• Kenny Osas Okuonghae, 38, was sentenced to 51 months in prison for laundering money linked to romance scams, rental fraud, and cryptocurrency schemes.
• An Ohio man lost $416,155 after sending money to a fictitious woman who claimed she needed urgent medical treatment and medical equipment.
• According to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New Jersey, seven victims across six states lost more than $1.27 million through the fraud operation.
A federal court in New Jersey sentenced Kenny Osas Okuonghae, 38, to 51 months in prison on June 4 after prosecutors said he laundered money obtained through romance scams, fake medical emergencies, rental fraud, and cryptocurrency schemes that cost seven victims more than $1.27 million. One Ohio man alone lost $416,155 after being persuaded to send money to a fictitious woman who claimed she needed urgent medical treatment and support.
One of the victims was an Ohio man who developed an online relationship with a woman identifying herself as “Aggie Gonzales,” a persona federal prosecutors later determined did not exist.
According to court records cited by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New Jersey, the victim was persuaded to send money for alleged medical equipment, hospital bills, and treatment after being told the woman was suffering from serious health problems. Over the course of the scheme, he transferred $416,155.
Prosecutors said the fraud escalated through increasingly urgent claims about her worsening condition. Investigators also alleged that Kenny Osas Okuonghae posed as a physician to reinforce the deception. In one message cited in court documents, the purported doctor wrote, “I plead with you on behalf of her to please save this woman's life. Time is not on her side.”
Prosecutors said the medical emergency was entirely fabricated, and the woman at the center of the online relationship never existed.
Federal prosecutors said Kenny Osas Okuonghae reinforced the deception by posing as a doctor and sending messages claiming the woman's health was rapidly worsening. Court records allege he shared photographs of a woman in a hospital bed and urged the Ohio man to continue sending money for treatment and medical equipment.
Federal officials also said the man was directed to Alphacoin Lab, a purported cryptocurrency investment platform that investigators later identified as part of the scheme. According to court documents, he was told that investment proceeds were available but that taxes and processing fees had to be paid before the funds could be released.
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New Jersey described the operation as a "pig butchering" scam, a form of online fraud in which perpetrators build trust through a perceived romantic relationship before persuading targets to send money or invest in fake opportunities.
Justice Department records indicate Okuonghae used bank accounts under his control to receive and move money generated through romance schemes, rental deceptions, and cryptocurrency investment fraud between 2019 and 2023.
Federal authorities linked seven victims across six states to the operation. Court records show that a Washington woman lost $4,100 after paying a deposit for a rental property that was never available. Other victims were persuaded to send money through fabricated online identities, fictitious emergencies, and false promises of financial returns.
Prosecutors said more than $1.2 million in victim losses was traced to accounts associated with Okuonghae. Investigators also found that he allegedly provided misleading explanations to a bank that flagged suspicious transfers and later discovered backdated invoices linked to his purported car-parts business.
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Newark Field Office and prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New Jersey.
Also see: California Doctor Convicted in Largest $45M Botox Medicare Fraud Scheme Targeting Elderly Patients
In this investigation, prosecutors said an Ohio man was persuaded to send more than $416,000 after being told a woman he met online required financial help for medical equipment and hospital treatment.
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the scheme combined false health-related claims with investment deception, ultimately causing substantial financial losses. The case also illustrates a tactic commonly seen in so-called “pig butchering” schemes, where perpetrators spend weeks or months building trust before requesting money or promoting fraudulent investments.
Federal authorities advise the public to independently verify online identities, be cautious of urgent requests involving medical expenses, and avoid sending money or investment funds to individuals known only through internet communications.
Reference:
1. U.S. Attorney's Office, District of New Jersey. “New Jersey Man Sentenced to 51 Months in Prison for Conspiring to Launder Over $500,000 Obtained from Internet-Related Frauds.” U.S. Department of Justice. June 5, 2026. https://www.justice.gov/usao-nj/pr/new-jersey-man-sentenced-51-months-prison-conspiring-launder-over-500000-obtained.
(Rh/TP/MSM)