Tag: Court

  • Driver remanded for abducting girl for eight years

    Driver remanded for abducting girl for eight years

    A driver, Timelyim Okulola, 28, on Thursday appeared in a Lugbe Grade 1 Area Court, Abuja, for alleged abduction of Sarah Sule for eight years.

    Okulola, who resides at Sauka Village, Airport Road, Abuja, was arraigned on two-count charge of abduction and adultery.

    Okulola pleaded not guilty to the charge and the judge, Mr Garba Ogbede, ordered that he should be remanded in prison custody till Feb. 10 for hearing.

    The Prosecutor, Mrs Ndidi Ukaoha, had told the court that Moses Sule of Idain, Kogi, reported the matter on Jan. 7 at the Iddo Police Station.

    Ukaoha said that Sule claimed that Sarah had been missing for eight years now and all effort to trace and bring her home proved abortive.

    “Not until sometime in December, 2015 that Sule discover that Okulola was harbouring Sarah since that eight years,’’ she said.

    She said that the Okulola got Sarah pregnant two times and she had two children for him without the consent of her family.

    The prosecutor also informs the court that during police investigation, the accused made a confessional statement.

    Ukaoha said the offence contravened Sections 272 and 387 of the Penal Code.

     

  • Court to determine ownership of Tafawa Balewa Square

    The Court of Appeal sitting in Lagos yesterday granted the High Court of Lagos State the jurisdiction to determine the ownership of the Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS), Lagos.

    The Lagos State Government, in suit No. M/940/2009, Attorney General of Lagos State vs. BHS International Limited & three others, pending at the High Court of Lagos State, had challenged the concessionary rights purportedly given to a private company, BHS International Limited, to manage, re-develop or rehabilitate  the Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS) without the state’s authority or knowledge.  The said concession was carried out by the Federal Government on October 17, 2007 during the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s administration.

    BHS International Limited, Attorney General of the Federation and other Defendants in the suit by way of preliminary objections in the lower court had challenged the jurisdiction of the Lagos State High Court to entertain the suit.  Justice  Atinuke Ipaye on October 8, 2012 had ruled that the High Court of Lagos State has jurisdiction to entertain the case.

    Dissatisfied with the ruling, BHS International Limited and Attorney General of the Federation in their various appeals  numbers: CA/L/914/12, BHS International Limited vs. Attorney General of Lagos State &  three others and CA/L/287M/13, Attorney General of the Federation vs. Attorney General of Lagos State & three others, filed their various  appeals against the Ruling.

    The Court of Appeal in a unanimous decision, dismissed the appeals and affirmed the ruling of the High Court of Lagos State that it has jurisdiction to entertain the case.

    With yesterday’s ruling, the coast is now clear for the High Court of Lagos State to continue with the hearing of the matter which has been stalled since 2012.

  • Ex-convict remanded over attempted murder

    Ex-convict remanded over attempted murder

    An ex-convict, Hassan Wahab, 32, who allegedly attempted to kill a pedestrian, was arraigned in Lagos on Wednesday.

    Wahab, who was previously convicted for robbery, is facing a charge of attempted murder before an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court.

    The Magistrate, Mrs Oluwadamilola Olanipekun, ordered that Wahab should be remanded in prison custody, pending further investigation and advice from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP).

    Earlier, the Prosecutor, Insp. William Ologun, told the court that the accused on Dec. 5, 2015, fired several shots at one Wale Odeniyi at Magboro area on the Lagos- Ibadan Expressway but missed target.

    The prosecutor said the accused claimed that he was unjustly imprisoned, following false accusations by his victim and decided to shoot Odeniyi in revenge.

    Wahab was arrested after the police were tipped off by members of the public.

    Ologun said the offence contravened Section 228 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

    The case was adjourned till Feb. 24 for trial.

     

  • Metuh gave me $2m cash to invest , witness tells court

    Metuh gave me $2m cash to invest , witness tells court

    Two testify as PDP spokesman’s trial begins in Abuja

    Trial opened yesterday at the Federal high Court, Abuja in the money laundering charge against Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) spokesman Olisa Metuh, with the prosecution calling two of its planned 18 witnesses.

    The first witness, Nneka Ararume, an employee of Asset and Resource Management (ARM) Company Limited, admitted collecting $2million in cash from Metuh in his house at the Prince and Princess Estate, Abuja in one day.

    Ararume, a Wealth Manager at ARM, said she collected the cash from Metuh on December 2, 2014 with an instruction to invest the money in the name of his company – Destra Investments Limited.

    The witness, who said she was assigned to manage Destra Investments Limited’s funds with ARM, said she later converted the $2m with the help of two bureau de change operators.

    Led in evidence by the lead prosecution lawyer, Sylvanus Tahir, the witness said: “Metuh gave me the sum of $2m in $100 bills. It was taken to bureau de change operators who would then transfer the money to ARM. From there (Metuh’s house), I proceeded to Sie Iyenome’s office at Wuse 2 where I gave him the sum of $1m.

    “I also invited Mr. Kabir Mohammed and I also gave him the sum of $1m to transfer the naira equivalent in favour of Destra Investment Limited. Later on the same day, December 2, 2014, Kabir and Sie Iyenome confirmed the receipt,” Ararume said.

    The defence sought an adjournment after Ararume completed her testimony.

    .Under cross-examination by the defence lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), Ararume said Destra, owned by Metuh, had been ARM’s client before she was employed by the financial services company in April 2013.

    When asked if she knew how long it took the defendants to accumulate the $2m he gave the witness in one day, the witness said “no”.

    The second prosecution witness, Sie Iyenome, one of the bureau de change operators who assisted Ararume to convert $1m out of the $2m she received from Metuh to naira, said he never knew Metuh, but knew only his company, Destra, on December 2, 2014 when Ararume forwarded the company’s account details to him for the payment of the naira equivalent of $1m he received from her.

    He said he reached an agreement on the rate of N183 per dollar with Ararume and that the total sum of the naira equivalent of the $1m amounting to N183m, was eventually paid to Destra’s account.

    Under cross-examination, the witness, who said he believed he was carrying out “a valid transaction”, also told the court that it was practice in the foreign exchange business to ask for the purpose which funds brought by customers were meant for.

    “Most times the question for the purpose the money is meant is done verbally, just for due diligence.

    “This was a brokering transaction. I’m not the one using the dollar. Even at that I asked who was selling and Nneka said it was her client at ARM, which was as good as a bank selling to you, Iyenome said.

    While being re-examined by Tahir, Iyenome confirmed that there was a limit imposed by law as to how much cash a bureau de change operator could transact with.

    “I am aware of some. I can’t name all of them. I’m aware that to sell to an individual travelling outside the country, the limit is $4,000, and for a business, the limit is $5,000,” Iyenome said.

    Earlier, the trial judge, Justice Okon Abang had rejected a move by Ikpeazu to prevent the commencement of the trial. The judge refused Ikpeazu’s application for adjournment to enable the defence team prepare for the trial.

    Also, the judge refused Ikpeazu’s request that his application for the variation of his client’s bail condition be heard. Ikpeazu had told the court that his client was yet to meet the conditions attached to the bail granted him.

    In a ruling, the judge said the application was not ripe for hearing. He adjourned further trial till today and fixed tomorrow for the hearing of Metuh’s application for the variation of his bail conditions.

     

  • How Dariye diverted Plateau’s N1.126b, EFCC witness tells court

    How Dariye diverted Plateau’s N1.126b, EFCC witness tells court

    •Ex-governor ‘gave ex-VP Atiku N100m’ •’Unregistered firm paid N176m’ •Trial resumes today

    About nine years after he was charged before the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, former Plateau State Governor Joshua Dariye’s trial for alleged money laundering opened yesterday.

    The prosecution called its first witness, who told the court how Dariye allegedly diverted the state’s N1.126billion ecological funds. Dariye is being tried before Justice Adebukola Banjoko.

    The witness, Musa Sunday (a detective with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission –EFCC), who was led in evidence by the lead prosecution lawyer, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), said he was involved in the investigation into how Dariye as governor allegedly diverted Plateau State’s funds.

    He told the court how Dariye allegedly applied for the ecological fund in the name of his state in 2001, but collected the money in person and diverted it.

    Sunday said upon receiving the cheque for the N1.126b ecological fund, Dariye allegedly lodged it with his private banker, the Abuja branch manager of All States Trust Bank Plc (now defunct), with instruction on how it should be disbursed.

    The witness said investigation by EFCC operatives revealed that the bank manager, allegedly acting on Dariye’s instruction, paid N100m in the name of “PDP South-west” which fund was later traced to a company – Marine Float Nigeria Limited – allegedly owned by former Vice President Atiku Abubakar. He said efforts to make Atiku refund the money failed.

    Sunday said Dariye instructed the payment of N178.8m to an unregistered company – Ebenezer Retnan Venture Limited, which was later discovered to belong to the ex-governor.

    He said Dariye ordered the payment of N80m from the ecological fund to Kingsley Nkumeh, a Permanent Secretary in the Ecological Fund Office.

    The witness said although the EFCC later recovered the N80m  from Nkumeh, he ran out of the country on learning that he was to be prosecuted, and has since not returned.

    Sunday also said Dariye paid N250m to a firm – Pinacle Communications – owned by a contractor to the state government.

    He told the court that the decision to investigate Dariye was informed by a request by the London Metropolitan Police for Nigeria’s assistance in investigating some parties and companies linked with the former governor.

    Dariye, who is representing Plateau Central was dressed in a brown kaftan. He looked unruffled as the witness spoke. When the proceeding was briefly suspended owing to power outage, Dariye smiled broadly as he went around shaking hands with some of his supporters who besieged the court.

    When the proceeding resumed, Sunday said: “Based on the request, we moved to the mentioned banks. We first went to All States Trust Bank, Abuja, where we met with the branch manager, who made available to us information about the account of Ebenezer Retnan Ventures limited.

    “From the mandate form of the account, we found that the signatory to the account was Haruna Dariye. The signature to the account was by the defendant (Dariye). The Account Officer, Awe Obesa, who marketed the account to the defendant, told us this.

    “He was arrested to confirm to us who Haruna Dariye was. He could not identify who Haruna Dariye was and we found that the circumstance surrounding the opening of the account was suspicious. We also found that there was no picture in the mandate card.

    “When we went further in our investigation, we confirmed, through Obesa that a waiver was given to the defendant not to use photograph. That led us to recover the mandate card from the bank and other account opening documents.

    “The mandate card and account opening documents were obtained for further investigation – to ascertain who the signatory was. We sent the documents to the forensic unit, which confirmed that the signature belonged to the defendant.

    “After realising that it was the bank that gave waiver for the defendant not to use photograph in his mandate card, the banker –Obesa – and his bank – All States Trust Bank – and one other were charged before Federal High Court, Kaduna.The bank and banker were convicted by the court.

    “In the course of our investigation in the bank, through the statements of account given to us on the Ebenezer Retnan Venture’s account, we saw a lot of financial in-flows of money from Plateau State Government account. Such in-flows include an amount of money coming from the Ecological Fund.

    “We approached the All State Trust Bank manager. She availed us with a handwritten document, where the defendant split about N1.162billion. We recovered a photocopy of the document from her.

    “On interview about where the money came from, because the money was not from Platuea State Government, she (the bank manager) then made available to us a Central Bank of Nigeria cheque covering the said amount of about N1.126b.

    “The CBN cheque and hand written disbursement were recovered and additional type-written disbursement letter by the defendant to the bank’s branch manager was recovered.

    “When we recovered those documents and cheques from CBN, we traced it to where it came from. Investigation led us to the Ecological Fund Unit under the Presidency. At the Ecological Fund Unit, we interviewed one Mr. Adewusi, who told us that there was a time the Plateau State Government applied for Ecological Fund for ecological problem in the state, and approval was given for N1.126b.

    “And that before the cheque was prepared, a payment voucher covering the said amount, which has other documents attached to it, were prepared and audited, at the end of which payment was made.

    “When the cheque was ready for collection, the defendant and his orderly, one Inspector Victor, went to the Ecological Fund office and, upon instruction by the defendant, the aide signed for the cheque and the defendant took the cheque to All States Trust Bank, Abuja.

    “Investigation revealed that in the office of the bank manager, the defendant instructed how the money should be disbursed to some individuals and companies. The bank’s branch manager complied with the defendant’s instruction.

    “Instead of the money to be paid into any of the Plateau State Government accounts, the bank used their own bank accounts to clear the cheque and disbursed to individuals and companies instructed by the defendant.

    Copies of his instructions, both type written and hand written, were made available to us during investigation.

    “We invited Pinacle Communications; the representative of the company. He actually confirmed collecting the N250m, but told us he is a contractor of the Plateau State government.

    “We found that the N500m actually went to the state government. The N80 paid to Union Homes turned out to have been paid to a Perm Secretary, Ecological Funds Office, Kingsley Nkumeh.

    “When interviewed, he said that was his share for facilitating the payment of the Ecological Fund to the state. The said amount was recovered by the EFCC from the Permanent Secretary, Minister of Ecological Funds.

    “Charges were later prepared for him to be charged to court in Lagos. He was granted administrative bail. He resigned and left the country. Our investigation at Union Homes revealed that the cheque was cleared into an account owned by the Perm Secretary, Nkumeh.

    “The bank gave us the mandate card of the Permanent Secretary, whose account the N80m was paid into. The N176 million was traced to Ebenezer Retnan Venture’s account domiciled at All States Trust Bank. From investigation at CAC, we found it was not registered. There was no record of the company’s existence.

    “The N100m paid to PDP Southwest was traced to Marine Float Limited and, in the course of our investigation, revealed that Marine Float Nigeria Limited. The mandate we received from the bank showed that Marine Float is owned by a former Vice President of Nigeria, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar. Effort to recover this money has been going on. We did not succeed in recovering it,” Sunday said.

    He is expected to resume his testimony today at 10am.

    The EFCC, in 2007, obtained the leave of an FCT High Court to prefer charges against Dariye and filed a 23-count charge against him. He was also accused of diverting the state’s funds estimated at billions of naira while in office.

    He pleaded not guilty to the charge, following which the trial judge, Justice Banjoko, fixed November 13, 2007 for the commencement of his trial.

    Before that date, however, Dariye filed an application, challenging the competence of the charge and the jurisdiction of the court. He argued that he ought to be tried at a Plateau State High Court and not the FCT High Court.

    On December 13, 2007, the trial judge dismissed Dariye’s application for lacking in merit, a decision he appealed to the Court of Appeal, Abuja and subsequently to the Supreme Court. The apex court, on February 27, 2015, dismissed Dariye’s appeal and ordered him to submit himself for trial.

  • Court adjourns ex-workers’ N480m suit against FIRS

    Justice J. D. Peters of the National Industrial Court sitting in Ikoyi, Lagos, has adjourned till April 14 hearing of all pending applications in a suit filed by 64 former staff of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) seeking N480 million for alleged wrongful termination of their appointment

    The ex staff, who were disengaged from service in 2013, are demanding compensation of N7.5 million each, totalling N480m for 64 of them.

    But the FIRS, through its counsel Miss Mary Okpe, urged the court to dismiss or strike out the suit for lack of jurisdiction.

    FIRS also argued that the disengaged workers’ suit is statute barred.

    It added that the claimants’ suit was extensively considered and determined by the terms of a collective bargaining agreement (MoU) dated July 25, 2007, whereof proper payment of severance benefits of all the claimants was paid.

    The disengaged workers are seeking a declaration that the termination of their appointment by the management of FIRS is a breach of contract of service, and is illegal, unlawful and void.

  • Court to hear Dasuki’s application to halt trial February 4

    Court to hear Dasuki’s application to halt trial February 4

    A High Court of the Federal Capital Territory High Court in Maitama, Abuja has fixed February 4 for hearing of an application by former National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki with which he seeks to stay proceedings in his trial.

    ‎Dasuki is being tried with a former Director of Finance and Administration in the Office of the NSA, Shuaibu Salisu, a former Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Aminu Baba-Kusa and two others before the court on a 19-count charge in which he was accused of  diverting N32bn arms fund,

    Also named in the charge are two firms believed to be owned by Aminu-Kausa’s – Acacia Holdings Ltd and Reliance Referral Hospital Limited.

    Dasuki is, by the application, seeking to stay proceedings in the case, claiming that the prosecution was in contempt of court for allegedly disobeying an order made by the court, granting him bail.

    He is contending that the decision by the Department of State Services (DSS) to re-arrest him on December 29, 2015 shortly after he was released from prison upon fulfilling the bail conditions granted him by the court on December 18, amounted to contempt.

    Friday, Dasuki’s lawyer, Joseph Daudu (SAN) stressed the relevance of the application, which he said bordered on the integrity of the court and the ability of the former NSA to prepare adequately for his defence in the trial.

    “It is true that we filed an application in which we are contending that the complainant, shortly after the first defendant (Dasuki) was released on bail took him back to custody.

    “As far we are concerned, they (the prosecution) are in brazen breach of the court order,” Daudu said.

    He stated that Dasuki’s lawyers did not know where he was kept after he was re-arrested, a development, he claimed, has affected the ability to prepare for his defence.

    “We don’t know where he is kept. Apart from the fact that he looks leaner and thinner than when I last saw him, we have not been able to discuss with him in respect of his preparation for his defence.

    “It is like tying our hand and engaging us in a boxing match,” Daudu said.

    Earlier at the commencement of proceedings, lead prosecution lawyer, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN) indicated his intention to open the prosecution’s case.

    He said his witnesses were already in court and urged the court to direct that the trial should begin‎.

    Jacobs kicked against the hearing of Dasuki’s application, citing provisions of section 306 of the Administration of Criminal Justice (ACJ) Act 2015, which prohibits a court from entertaining any application for stay of proceedings.

    He equally cited Section 396 (1) to (3) of the ACJ Act, which stipulates that any any application challenging the competence of criminal charges could only be considered along with the substantive issues in the case and ruling on it delivered along with the judgment on the entire case.

    Former Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Akin Olujinmi (SAN), Solomon Umoh (SAN) and Olawale Akoni (SAN) who are lwayers to other defendants in the case, equally objected to the commencement of trial.

    They said they were just served with additional prove of evidence by the prosecution, while some said they were yet to be served with the application by Dasuki.

    Jacobs, in responding, said: “The additional proof of evidence was with respect to somebody’s statement which we are not going to use ‎in this case. Mr. Akoni only wrote to me asking for the document this week. So it is unfair to say that I was setting booby-trap for the defence.”

    The trial judge, Justice Hussein Baba-Yusuf, in a ruling, elected to hear Dasuki’s application before proceeding to trial.

    He adjourned to February 4.

  • Alleged destruction of statement: Metuh gets N600m bail 

    Alleged destruction of statement: Metuh gets N600m bail 

    Detained spokesman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Olisa Metuh, got reprieve Friday as a High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) granted him N600 million bail.

    Metuh was arraigned before the court on Thursday on a two-count charge, in which he was accused of destroying the statement he made to operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Before his arraignment at the FCT High Court on Thursday, Metuh had earlier been arraigned before Justice Okon Abang of the Federal High Court on a seven-count charge of money laundering.

    The judge has since granted Metuh bail at N400m and two sureties, who must have houses in the highbrow Maitama, Abuja.

    Metuh is yet to meet the conditions attached to the bail granted him by the Federal High Court.

    Friday, Justice Ishaq Bello of the FCT High Court took argument on Metuh’s bail application.

    Metuh’s lawyer, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), while making oral application for his client’s bail, relied on the provisions of sections 158 and 162 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015 as well as sections 35 and 36 of the Constitution.

    Lead prosecution lawyer, Sylvanus Tahir did not object to the bail application.

    Ruling, the judge agreed with the defence that the offences the accused was charged with were bailable and that he was presumed innocent until proved guilty.

    Trial in the case is expected to open on February 26.

  • Ondo council poll: ‘wait for Supreme Court’s verdict’

    Ondo council poll: ‘wait for Supreme Court’s verdict’

    An Akure-based lawyer, Charles Titiloye has urged Governor Olusegun Mimiko and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ondo State to respect the Constitutional authority of the Supreme Court by refraining from taking any extra- judicial step.

    This, according to him, will undermine the determination of the local government dissolution suit pending before the Supreme Court.

    Titiloye condemned the notice of election issued by the Ondo State Independent Electoral Commission (ODIEC), fixing local government election for April. He said this will not be possible with a pending case on its dissolution before the Supreme Court.

    According to him, the first unconstitutional step taken by Mimiko was to dissolve the Local Government Council and appoint a Caretaker Committee. He said the aggrieved councilors and chairmen have since been in Court and Mimiko’s government deliberately prolonged the case for seven years to have an unchallenged access to local government fund.

    His words: “One wonder why the same Mimiko-led PDP government is no longer interested in waiting for the Supreme Court but is now in a hurry to conduct local government election at the twilight of its tenure in office.

    “The reason is not far-fetched. The PDP’s government in Ondo intends to use the local government structure to rig the coming governorship election.

    “I therefore call on the emergency-constituted ODIEC not to allow itself be used to scuttle the ongoing legal battle before the Supreme Court”.

    The lawyer noted that the only constitutional option available to ODIEC is to await the Supreme Court’s decision on the suit and not to embark on any form of self-help.

  • Guber aspirant, four others re-arraigned for fraud

    Guber aspirant, four others re-arraigned for fraud

    The Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) Thursday re-arraigned a governorship aspirant in Nasarawa State on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Yusuf Agabi, and four others before a Federal Capital Territory High Court in Maitama, Abuja, on charges of alleged N605m fraud.

    Agabi, a former director at the Federal Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs and others were re-arraigned before Justice Adegboyega Adeniyi on a 46- count of fraud.

    Those arraigned with Agabi are Akpore Okeroghene (Deputy Director of Finance), Abibu Ayinla (Director of Finance), Idowu Adewale (Deputy Director Accounts) and Ngozi James (Deputy Director Accounts).

    The re-arraignment was informed by the re-assignment of the case to Justice Adeniyi from Justice Hussein Baba-Yusuf.

    The case was re-assigned to Justice Adenyi following a petition by some of the accused persons to the court’s Chief Judge, Justice Ishaq Bello, accusing Justice Baba Yusuf of bias in his handling of the case.

    The prosecution had already called one of its witnesses before the case was transferred to Justice Adeniyi.

    The accused pleaded not guilty when the charge was read to them. They were said to have fraudulently withdrawn N605m from the Constituency Project account of the ministry without authorization.

    It also alleged that the accused persons perpetrated the fraud using fictitious claims through payment vouchers containing false information. Some of them were said to have used the proceeds to build private houses.

    After the arraignment, Justice Adeniyi ordered that the accused persons should continue to enjoy the bail earlier granted by Justice Baba-Yusuf and adjourned to March 1 for the commencement of trial.