A Ghanaian charlatan who posed as an American major general to swindle
thousands of pounds from lonely British women he met through online dating
sites has been jailed.
Maurice Asola Fadola charmed vulnerable lonely women during his 'Rom Con'
scam, sending flowers on their birthdays and bombarding them with flattering
messages and poetry.
But he would soon claim to be in some sort of financial difficulty and ask
the often widowed pensioners to send cash his way - which he used to pay for a
lavish gold-plated mansion in his home country.
The conman, believed to be in his 40s, has now been unmasked as one of the
world's most prolific online dating fraudsters as his callous crimes left some
victims penniless and even HOMELESS.
At least 19 British victims were spun an elaborate web of lies as Fadola
used pictures of US Army servicemen plundered from the web to claim he was
serving in Iraq and needed cash for emergency medical treatment, customs
charges or even to buy his way out of the army.
In all, he is believed to have conned 19 British victims out of around
£800,000.
After almost three years of heartache and accusations, Fadola has now been
sentenced in his native country to five years in prison and ordered to repay
his victims in full.
One victim, 71-year-old grandmother Katherine Clark from Southsea,
Hampshire, travelled to Ghana to give evidence against Fadola.
Victim: Katherine Clark travelled to Ghana to give evidence
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She had lost her husband 30 years previously and was charmed by the conman,
who this time claimed to be a British builder named Bruce living in London.
Speaking to Sky News in 2011, she said: "He made me feel great, he made
me feel wanted and that he was genuine. It was a nice feeling."
Fadola soon told Ms Clark he was moving to Ghana and encouraged her to send
money to him to invest in a mining company.
She even travelled to the West African country at one point to meet 'Bruce'
and encountered Fadola - who was pretending to be Bruce's driver.
He took her to Fadola's luxury marble-clad mansion, showed her a case of
gold to prove the investment was genuine and then said Bruce was in prison and
needed her money for bail.
On another occasion, 57-year-old widow Dena White, of East Yorkshire, lost
her home after she re-mortgaged her property and used £50,000 of her savings to
help 'Steve Moon' in a legal dispute over the impounding of his war medals.
Fadola - posing as Moon - said he couldn't access his own cash because he
was serving in Iraq. The pair chatted through a dating website for hours each day.
Speaking to the Daily Mail after he was unmasked, she said: "Of course
I was wary but everything he told me seemed to check out. "He’d send me poetry. It sounds silly now but we were in love."
Fadola was snared when he tried to obtain a British visa which disclosed his
true identity to the National Crime Agency, who were investigating a case where
a disabled woman had been persuaded to sell her house and send funds to Ghana.
He is believed to have targeted women across Britain, France, Sweden, Italy
and the US and was found guilty of more than 20 offences stemming from his 2012
trial.
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