Instagram celebrity, Hushpuppi, Woodberry and ten other gang members were arrested this month accused of cyber fraud and money laundering.
Dubai Police, however, seized Dh150 million in cash and more than a dozen luxury cars during the raid accused of online fraud and money laundering.
In a video shared by police, which went viral in no time, officers explained how they arrested Raymond Abbas, better known as Hushpuppi.
The Nigerian socialite is accused of creating websites that appear identical to those of well-known companies and banks where fraudulent emails and messages that prompted them to log in or make payments on the fake sites were established.
Hushpuppi is accused of being part of a gang that hacked corporate emails and directed huge payments to accounts they controlled.
According to the investigation, Olalekan Jacob Ponle, known as Woodberry, was also arrested along with 10 other men in an operation that involved six police teams.
Police confiscated 13 luxury cars, valued at about Dh25m, 21 computers and 47 smartphones during the incident.
They said the email addresses of 800,000 people were found and Dh1.6 billion could have been stolen from victims of the alleged scam.
The operation was called Fox Hunt 2, after a raid Dubai Police carried out in February on an African cyber-crime gang accused of stealing Dh32m in a similar scam.
Mr. Abbas, who has more than two million followers on Instagram, is accused of posing as a property investor and businessman.
Posts on his account suggest a lavish lifestyle, with images of him taking trips on a private jet, wearing Louis Vuitton tracksuits and a Dh550,000 Richard Mille watch, and posing outside the Four Seasons hotel in Paris.
A video of a wedding in Dubai attended by Nigerian celebrities, which made headlines in his home country, showed Mr. Abbas dancing as he threw $100 notes into the air.
Dubai Police CID chief Brig Jamal Al Jalaf said he posed as a successful businessman “celebrating his wealth via social media platforms, in an attempt to lure victims from all over the world”.
“The suspects targeted victims overseas by creating fake websites for well-known companies and banks in a bid to steal victims’ credit card information and then launder the stolen money,” Brig Al Jalaf said.
Last week, a senior prosecutor told The National that “initial information includes that he was part of this gang which fraudulently obtained cash and cars from people”.
He said the prosecution investigations were only beginning.
Mr. Abbas is also accused of committing fraud in Europe, the US and Nigeria.
Dubai Police chief Lt Gen Abdullah Al Marri said cybercrime and financial scams on victims at home and abroad remain a major focus for the force.
“As criminals constantly change their criminal methods, the elite officers of Dubai Police work tirelessly with the latest technologies to tackle emerging and transnational organized crime,” Gen Al Marri said.