Nigerian scammers are generally
regarded as pioneers in the sending of mass letters, messages and
emails seeking to defraud any recipient foolish and greedy enough to
fall for their tricks, although all the signs are that the practice
has now spread worldwide. Nigerians call scams like these “Four One
Nine,” so called by reference to Article 419 of the country’s
criminal code, which concerns fraud.
Yet Nigeria’s 419 scammers have a far
longer pedigree than most people realise. The first properly
documented 419 letter dates from 1920 and was written by one P.
Crentsil to a contact in the British colony of the Gold Coast,
today’s Ghana. Crentsil launched into a long description of the
magical powers that were in his possession and that could, on payment
of a fee, be used to the benefit of his correspondent. Crentsil
signed himself “P. Crentsil, Professor of Wonders.”
According to the evidence at hand,
“Professor” Crentsil has to be regarded as the first-known
exponent of the modern 419 fraud. He seems to have written a number
of similar letters, each time offering to provide magical services on
payment of a fee. In December 1921, he was charged by the police with
three counts under various sections of the criminal code including
section 419, the one to which Nigerians make reference when they
speak of “Four One Nine.” But Crentsil was in luck: the
magistrate presiding over his case discharged him with a caution on
the first count and acquitted him on the two others for lack of
corroborating evidence, as a result of which “he (Crentsil) is now
boasting that he got off owing to his ‘juju’ powers,” reported
the Chief of Police in Onitsha Province. The same officer stated that
he had known Crentsil for some years, during which time the
“Professor” “had slipped through the hands of the police so
often that I shall soon, myself, begin to believe in his magic
powers.”
There is no way of knowing how many
similar cases may have occurred, but the colonial authorities became
sufficiently concerned by the number of letters addressed to
Nigerians from outside the country soliciting money for what the
British regarded as fraudulent purposes that they started to
intercept items of what was called “charlatanic correspondence.”
The Director of Posts and Telegraphs made clear that this term
embraced adverts concerning “medicines of potency, and unfailing
healing power, lucky charms, love philtres, magic pens with which
examinations can be passed, powders and potions to inspire personal
magnetism, remove kinks from hair—or insert them—counteract
sterility and ensure football prowess.” The Posts and Telegraphs
department recorded 9,570 such items in 1947, by which time the
amount of money returned to senders was some £1,205. In the
mid-1940s there was a spate of financial scams perpetrated by people
known as “Wayo tricksters,” some of whom were operating a trick
that involved posing as agents of a “New York Currency Note Firm,”
selling to a gullible victim boxes of blank paper with a promise that
this could be turned into banknotes by application of a special
chemical.
Behavior of a sort that British
officials probably would have classified as charlatanic was sometimes
recorded on the part of the relatively few Nigerians who travelled
overseas at that time. One of these was one Prince Modupe, who spent
years in the United States under a variety of fantastical guises. In
1935 he was in Los Angeles presenting himself as a graduate of Jesus
College, Oxford, although Oxford University had no record of him. In
March 1947 he appeared on the bill at the San Francisco Opera House
under the name His Royal Highness Prince Modupe of Dubrica. Seven
months later he was still in San Francisco, now claiming to be the
“Crown Prince of Nigeria” and representing himself as a
successful businessman who had obtained a variety of commercial
contracts. Modupe seems to have been in effect a professional
confidence trickster. Nor was he the only Nigerian operating in this
field in the United States. Another was Prince Peter Eket Inyang Udo,
a businessman who lived in America and Britain for some seventeen
years. Eket Inyang Udo attracted the attention of the colonial
authorities not only on account of his dubious commercial practices
but also because of his political ideas and connections.
Another controversial case, in which
fraud and nationalist politics seem to have been mixed, concerned an
Igbo man who became a minor celebrity in America under the name
Prince Orizu. He was so well known that an Australian official
working in New York for the U.N. wondered in his memoirs: “What
happened to the Ibo adventurer who called himself Prince Orizu?”
Noting that “there are no hereditary chiefs let alone princes in
Ibo-land,” the Australian wrote that Orizu “seemed to have no
difficulty in getting a write-up in the New Yorker or the New York
Times every now and then.” The person he was describing also went
under the name Dr Abyssinia Akweke Nwafor Orizu, and it was under
this name that he was convicted by a magistrate in Nigeria in
September 1953 on seven counts of fraud and theft of funds ostensibly
intended to fund scholarships in the United States. Himself
U.S.-educated, Orizu had collected over £32,000 in the three years
prior to his conviction. What makes the case all the more interesting
is that Orizu was a stalwart of the National Council of Nigeria and
the Cameroons (NCNC), the leading political party founded in 1944,
and was also a member of the Regional Government established under
Nigeria’s 1951 constitution. He went on to have a distinguished
political career, becoming president of the Senate after Nigeria’s
Independence. Although it has been alleged that Orizu’s conviction
for fraud was a miscarriage of justice, it seems fair to observe that
modern politics, which emerged in Nigeria only in the 1940s, offered
opportunities for a type of self-fashioning comparable in many
respects to that practised by fabulists and fraudsters like Crentsil,
Modupe and others.
Some of Nigeria’s new breed of
chancers began at a young age. In 1949, the U.S. consul-general in
Lagos reported the existence of one “Prince Bil Morrison,” who
turned out to be a 14-year old boy who specialized in writing to
correspondents in America to solicit funds. The police remarked that
this case was just “one more in which generous, but possibly
gullible, American citizens have allowed themselves to be taken in by
African schoolboys.” The consul-general wrote: “These young
Nigerians are stated by the police to be excellent psychologists,”
noting that their practice of writing to people in the United States
and Canada for money was “widespread.” Frauds by Nigerian
students in the United States and Canada in the late 1940s were said
to include the offer for sale of diamonds, ivory and other exotic
luxuries.
(Source: NEWSWEEK)
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