The sentencing followed the recruitment of 17 teenagers into an internet fraud training ring.
The Benin Zonal Directorate of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has secured the conviction of a man, Goodluck Ejimiyare, for recruiting young boys into an internet fraud training network popularly known as a “Yahoo school.”
Mr Ejimiyare was first arraigned on 30 March on an amended one-count charge of conspiracy to commit internet fraud with one Ebuka Eze, who the EFCC says is currently at large.
According to the charge, the defendant conspired in 2025 to commit computer-related fraud, an offence contrary to Section 27(b) of the Cybercrime (Prohibition, Prevention etc.) Act, 2015 as amended in 2024, and punishable under Section 22(2)(iv) of the same Act.
The prosecution told the court that Mr Ejimiyare recruited some young boys into a fraud ring identified as “Hustling Kingdom,” which is a “Yahoo” school where internet fraud is taught.
The defendant pleaded guilty to the charge.
Following his plea, the prosecution counsel, Elodi Immaculate, asked the court to convict and sentence him accordingly. The judge subsequently adjourned the matter until 20 April for sentencing.
At the resumed sitting, Justice Obiozor sentenced Mr Ejimiyare to five years imprisonment, with an option of a N1 million fine.
The court also ordered the forfeiture of his mobile phone and directed him to undertake in writing to be of good behaviour.
The EFCC in a statement said the case stemmed from an earlier operation by the Nigerian Army’s 4 Brigade Headquarters, which arrested 17 boys at a suspected Yahoo school and handed them over to the commission.
During interrogation, several of the boys reportedly identified Mr Ejimiyare as the person who recruited them into the scheme.
Recently, Edo State has featured prominently in several cyber fraud cases. In May 2025, an internet fraudster was arrested in Auchi.
In March this year, the Nigeria Police Force arrested a suspect in Benin City over an alleged $550,000 cyber fraud targeting an American woman.
PREMIUM TIMES had reported how a court sentenced 19 internet fraudsters to jail in Edo in 2023.

