A Nigerian politician has been sentenced to five years in a U.S. federal prison for a romance fraud scheme that robbed eight victims of more than $3.5 million over a decade.
Franklin Ikechukwu Nwadialo, 42, chairman of the Ogbaru Local Government Area of Anambra State, a position he had only recently won in elections held on September 28, 2024, was sentenced Monday in the U.S. District Court in Tacoma, Washington, before Judge Tiffany M. Cartwright, who minced no words in condemning the scale of human suffering the defendant had engineered.
“This crime was devastating,” Judge Cartwright said from the bench, adding that it is “not an exaggeration to say it ruined lives, not only financial lives,” but also those burdened by the emotional wreckage left behind: shame, depression, and a painful isolation from the very family members victims once trusted.
For approximately 15 years, Nwadialo operated his scheme from Nigerian soil, hiding behind a fictitious American persona he called “Giovanni,” a name he deployed in various forms across popular dating platforms, including Match, Zoosk, and Christian Café.
Armed with stolen photographs, fabricated military credentials, and the calculated patience of a seasoned con artist, he told victims he was a soldier deployed overseas, a convenient lie that explained why he could never meet them in person.
The victims he selected were not chosen at random. Prosecutors revealed a chillingly deliberate pattern: Nwadialo specifically targeted older, widowed, or divorced individuals, men and women already wounded by loss, loneliness, and heartbreak, and therefore far more susceptible to the affections of a seemingly devoted partner. He exploited their grief with ruthless precision.
Once he had cultivated trust, sometimes over months, sometimes years, the financial demands would begin, each one wrapped in a new layer of manufactured crisis. In one case, he told a victim that the military had fined him $150,000 for inadvertently revealing his location to her, and he needed her help to pay it.
He told another victim he was investing her money on her behalf. He claimed he needed money for his father’s funeral. He asked for help with his son’s school fees. He even represented himself as running a non-profit organization providing services for autistic children, a cover story prosecutors described as particularly brazen.
“No scheme was too low for these conspirators,” First Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles Neil Floyd said in a statement released by the Department of Justice on Tuesday.
The human cost of Nwadialo’s operation is perhaps best illustrated in the individual stories of his victims. One woman spent three full years in a romantic “relationship” with his fictional Giovanni persona, never once suspecting the man she confided in, planned a future with, and sent money to was a fraud operating thousands of miles away. It took an FBI intervention to shatter the illusion.
Another victim, a widow who believed she had found love again following the death of her husband, lost everything. Her home. Her life savings. And even after the scam was uncovered, she continues to suffer financially, still grappling with the taxes, fees, and penalties she incurred after liquidating her accounts and property to help a man who never existed. “Try as they might,” prosecutors wrote in their submission to the court, “those victims may never truly recover from Nwadialo’s conduct.”
Nwadialo’s downfall came when he made the fatal miscalculation of stepping onto American soil. The FBI arrested him at a Texas airport upon his arrival in the United States in 2024. He had operated from overseas for over 15 years, apparently believing that geographical distance would shield him from American justice. It did not.
He was indicted in December 2023 on 14 counts of wire fraud connected to his romance scheme. He has since been convicted and sentenced to the five-year term prosecutors sought.
“For years, Mr. Nwadialo preyed on vulnerable victims looking for relationships online, gained their trust, and told them lies to steal their life savings totaling millions of dollars,” said W. Mike Harrington, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Seattle field office.
“Fortunately, although he operated his romance scams from overseas, Mr. Nwadialo ultimately travelled to the United States, where he could be arrested and held accountable for his crimes.”
Nwadialo’s conviction arrives amid growing concern over the global epidemic of romance fraud. According to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, Americans lose hundreds of millions of dollars annually to romance scams, a figure experts widely believe is significantly underreported, as many victims, paralyzed by shame, never come forward at all.
The elderly and recently bereaved are disproportionately targeted, making schemes like Nwadialo’s not merely financial crimes but deeply personal violations.
The case was investigated by the FBI. It serves as a stark reminder that digital borders offer no permanent refuge for fraudsters and that the emotional devastation of romance scams can outlast any prison sentence handed down.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Franklin Ikechukwu Nwadialo, a Nigerian local government chairman, has been sentenced to five years in a U.S. federal prison for running a romance scam that stole $3.5 million from eight vulnerable victims over 15 years.
Posing as a military officer named “Giovanni” on dating platforms, he deliberately targeted grieving widows and divorcees, manipulating their loneliness for financial gain.
His arrest at a U.S. airport in 2024 proved that geographical distance is no shield from justice.
















