An Garda Síochána assess that around €94 million has been stolen and laundered in Ireland by a single organised-crime structure since 2020. The structure has been publicly identified by the Garda National Economic Crime Bureau as Black Axe, a West African criminal organisation now operating worldwide. This page is a live, updated reference: gang profile, the named-conviction ledger, and the deportation policy gap that should — but does not — close behind every successful prosecution.
The gang
Black Axe began as a university confraternity at the University of Benin in Nigeria in 1977. It is now recognised as a major organised-crime threat by An Garda Síochána, Interpol, the FBI, the Italian Carabinieri, and Norwegian and German law enforcement. Its core methods are romance fraud, business email compromise, invoice-redirect fraud, bank-account takeover (often via SIM-swap and intercepted password resets), money-mule recruitment (frequently through Snapchat targeting Irish young people), and SMS-based phishing.
“It is the assessment of the GNECB and INTERPOL that this Criminal Organisation is the Black AXE, a Criminal Organisation formed in West Africa in the mid-1970s and which is now operating worldwide.”
The Garda investigation into the gang is Operation SKEIN, the Irish leg of Interpol’s coordinated Operation JACKAL. Garda assessments, reported by The Irish Times, suggest Black Axe profits in Ireland may now rival or exceed those of the domestic drugs trade.
The case ledger
Every individual named below has been convicted, charged, or is currently before the courts in Ireland. Each entry is sourced to credible Irish-outlet court reporting. 7 of the 8 named defendants have been convicted; the remainder are charged and proceeding through the courts. See the full sortable ledger →
Elike Francis Ogbuefi (42) — Clonard Road, Crumlin, Dublin; Steven Silvester (32) — The Paddocks, Morristown, Newbridge, Co Kildare
Sentenced for directing a global money-laundering operation that moved €6.17m through romance fraud, smishing, and a network of bank accounts. Prosecution described it as "a worldwide, highly sophisticated money laundering scheme on a breathtaking scale." Judge Nolan called the pair "a colonel and a major" of the operation; the investigating Garda detective accepted the characterisation. Both pleaded not guilty; convicted by jury in February 2026.
Olatunde Salawe (47) — No fixed address in Ireland (resident London)
Garda National Economic Crime Bureau probe into the use of fake AI-generated documents to obtain more than 145 credit cards. Gardaí alleged the accused had been flying to Dublin every week between September 2024 and March 2025 to collect Jobseeker's Allowance to which he was not entitled. Arrested at Dublin Airport disembarking a Ryanair flight. GNECB opposed bail; Detective Shane Devereux cited flight-risk concerns and access to false identity documents.
Funmi Abimbola (26) — Rosse Court Terrace, Lucan, Dublin
Bank of Ireland employee with a Master's in Human Resources. Provided bank accounts for the gang's money laundering and "controlled money mules, moving money and managing the finances and accounts." Judge Codd noted the "irony" of his having worked for Bank of Ireland during the offences and said he had been "effectively oiling the wheels" of the crime. AML Intelligence reported Gardaí had identified ten further bank-worker suspects in the broader Black Axe probe and that European law enforcement were warning of an "insider threat" at EU lenders.
The deportation gap
Ireland in 2025 signed 4,700 deportation orders and confirmed 2,111 departures. We’ve written separately about the 2,589-person gap between the two figures. Convicted foreign-national organised-crime members — the named defendants in the case ledger above and the hundreds more under Operation SKEIN — are the most clear-cut category the deportation regime should be capable of handling. They are not contested asylum claims. They are people the State has identified, prosecuted, convicted, sentenced, and accommodated at public expense for years. On the public record, charter operations of convicted West African organised-crime defendants on completion of sentence are not currently a feature of Ireland’s deportation programme.
The remigration regime exists precisely for this category. It is not being used.
Further reading
- 1 in 5: Ireland’s Black Axe Casebook and the Deportation Gap That Won’t Close It — the launch commentary piece for this hub (May 2026).
- 4,700 Orders, 2,111 Departures: Ireland’s Deportation Maths in 2025 — the policy context.
- Full case ledger — sortable table of every named defendant.
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