【in his eroticized two women's torsos we see william de kooning】
Bet you regret deleting all those emails you got from that Nigerian prince.
More than $43 million in U.S. dollar notes was uncovered in an apartment in Nigeria by the country's Economic and in his eroticized two women's torsos we see william de kooningFinancial Crimes Commission.
SEE ALSO: Looks like Manny Pacquiao won't fight Amir Khan after all because of a scamThe EFCC announced on Facebook that they had received a whistleblower's tip that someone had been moving bags in and out of the apartment.

Naturally, everyone only had one thing to say about this.
@ctvedmonton I think this is mine, I got a legimate looking email a few weeks back about it. Please contact pic.twitter.com/NAgj6Kdixr
— iwan hughes (@IwanHughes2001) April 16, 2017
@ctvedmonton The guy must've email a thousand people asking for help transferring that money. Was even willing to pay. No one wanted to help. #Sad!
— Patrick McDevitt (@pfmcdevitt) April 15, 2017
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
@ctvedmonton Okay, okay, my credit card number is 4053 2311 3441 2211, so please do go ahead and release the funds to my bank account.
— The Ottawa Ross (@ottaross) April 16, 2017
@ctvedmonton Must be the home of the fabled Nigerian Prince we have heard about...
— Notminenotnownotever (@notminenotnow) April 16, 2017
@CNN Maybe I should email that Nigerian prince back, after all 🤔
— Kristina Montesano (@ohthatkristina) April 14, 2017
The news trended after social media users quickly picked up on the fact that the event occurred in Nigeria -- a reference to the many scam emails often sent from a "Nigerian royal figure" soliciting users to transfer thousands of dollars with the promise of a larger reward at the end.
Most of the emails start off with something like this:
I've gotten a lot of spam, but Ive never actually received an email claiming to be from a Nigerian prince, until now pic.twitter.com/7HmirOZdHG
— Alex Gill (@thealexgill) April 1, 2015
According to the EFCC, in addition to the U.S. dollars, $75,000 worth of Nigerian currency and $35,000 in British pound sterling were also found "neatly arranged" inside fireproof cabinets hidden behind wooden panels.
Investigations are ongoing, said Nigerian officials.
Earlier last week, the EFCC uncovered some $817,000 in cash from a market in Lagos, and some $1.5 million at a shopping mall.
Nigeria is ranked 136 out of 176 countries on Transparency International's Corruption Perception Index in 2016.
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