R Dollar Money Transfer owner alleges GTBank fake alert fraud, accusing Abayomi Ayoola of defrauding him of N225 million in South East London.
The owner of R Dollar Money Transfer in South East London has accused Abayomi Ayoola, a man popularly known within the community as Belle and based in Kidbrooke, South East London, of defrauding him to the tune of two hundred and twenty five million naira through the use of fake debit alerts styled to resemble genuine GTBank transfer receipts.
According to the complainant, the scheme involved Ayoola presenting documents bearing GTBank’s GTWorld branding, purporting to show large sums transferred as payment, alerts the complainant says turned out not to reflect genuine credit into his account.
Documents made available to Freelanews, presented as evidence in the matter, show a series of purported GTBank transfer receipts in Ayoola’s name, addressed to a recipient identified as LA Capital Enterprises, with amounts ranging from twenty five million to forty five million naira between March and April 2026. See alerts below.
Freelanews could not independently verify the authenticity of the receipts, and there is no indication that GTBank itself was involved in or aware of their alleged misuse.
A voice conversation made available to this publication captures exchanges in which Ayoola was repeatedly pressed to settle the outstanding sum. In the recording, he is heard offering different reasons for the delay each time he was contacted, according to the source who shared the audio. Listen below.
@freelanews Between Abayomi Ayoola (Belle) and R Dollar Money Transfer, South East, London #f #fyp ♬ original sound – Freelanews
The allegations gained further traction online after a blogger on Instagram called Ayoola out publicly.
The blogger claimed that Ayoola was compelled to refund N45million Naira and £10,000, part of the disputed money only after being confronted on a phone call, a claim that has since circulated among followers tracking the unfolding saga. The Instagram post is still the publisher’s account.
The case has stirred considerable concern within the South East London community, where money transfer operators such as R Dollar rely heavily on trust and personal relationships with clients sending funds across borders.
It also raises fresh questions about the ease with which bank style alerts can reportedly be fabricated and used to mislead victims in informal remittance transactions.
Efforts to reach Abayomi Ayoola for his side of the story were unsuccessful as at the time of filing this report.
GTBank has also not issued any statement regarding the documents bearing its branding. Freelanews will provide an update should either party respond.

Freelanews is the editorial byline of Freelanews.com, used for staff reports, news updates, press releases, and collaborative stories produced by the Freelanews Editorial Team.






















