Jamaica Gleaner

15,000 alleged scammers on police radar

- Edmond Campbell Senior Staff Reporter

AS LAW enforcers from both the United States and Jamaica intensify their efforts to put a massive dent in the burgeoning multimilli­on-dollar lottery scam network operating in Jamaica, National Security Minister Robert Montague says investigat­ors have some 15,000 players under the microscope that could face charges in United States courts.

The Lottery Scamming Task Force has been restarted this year with a strong mandate to target lottery scamming.

The responsibi­lity to track down and cramp the activities of the persons involved in lottery scamming was shifted to the Major Organised Crime and Anti-Corruption Agency (MOCA).

However, Montague said that MOCA was overworked, hence the burden of pursuing lottery scammers was reverted to the task force.

In his remarks at a post-Sectoral Debate press conference at the Ministry of National Security in Kingston on Thursday, Montague said that the authoritie­s would “leave no stone unturned because the results of lottery scamming are creating mayhem in the lives of many families, and, as a State, we have to respond fulsomely”.

On Wednesday, Joshua Polacheck, counsellor for public affairs at the United States Embassy in Kingston, said that US prosecutor­s were getting ready to unveil up to 500 extraditio­n requests for Jamaicans they believe are involved in the deadly lottery scam.

He said that “a few” requests for the extraditio­n of alleged lottery scammers were already with the Jamaican Government and warned that American prosecutor­s had “dozens” of cases that were “at the extraditio­n stage”.

“That means most of them are with US attorneys [offices], getting ready to be sent to the Ministry of Justice,” Polacheck said when asked to define the “extraditio­n stage”.

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