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British sprinter CJ Ujah appears in court with nine others charged accused of cryptocurrency fraud 'that saw one victim lose more than £300,000'

تكنولوجيا
Daily Mail
2026/05/28 - 21:38 503 مشاهدة
Published: 22:37, 28 May 2026 | Updated: 22:52, 28 May 2026 British sprinter CJ Ujah is among ten people who have appeared in court accused of taking part in an alleged cryptocurrency fraud which saw one victim reportedly lose more than £300,000. Ujah, a disgraced former Olympian who was stripped of his silver medal at the Tokyo Olympics, is alleged to have been a member of an organised crime group linked to a crypto scam. The scam was said to have involved phone calls to multiple victims from people purporting to be police officers and cryptocurrency companies. Victims are reported to have been tricked into sharing important security details before discovering funds stored in their crypto wallets had been stolen. One of the victims is alleged to have lost more than £300,000. An investigation was launched across multiple police forces which resulted in a series of coordinated search warrants being carried out across Kent, Essex and London on April 29. Today, Ujah and the nine other defendants appeared before Chelmsford Crown Court.  The 10 defendants are all charged with conspiracy to defraud, the Regional Organised Crime Unit Network said.  British sprinter CJ Ujah (pictured at the Tokyo Olympics) is alleged to have been a member of an organised crime group linked to a crypto scam From left to right: Ujah, Zharnel Hughes, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake with their silver medals at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Ujah raced in the 4x100m final but tested positive for two banned substances which led to his team being stripped of their silver medal None of the defendants were asked to enter pleas at Thursday's hearing, and they are next due to appear before Chelmsford Crown Court on July 24. Judge Mary Loram was told that a trial in the case could last for around three months, with no date or venue yet set. The defendants include sprinter Ujah, whose name appeared in the court list as Chijindu Ujah. He raised his hand when asked by the court clerk to confirm his identity, as he sat in the dock alongside five of his co-defendants, with the other four appearing by prison videolink. The 32-year-old, of Enfield, north London, became only the fifth Briton to break the 10-second barrier for the 100 metres, running 9.96 seconds in 2014. He won 4x100m relay gold at the world championships in London in 2017. At the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, he raced in the 4x100m final but tested positive for two banned substances which led to his team being stripped of their silver medal. He was subsequently cleared of intentionally taking prohibited substances. The other defendants are Brandon Mingeli, 25, of Thamesmead, south-east London; Louis Richards-Miller, 24, of Greenwich, south-east London; Joseph Umoru, 24, of Abbey Wood, south-east London; Adedeji Kujore, 24, of Erith, Kent; Taiwo Yusuf, 24, Kehinde Yusuf, 24, Jayden Nakayama, 25 - all from Greenwich; Samantha Gyabaa, 23, of Hackney, east London; and Jami Durston, 28, of Chelmsford, Essex. Mingeli, Richards-Miller, Umoru and Durston were remanded into custody, while the other six defendants were bailed. Sorry we are not currently accepting comments on this article.
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