Photo: Obinwanne Okeke aka Invictus Obi

There is anxiety over the whereabouts of disgraced Nigerian entrepreneur Obinwanne Okeke, who was once celebrated as a rising business mogul, as record indicated that he is no longer listed in U.S. federal custody.

Okeke, once celebrated by Forbes and other ranking agencies, also known as “Invictus Obi” missing name from list of prisoners in US custody, is sparking speculation about an unannounced release more than two years before the end of his 10-year prison sentence.

There are also concerns that he might have been shipped out of the US as part of President Donald Trump’s wide immigration reform, which involved shipping of prisons to other countries, including the deadly CECOT maximum security prison in El Salvador.

A search of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) inmate database on December 23, 2025, shows his status as “Not in BOP Custody as of: 12/23/2025.”

The update offers no explanation, leaving unanswered whether the 36-year-old benefitted from a sentence reduction, early release programme, or another form of legal relief. U.S. authorities have not issued any public clarification, and the circumstances surrounding the change remain unclear.

Okeke’s fall from grace was one of the most dramatic in recent Nigerian tech history. Before his arrest, he had been widely profiled as a rising business star, featured on Forbes’ 100 Most Influential Young Africans list and frequently showcased as an example of young entrepreneurial success.

That image disintegrated in August 2019 when FBI agents arrested him at Dulles International Airport, Washington D.C., as he attempted to board a flight out of the United States.

U.S. prosecutors accused him of masterminding a multimillion-dollar business email compromise scheme that targeted Unatrac Holding Limited, the international sales subsidiary of Caterpillar equipment. Investigators said the scheme began in April 2018 after conspirators gained access to a company executive’s email account through a phishing attack. With control of the account, the fraud ring sent fake wire-transfer instructions supported by forged invoices, ultimately siphoning more than $11 million.

In June 2020, Okeke pleaded guilty to wire fraud. A U.S. federal judge later sentenced him in February 2021 to 10 years in prison, setting a projected release date of September 3, 2028. Because his conviction was for federal offences, experts say a transfer to a state facility is unlikely, adding to questions about his current status.

As of now, Okeke’s name no longer appearing on the BOP register has fuelled speculation but no confirmed answers. Neither the U.S. Department of Justice nor the Federal Bureau of Prisons has issued a statement explaining the development.

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