Tag: Abuja Court

  • JUST IN: Abuja court fails to deliver judgment in Lamido’s case against PDP

    JUST IN: Abuja court fails to deliver judgment in Lamido’s case against PDP

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has failed to deliver its judgment earlier scheduled for November 13 in the suit filed by former governor of Jigawa State, Sule Lamido.

    Lamido is by the suit, seeking among others, to stop the national convention of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) planned for November 15 and 16 in Ibadan, Oyo State.

    Justice Peter Lifu had on November 11, after taking final arguments from lawyers to parties in the suit, adjourned till November 13 for judgment.

    Read Also: Court to rule November 11 on Lamido’s request to stop PDP convention

    When parties got to court on Thursday, an official of court announced that the judgment was not ready but that parties would be notified when it is ready.

    Details shortly…

  • Alleged forgery, false information: Court shifts trial of lawyer, three Ghanaians till October 

    Alleged forgery, false information: Court shifts trial of lawyer, three Ghanaians till October 

    A High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) has rescheduled the arraignment of a Nigerian lawyer, Abu Arome, three Ghanaians – Sam Jonah, Kojo Ansah and Victor Quainoo – and a firm, Mobus Property Nigeria Ltd over alleged forgery and giving of false information till October 7.

    The arrangement, which was earlier planned for July 16 by Justice Modupe-Osho Adebiyi (sitting in court 18), was shifted owing to heavy workload of the court on Wednesday.

    The defendants are, in the charge marked CR/402/2025 and filed in the name of the Inspector General of Police (IGP), accused of forging companies board resolutions and making false claims in petitions to the police.

    They are also accused of forging documents in a bid to illegally takeover two firms – Houses for Africa Nigeria Ltd and Jonahcapital Nigeria Ltd.

    READ ALSO; UPDATED: Why I resigned from PDP, by Atiku

    The defendants were said to have between January 2010 and January 2025 knowingly gave false information to the Commissioner of Police FCT Command and the Inspector General of Police through a petition dated 23rd January 2025 and 9th September, 2024 against John Townley Johnson, Adeniran Ogunmuyiwa and Paul Odili that they committed an offences of fraud, land grabbing, identity theft and misled the police officers, which they knew to be fatse and thereby committed an offence punishable under section 140 of the Penal Code Law.  

    In a count of the charge, the defendants were alleged to have between January 2010 and January 2025 while acting in concert, forged the board resolution of Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited purportedly transferring the 7,500,000 ordinary shares from Houses for Africa Holdings Inc. to Samuel Esson Jonah and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 362 and punishable under Section 364 of the Penal Code Law. 

    In another count, they were said to have, between January 2010 and January 2025 in Abuja, while acting in concert, fraudulently removed from Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited all Nigerian directors and redistributed its share capital amongst yourselves and converted Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited as majority shareholder and thereby committed an offence contrary to section 18(2)(b) of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act 2022 and punishable under section 18(3) of the same Act.

    In yet another count, the defendants were alleged to have, 

    between January 2010 and January 2025 in Abuja while acting in concert, processed title documents of property belonging to Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited to Mobus Property Nigeria Limited with the aim of permanently depriving them of the said property w thin Riverpark Estate, Abuja and thereby committed an offence contrary to section 18 (2)(b) of the money laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act 2022 and punishable under section 18(3) of the same Act. 

    They are, in count 23 accused of knowingly submitting false information to the authorities of Corporate Affairs Comm’ssion with the intention of misleading Corporate Affairs Comm’ssion that you are a Nigerian in order to illegally increase Jonahcapital Nigeria Limited’s ordinary shares capital from 1,000,000 to 1,000,000,000 which they knew as false and believe it to be false, and thereby committed an offence punishable under section 140 of the Penal Code Law.

    In count 25 the defendants were said to have, between January 2010 and January 2025 in Abuja, while acting in concert, forged the signature of Adeniran Ogunmuyiwa and the letterhead of Houses of Africa Nigeria Limited and use it to remove all directors and take over the company and you thereby committed an offence contrary to section 311 and punishable under Section 312 of the Penal Code Law.

  • Court sets July 16 for trial of lawyer, three Ghanaians over alleged forgery, false information

    Court sets July 16 for trial of lawyer, three Ghanaians over alleged forgery, false information

    A High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) has scheduled July 16 for the arraignment of a Nigerian lawyer, Abu Arome, three Ghanaians – Sam Jonah, Kojo Ansah and Victor Quainoo – and a firm, Mobus Property Nigeria Ltd, over alleged forgery and giving of false information.

    According to a notice issued by the court, the five defendants would be arraigned before Justice Modupe-Osho  Adebiyi (sitting in court 18) on a 26-count charge marked CR/402/2025 filed in the name of the Inspector General of Police (IGP).

    The defendants are, in the charge, accused of forging companies’ board resolutions and making false claims in petitions to the police.

    They are also accused of forging documents in a bid to illegally take over two firms – Houses for Africa Nigeria Ltd and Jonah Capital Nigeria Ltd.

    READ ALSO; Adeleke slams Aregbesola Over 2026 guber threat, labels his tenure worst in Osun history

    The defendants were said to have between January 2010 and January 2025  knowingly gave false information to the Commissioner of Police FCT Command and the Inspector General of Police through a petition dated 23rd January 2025 and 9th September, 2024 against John Townley Johnson, Adeniran Ogunmuyiwa and Paul Odili that they committed an offences of fraud, land grabbing, identity theft and misled the police officers, which they knew to be fatse and thereby committed an offence punishable under section 140 of the Penal Code Law. 

    In a count of the charge, the defendants were alleged to have between January 2010 and January 2025 while acting in concert, forged the board resolution of Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited purportedly transferring the 7,500,000 ordinary shares from Houses for Africa Holdings Inc. to Samuel Esson Jonah and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 362 and punishable under Section 364 of the Penal Code Law.

    In another count, they were said to have, between January 2010 and January 2025 in Abuja, while acting in concert, fraudulently removed from Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited all Nigerian directors and redistributed its share capital amongst yourselves and converted Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited as majority shareholder and thereby committed an offence contrary to section 18(2)(b) of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act 2022 and punishable under section 18(3) of the same Act.

    In yet another count, the defendants were alleged to have, between January 2010 and January 2025 in Abuja while acting in concert, processed title documents of property belonging to Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited to Mobus Property Nigeria Limited to permanently deprive them of the said property w thin Riverpark Estate, Abuja and thereby committed an offence contrary to section 18 (2)(b) of the money laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act 2022 and punishable under section 18(3) of the same Act.

    They are, in count 23 accused of knowingly submitting false information to the authorities of Corporate Affairs Commission with the intention of misleading Corporate Affairs Commission that you are a Nigerian to illegally increase Jonahcapital Nigeria Limited’s ordinary shares capital from 1,000,000 to 1,000,000,000 which they knew as false and believe it to be false, and thereby committed an offence punishable under section 140 of the Penal Code Law.

    In count 25 the defendants were said to have, between January 2010 and January 2025 in Abuja, while acting in concert, forged the signature of Adeniran Ogunmuyiwa and the letterhead of Houses of Africa Nigeria Limited and use it to remove all directors and take over the company and you thereby committed an offence contrary to section 311 and punishable under Section 312 of the Penal Code Law.

  • Court lifts order restraining INEC, SIEC, others over Kwara council poll

    Court lifts order restraining INEC, SIEC, others over Kwara council poll

    • Rejects PDP’s contempt claim

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has lifted the ex-parte order it issued restraining the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from releasing the national voters’ register to the Kwara State Independent Electoral Commission (KWSIEC) to conduct local government election in Kwara State on Saturday.

    Justice Peter Lifu, who issued the order on July 29, upon an ex-parte motion by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), vacated it yesterday while ruling on an application by KWASIEC.

    Justice Lifu, in the ruling, upheld the argument by KWASIEC’s lawyer, Johnson Usman (SAN) that the order, being an ex-parte one, ought to be lifted after 14 days, in line with extant legal provisions.

    The judge also dismissed the allegation of contempt of court made by the PDP against the Chairman of KWSIEC, Okanlawon Baba.

    Read Also: Nigeria’s money-making practices

    PDP had sought that the KWASIEC chairman be committed to prison for allegedly violating a subsisting order of the court.

    In the ruling yesterday, Justice Lifu dismissed the motion for committal filed by the PDP on the grounds that the KWASIEC chairman was not served personally as required by law.

    Justice Lifu held that since committal proceeding is quash criminal one, the motion commencing it must be served personally on the alleged contemnor and not through any other party or person.

    The judge held that the failure of PDP to effect personal service on the alleged contemnor was fatal to its case and amounted to violation of KWASIEC chairman’s right to fair hearing guaranteed under Section 36 of the Constitution.

    He said: “I have carefully and painstakingly perused the arguments for and against the motion to commit the contemnor to prison.

    “Where the liberty of person is at stake, due of process of law must be carefully followed.

    “In the instant case, the fundamental right of the alleged contemnor to fair hearing, as enshrined in Section 36 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, was breached by not serving him personally and this makes the motion for committal to prison to be liable to dismissal and is hereby dismissed,” the judge said.

    Following a motion ex-parte filed by the PDP, the court on July 29 issued an order restraining INEC from releasing the national voters register to the KWSIEC for the purpose of conducting the September 21 local government elections in Kwara State.

    It equally restrained  KWASIEC and the state’s Attorney General from receiving, accepting or using the national voter register or any part relating to Kwara State from the electoral body for the council’s election in Kwara State.

    The PDP had, while alleging contempt, claimed that despite the pending orders of the court, KWASIEC’s chairman wrote two letters to political parties, one inviting them for peace meeting and the other requesting them to submit names and photographs of their agents for the purpose of the election.

    At the conclusion of the ruling yesterday, Justice Lifu said he would return the case file to the court’s chief judge for reassignment because his court only sat on the case as a vacation court.

    In the substantive case, the PDP is contending among others, that the KWASIEC was in grievous contravention, breach and violation of sections 9, 28, 29 and 106 of the Electoral Act 2022, sections 20 (1) and 21 (1) of Kwara State Local Government Electoral (Amendment) Law, 2024.

    The PDP claimed that the conditions and precedents stipulated in Local Government Electoral laws in Kwara State were allegedly deliberately ignored by KWASIEC under unacceptable circumstances.

    It alleged that KWASIEC had applied to INEC for the register of voters in Kwara to use the same in the conduct of the local government polls.

    The party said the action was in breach and violation of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, Electoral Act, 2022, as well as Kwara State Local Government Electoral (Amendment) Law, 2024.