Hmm, a cushy 5 year free holiday at Her Majesty's pleasure or back to Nigeria where life is pretty tough (to put it politely). And get to keep 630,000 quid. Tricky choice.
Cybercrim who fleeced students faces scramble to repay stolen cash
A woman who made £1.2m through cybercrime has been ordered to pay back almost £630,000 accumulated from the hundreds of British students she helped to defraud. Ruth Smith-Ajala, 46, a Nigerian national of Redlands Way, Lambeth, was given a five-year sentence back in December 2013 for her role in stealing £1.2m from British …
COMMENTS
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Wednesday 16th September 2015 10:26 GMT Phil O'Sophical
Re: Where's the "scramble"?
> it doesn't appear she'll need to find any more money at all.
If she owns the houses outright, which the reference to "mortgage fraud" suggests is not the case. Unfortunately any lender probably has first call on the profits of a sale. If they could sell the houses, pay back the people she defrauded first, and then leave her to pay off any outstanding loans, it would be closer to justice.
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Wednesday 16th September 2015 12:49 GMT BitDr
Punctuation!
'Cybercrim who fleeced students faces scramble to repay stolen cash"
There really ought to be some punctuation in that headline. How does one "fleece students faces" without their knowledge? Is it done while they sleep? Who buys this face-fleece? I'm guessing that only those with thick face-fleece were targeted by this miscreant.
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Wednesday 16th September 2015 15:43 GMT benzaholic
Re: Punctuation!
My opinion is that the headline makes perfect sense with no punctuation, and I'm a bit of a comma fan.
If it included an apostrophe after students, THEN we would be discussing the students' faces. Without that apostrophe, the word students is used simply as a plural, not as a singular or plural possessive.
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