![]() |
| Nkechi Ekere Eze. |
A Nigerian scholar, Nkechi Ekere Eze, who was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation sometime base, has entered a plea deal, confessing to laundering over $1.4 million and evading tax.
Ms Eze
entered the plea deal following her arraignment before a United States District
Court, Western District of Michigan, Southern Division, two days after her
arrest by the FBI.
Ms Ezeh is
the founder and Chief Executive Officer of a now-closed nonprofit organisation,
Early Learning Neighborhood Collaborative, which funded and supported agencies
that provided early learning opportunities for disadvantaged children.
Court
records seen by Peoples Gazette show that the tenured professor who won the
West Michigan Woman 2018 Woman of the Year award pleaded guilty to wire
fraud and tax evasion.
In an
interview published by VoyageMichigan, a U.S.-based magazine, on August 31,
2022, Ms Eze, who said she has five children with her husband, Pius, boasted
about her hard work and commitment to good family values.
“I
honestly cannot recall not working two jobs and then tending to the real work
at the home of cleaning, cooking, washing, school runs, etc., and of raising my
children. I accomplished all that while at the same time raising, with my
husband Pius, our five children, Onyinyé MK, Obinna, Akuezumkpa, Nnenna, and
Nkechi-Nicole,” Ms Ezeh told VoyageMichigan.com.
According
to court documents seen by The Gazette, the FBI and the court found that Ms
Ezeh laundered funds through her NGO to fund her personal travel, including
trips to Hawaii, Liberia, and Nigeria.
Ms Eze
reached the agreement rather than have the case go before a federal grand jury
for potential indictment.
The court
documents, which outline the plea agreement she signed, further revealed that
most of the stolen funds were wired to Nigeria, pointing to a possibility that
she used the money to acquire properties in the West African country.
Ms Eze’s
former bookkeeper, Sharon Killebrew, aged 70, is serving four years, six months
in prison after she pleaded guilty to conspiring with Ms Eze to defraud a
federally funded program and to evade tax. She was convicted of conspiring to
embezzle $1,170,935.
The ELNC
board welcomed their plea bargain.
“We
welcome the news of Nkechi Eze’s acceptance of responsibility for reckless and
unconscionable actions,” the ELNC board said in a statement. “The millions of
dollars taken from ELNC forced the organisation to close its doors and deprived
children in Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, and Battle Creek’s poorest neighborhoods
of essential early childhood services needed to prepare them for kindergarten
success.”
The board
further noted that Ms Eze’s plea and eventual sentencing will bring
accountability and justice.
“Ezeh’s
acceptance of the charges, and acknowledgment of her role as the architect of
the scheme carried out with Sharon Killebrew against some of the community’s
most vulnerable children and families, marks an important step toward the
closure this board has sought for nearly three years,” the board said.
Ms Eze has
agreed to pay restitution, while the government said the losses to ELNC will be
$1.4 million.
She is
also required to pay $390,000 in losses caused by her failure to report
personal and business income to the IRS from 2017 to 2022, court records said.
In the
plea deal, Ms Ezeh agreed that she conspired with Ms Killebrew and others to
defraud ELNC and its donors, including the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services’ Early Head Start Program and private donors, of $1.4 million.
The court
documents reveal that Ms Ezeh directed Ms Killebrew to generate fictitious
invoices for goods and services that were not received by ELNC. The former also
caused the latter to disburse funds to herself (Ms Killebrew) and her
contracting company, and provide the rest to the professor and others.
In one
instance, Ms Eze directed Ms Killebrew to incorporate a non-profit with the
state using stolen identities of three people, the plea agreement said.
Ms Eze is
scheduled to plead guilty on January 14, 2026, before U.S. District Judge Hala
Jarbou in Lansing.
While tax
evasion is a felony that attracts a five-year jail term, the wire-fraud charge
carries a penalty of up to 20 years in federal prison.

0 Comments
DISCLAIMER
The views and opinions expressed on this platform as comments were freely made by each person under his or her own volition or responsibility and were neither suggested nor dictated by the owners of News PLATFORM or any of their contracted staff. So we take no liability whatsoever for such comments.
Please take note!