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Copyright International Journal of Cyber Criminology Jan-Jun 2013

Abstract

A trend has emerged over the past few years concerning the universal awareness of the Nigerian advance fee fraud (419) that suggests that a diversification process is taking place. This paper investigates why 419 syndicates have added kidnapping for ransom to their criminal portfolio that already include armed robbery, extortion, and other related crimes. The paper argues that since advance fee fraud (419) is no longer as lucrative as it used to be, and hence, kidnapping in Nigeria which was a regional and oil sector problem confined to the Niger Delta region, is now a national nightmare. Furthermore, the study reveals that although kidnapping for ransom is very lucrative, fraudsters are also very much interested in politically motivated kidnapping if and when the price is right. In the final analysis, kidnappings in Nigeria are unintended consequences of decades of wealthy people preying on the powerless and doing everything in their considerable power to keep from losing power; which generates a class-based resentment fueling kidnapping. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Kidnapping: A Variant of Nigerian Advance Fee Fraudsters (419) Diversified Portfolio
Author
Otu, Noel
Pages
73-87
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jan-Jun 2013
Publisher
International Journal of Cyber Criminology
ISSN
0973-5089
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1458594037
Copyright
Copyright International Journal of Cyber Criminology Jan-Jun 2013