KONSEQUENCES – MY TRIP TO NGATA. WILSON CHE FONGUH
Prison Register Number: 62090-509, Age: 42 (as of 28 Oct 2024). Locked up at Lewisburg FCI Prison USA, Expected Release Date: 05 Sep 2027.
Cameroonians in the Diaspora often feel invincible and untouchable, that is why they felt comfortable to incite and sponsored terrorism in #Cameroon. WILSON CHE FONGUH is just one of Dozens of Cases where these idiots were arrested abroad and sent to prison for their role in causing havoc in #Cameroon
Friday, May 26, 2023 - Baltimore, Maryland – U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett sentenced Wilson Che Fonguh, age 41, of Bowie, Maryland, to 63 months in federal prison, followed by two years of supervised release, for conspiracy, for transporting firearms with obliterated serial numbers, and for smuggling firearms and ammunition from the United States to Cameroon through Nigeria. Judge Bennett also ordered Fonguh to pay a fine of $25,000. Fonguh was convicted of those charges on May 6, 2022, along with co-defendants Eric Fru Nji, age 42, of Fort Washington, Maryland and Wilson Nuyila Tita, age 47, of Owings Mills, Maryland, after a two-week trialFriday, May 26, 2023 - Baltimore, Maryland – U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett sentenced Wilson Che Fonguh, age 41, of Bowie, Maryland, to 63 months in federal prison, followed by two years of supervised release, for conspiracy, for transporting firearms with obliterated serial numbers, and for smuggling firearms and ammunition from the United States to Cameroon through Nigeria. Judge Bennett also ordered Fonguh to pay a fine of $25,000. Fonguh was convicted of those charges on May 6, 2022, along with co-defendants Eric Fru Nji, age 42, of Fort Washington, Maryland and Wilson Nuyila Tita, age 47, of Owings Mills, Maryland, after a two-week trial #Cameroon.
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/Cw3AYswa43dat3rB/
According to the evidence presented at trial, from at least November 2017 through July 19, 2019, Fonguh and his co-defendants conspired with each other and with others to export firearms, ammunition and other military typed items from the United States to Nigeria. Specifically, the evidence at trial established that Fonguh and his co-conspirators secreted 38 firearms, 28 of which had the obliterated serial numbers in a shipping container that they sent out of the Port of Baltimore in January of 2019. The guns included sniper rifles, SKS assault rifles (some with bayonets), other rifles and several handguns. There were 44 high-capacity magazines, two rifle scopes and over 35,000 rounds of ammunition.
As detailed in trial testimony, Fonguh and his co-conspirators contributed funds for the purchase of firearms, ammunition, reloading materials and other equipment for shipping overseas to separatists fighting against the Government of Cameroon.
According to their plea agreements, co-defendant Tamufor St. Michael, Roger Akem and others purchased the ammunition, firearms, and other military-type items, both online and in person. The evidence proved that Fonguh and his co-conspirators concealed the firearms, ammunition, rifle scopes, and other items in duffle bags and heavily wrapped packages inside sealed compressor units, placing those items into a shipping container destined for Nigeria. Fonguh and his co-conspirators communicated about their efforts and plans to ship weapons and ammunitions using an on-line encrypted messaging application and code words in order to conceal their activities.
#MKPD