Divorced couple get suspended sentence for laundering nearly €180,000 of stolen cash

Money taken in an invoice redirect fraud was transferred to bank account of business owned by Zanab Ibrahim in 2014

Judge Elma Sheahan suspended a prison sentence of 2½ years on condition each of the defendants keep the peace and be of good behaviour
Judge Elma Sheahan suspended a prison sentence of 2½ years on condition each of the defendants keep the peace and be of good behaviour

A divorced couple have received a fully suspended prison sentence for laundering nearly €180,000 of cash stolen from an education board in an invoice redirect fraud.

Zanab Ibrahim (51), of Wolfe Tone Street, Cavan, and her ex-husband Francis Falaye (54), of Lobinstown Apartment, Navan, Co Meath, pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to money laundering on October 31st, 2014. The couple had divorced in 2004.

The court heard that while €178,695 was transferred to a bank account in Ibrahim’s business, €50,000 of this was transferred to Falaye’s account four days later.

Garda Shane Fitzsimons told Emmet Nolan BL, prosecuting, that a total of €178,965 was taken through an invoice redirect fraud after the Laois and Offaly Education and Training Board paid a construction company for work carried out in a school in Tullamore.

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A genuine invoice was sent to the board before the accounts department received an email, purporting to be from the construction company, instructing them to make payment to a Permanent TSB bank account.

The fraud came to light when the construction firm advised that they had not yet received payment.

An investigation was launched and it was discovered that the email had originated from the Czech Republic.

Garda Fitzsimons confirmed that Ibrahim is responsible for the €178,965 which was lodged to a bank account in the name of a fashion boutique she owned in Co Cavan, while Falaye is responsible for €50,000 that was later transferred to his bank account on November 3rd, 2014.

Judge Elma Sheahan suspended a prison sentence of 2½ years on condition each of the defendants keep the peace and be of good behaviour. She ordered that Falaye pay a sum of €1,000 to the Peter McVerry Trust.

Ibrahim was arrested in February 2015 and brought in for questioning where she made certain admissions. She admitted to owning the business, which had been based in Dublin’s Moore Street and had been operating there until 2009.

She claimed she had allowed for the transfer of the cash into her account as she was expecting €205,000 from the sale of a house in Nigeria, but Garda Fitzsimons said the Garda does not accept her claim and said there was no planned sale of a house.

Ibrahim said she transferred €50,000 to Falaye to allow him to buy two trucks for her mother’s farm.

Garda Fitzsimons agreed with Keith Spencer BL, defending, that all bar €1,000 of the money that had been taken was recovered.

He accepted that Ibrahim had entered the plea on the basis that she was reckless in accepting the money into her account. It was accepted that she has not come to Garda attention since 2014.

Garda Fitzsimons agreed with Kevin Roche BL, defending Falaye, that the original email had not been sent by either his client or Ibrahim.

He accepted that Falaye does have a business involved in the exportation of vehicles to Nigeria through a company that was first registered in 2008.

Mr Spencer asked the court to accept that Ibrahim had no involvement in the redirect fraud that led to the money being taken but instead allowed her account to be used, when she should have made more enquiries as to why her account was needed.

She is the mother of two adult children. He said she is quite a vulnerable person and is living in hostel accommodation.

Mr Roche said Falaye should have asked if the money was legitimate before he allowed it to be transferred to his account and now fully accepts he “should never have run that risk”.