7 million Malaysian ringgit (about N365.5 million) in losses.
Singapore police on its website announced that its Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) of the Singapore Police Force worked with the Commercial Crime Investigation Department (CCID) of the Royal Malaysia Police (RMP) to jointly cripple the Internet love scam syndicate.
The six Nigerians were arrested during raids on two locations in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in late June. One Malaysian woman was also arrested during one of the raids.
Eight laptops, 17 mobile phones, three thumb drives, two ATM cards, two modems, two WIFI routers and two passports were seized from the suspects.
Their arrest came after a Singaporean female victim lodged a police report in February that she could have fallen prey to an internet love scam.