In a six-day trial at the U.S. District Court in Greenbelt, prosecutors said Appiah looked through
online dating websites to initiate the relationships, including with victims in
Wisconsin, California and Florida. Once he had their trust, prosecutors said,
Appiah would ask for money. Appiah and his co-conspirators often pitched “false
stories and promises to convince the victims to send them money,” according to
a statement from the office of Maryland U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein, which
has prosecuted a series of similar cases. Four victims testified at trial,
including a recently divorced high school guidance counselor.
She paid Appiah
$160,000, prosecutors said, for what he told her were emergency travel and
health situations. Appiah had told the woman he was in love with her and would
help raise her children, prosecutors said. Appiah created 10 bank accounts to
receive the funds, authorities said, and in some cases used the money to make
purchases that he then shipped to others outside the United States. In one
instance, prosecutors said, Appiah used the name and other identity information
of a victim as he deposited the victim’s cashier’s check into his own bank
account. The scheme Appiah ran lasted from December 2013 to June 2015.
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