Le président de la République, Macky Sall, s'active pour obtenir le transfèrement du détenu Samba Kane au Sénégal, afin qu'il y purge sa peine, près de sa famille. Mais au même moment, un autre Sénégalais est détenu dans le Michigan plus précisément à Kalamazoo. Son nom : Pape Seck. Il était parti aux Etats Unis pour étudier, mais s'est finalement retrouvé derrière les barreaux.
Selon “Libération”, cet homme âgé e 41 ans, est mêlé à une rocambolesque affaire de fraude à l'assurance-vie qui porte sur 33 millions de dollars (environ 15 milliards de Fcfa). Selon l'accusation, Pape Seck avait pu monter un système ingénieux pour escroquer trois compagnies d'assurance.
Mais selon ses proches, tout ceci est une cabale et qu'il n'a absolument rien à voir avec les faits qui lui sont reprochés.
24 Commentaires
Mais
En Mai, 2015 (07:16 AM)Babacar
En Mai, 2015 (07:20 AM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (07:32 AM)Xeme
En Mai, 2015 (07:44 AM)Anonymebindia
En Mai, 2015 (08:01 AM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (08:11 AM)Souleymani
En Mai, 2015 (08:16 AM)Fuabisalu
En Mai, 2015 (08:20 AM)Yokhossou
En Mai, 2015 (10:45 AM)Et c'est les mêmes qui jurent par leurs marabouts, envoient de l'argent à leurs marabouts etc... HYPOCRISIE!!
Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (10:48 AM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (14:17 PM)Anonymeinfo
En Mai, 2015 (14:31 PM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (15:12 PM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (15:18 PM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (15:40 PM)Cable Dude
En Mai, 2015 (15:45 PM)A New York City-based insurance agent was sentenced June 7 in New Jersey to three years in prison for attempting to defraud two insurance companies in a life insurance scheme.
Pape Michael Seck, 39, of New York, N.Y., also was ordered to forfeit his New Jersey insurance license and pay $10,000 in fines by New Jersey Superior Court Judge Joseph V. Isabella.
Seck pleaded guilty April 12 to two counts of second-degree insurance fraud, admitting that between May 22, 2008, and July 27, 2009, he submitted false applications to Prudential Life Insurance Co. and Aviva Life Insurance Co.
The applications were for two $7 million life insurance policies on behalf of Mansour Seck, listing Pape Seck as Mansour Seck’s son and the beneficiary under the policies. He admitted that his father, whose name is Mansour Seck, did not apply for the life insurance, nor did anyone by that name.
The New Jersey Office of the Insurance Fraud Prosecutor investigation determined that although Mansour Seck is the name of his father, the defendant, in filing the applications, also used identifying information, including a Social Security Number, from two other real people named Mansour Seck, one a retired dignitary from Senegal in Africa and the other a New Jersey resident. Mansour Seck is a common name in the country of Senegal, authorities said.
Neither insurance company issued a policy.
Pape Seck admitted that a number of documents in support of the life insurance applications were false, including a letter, dated July 22, 2008, that was purportedly from a financial advisor of Mansour Seck, asserting that Mansour Seck had assets in excess of $10 million and that he was able to pay a $300,000 premium from his current income and savings. An HSBC account summary for the purported checking and savings accounts of Mansour Seck, indicating a total balance of $4,311,035.57, also was fraudulent, as was a letter submitted to Prudential dated July 2, 2008, purportedly from a doctor who reported that he had performed a nuclear stress test on Mansour Seck and a letter from another doctor, indicating that she performed a Magnetic Resonance Angiography on Mansour Seck on July 4, 2008, prosecutors said. The 2006 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, Form 1040 for Mansour Seck he provided also was fraudulent, officials said.
Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (16:23 PM)@cable Dude
En Mai, 2015 (16:48 PM)Ani
En Mai, 2015 (17:58 PM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (18:01 PM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (18:29 PM)patriotes car ne racontent que des conneries qui ne les
Anonyme@ Cable Dude
En Mai, 2015 (01:06 AM)Babs
En Mai, 2015 (02:06 AM)Anonyme
En Mai, 2015 (10:54 AM)Participer à la Discussion