Tag: Inspector

  • Bandits kill Inspector, five others in Aba attack

    Bandits kill Inspector, five others in Aba attack

    It was a black Sunday yesterday when gunmen killed three policemen, including  aan an Inspector and three civillians in Aba, the Abia State capital .

    The police officers, who were attached to the headquarters of the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) in the Aba North premises, were said to be on a stop-and-search at the Mosque Road axis of Aba South Local Government Area of the state, when they were caught off guard.

    The civilians were said to be returning from church service when they were caught in the ensuing melee.

    The Police Commissioner, Kenechukwu Onwuemelie, in a statement confirmed the deaths, which included an Inspector identified as Shehu Oyibo.

    The statement by the Public Relations Office (PRO) of the command, Maureen Chioma Chinaka, said: “Today, July 21, 2024, about 1,128hours,  police operatives attached to the Rapid Response Squad (RRS) Aba, Abia State Command, while on patrol along Ngwa Road by Mosque junction, Aba, were attacked by armed men assailants in an ash-colored Sienna vehicle. The armed men opened fire on the police personnel, and the operatives repelled the attack, preventing what could have been a deadlier outcome.

    “However, during the exchange of gunfire, two of the assailants were neutralised, while others escaped with various degrees of bullet injuries.

    Read Also: Lagos intensifies advocacy for good sanitation practices

    “Unfortunately, a police officer, Inspector Shehu Oyibo,  three civilians who were later identified as Chika Godliveth ‘m’, Onyenaturuchi Jonah ‘m’ 32 years old, from Item, in Bende L.G.A. of Abia State, and Eniobong Godsgift Clement ‘f’, 18 years old, from Akwa Ibom State were killed by bullets from the assailants.

    “Bodies of the deceased have been deposited at the mortuary, while investigation is ongoing to arrest the fleeing hoodlums.

    “The public are assured to go about their lawful activities without fear, as officers have been deployed to strategic locations in the state to ensure the protection of life and property.”

  • Gunmen kill police inspector in Rivers, steal gun, beret

    Gunmen kill police inspector in Rivers, steal gun, beret

    Unidentified gunmen have killed an inspector of police and stolen his rifle, and beret in Rivers state.

    The tragic incident reportedly occurred on Friday night close to a popular hotel in Oroworukwo-Olu Obasanjo, Port Harcourt City Local Government Area.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said killers rode on a grey colour 2005 Toyota Corolla.

    They were said to have sighted the victim,.attacked him immediately, took his AK-47, his beret and fled to an unknown destination.

    The police public relations officer, Grace Iringe-Koko, confirmed the incident and said the victim, who was serving in Bayelsa state, accompanied a VIP to Rivers state before the gunmen struck.

    Read Also: Gunmen kill two customs officers in Kebbi

    Iringe-Koko, a Superintendent of Police, who regretted the development said that investigation had commenced to unmask and arrest the killers.

    She said: “At about 2030hrs information was received that one inspector ‘m’ attached to Department of Operations, Yenegoa Bayelsa State was fatally shot on the head while escorting his principal around Landmark Hotel at Oroworukwo-Olu Obasanjo Port Harcourt.

    “His rifle and beret were carted away. Patrol teams were immediately mobilized to the scene. Effort is ongoing to arrest the fleeing hoodlums and recover the rifle. Corpse of the victim has been deposited at Military Hospital Port Harcourt for autopsy. Further development will be communicated.”

  • Police dismiss inspector for allegedly killing soccer fan  

    Force slammed ‘for carelessness’

    The Lagos State Police Command has dismissed Inspector Ogunyemi Olalekan for allegedly killing a football fan, Kolade Johnson, on Sunday night.

    He was dismissed after the orderly room trial found him guilty of discreditable conduct, unlawful and unnecessary exercise of authority as well as unnecessary violence.

    A statement by spokesman Bala Elkana, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said Sergeant Godwin Orji was cleared, as no evidence linked him to it.

    Elkana said: “The two police officers alleged to have been involved in the shooting of Kolade Johnson on March 31 were apprehended and subjected to internal disciplinary proceedings, known as Orderly Room Trial, by the command. The trial began on Monday and ended yesterday.  “They were tried on a three-count charge: (1) Discreditable Conduct (2) Unlawful and Unnecessary Exercise of Authority and (3) Damage to Clothing or Other Articles, contrary to Paragraph E (iii), Q (ii) and D (i) First Schedule, Police Act and Regulations, Cap 370 LFN 1990.

    “The trial started with the reading of charges and taking of plea. Five witnesses testified.

    “At the conclusion of the trial, the first defaulter, Inspector Ogunyemi, was found guilty of discreditable conduct by acting in a manner prejudicial to discipline and unbecoming of members of the Force by shooting and killing Johnson; unlawful and unnecessary exercise of authority by using unnecessary violence, by using AK 47 rifle on the deceased in total neglect to the provisions of Force Order 237 on the use of firearms.

    “The Adjudicating Officer, CSP Indyar Apev, awarded the punishment of dismissal from service and prosecution to the first defaulter. “There was no evidence linking the second defaulter, Sergeant Godwin Orji, to the shooting. He was, therefore, found not guilty, discharged and acquitted.

    “The first defaulter, Inspector Ogunyemi, is handed over to the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department, Panti for prosecution in a conventional court.”

    A human rights organisation, Crime Victims Foundation of Nigeria (CRIVIFON), has condemned the alleged killing of a football fan, Kolade Johnson, by two officers of the Anti-Cultism Unit of the Lagos Police Command.

    The foundation, in a statement yesterday in Lagos, decried what it described as “careless use of rifles by the two policemen involved.”

    Command spokesman Bala Elkana, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), had in a statement on Tuesday named the suspects as Inspector Ogunyemi Olalekan and Sergeant Godwin Orji.

    In the statement by its Executive Director, Mrs. Gloria Egbuji, the group said it was pained that the policemen allegedly involved in the killing were once beneficiaries of the police human rights training, facilitated by the foundation.

    It regretted that they allegedly threw away the knowledge they acquired during the training.

    “No Nigerian or even a foreigner in our midst should be deprived of his or her life in such an uncivilised manner as displayed by the Anti-Cultism Team involved in the dastardly act”, it alleged.

    The foundation expressed dismay about the alleged attitude of some policemen at a time the Federal Government was paying attention to the restructuring of the Police for efficient performance and especially with respect to human rights violation.

    Egbuji said: “As facilitators of the police human rights training, which began in 2006 at the Lagos Police Command, CRIVIFON will want every policeman, who undergoes the training, to bring the knowledge acquired to bear on his job.

    “They should not see the training merely as an opportunity to acquire certificate, but also the knowledge needed to improve their service delivery.

    “They should see the training as opportunity to reform their character traits, with respect to how they used to perceive people’s fundamental human rights before undergoing the human rights training.”

    She said the foundation was encouraged by the fact that President Muhammadu Buhari and the police management in their reactions to the unwarranted killing of the soccer fan, stressed the administration’s efforts to overhaul the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) and other such units, particularly through regular training of personnel, to avoid violation of people’s fundamental rights.

     

     

  • Inspector to Lagos CP: save me

    A police Inspector, Olufunke Adebayo, has urged Lagos State Commissioner of Police (CP), Zubairu Muazu, to save her life.

    She said she was detained at the Area F Police Command, Ikeja at the instance of her superiors.

    Through her lawyer Mr G. I. Ukaegbu, Adebayo, a medical staff at the Police Hospital, Ikeja, said her rights were being abused.

    She alleged she was undergoing brutalisation and torture in the cell  at Area F for alleged sexual abuse and for refusing to disclose the location of her husband, Michael.

    In a March 18 petition to the CP,

    Ukaegbu accused the officers of torturing Adebayo.

    He alleged that an officer with oversight powers on the hospital made “immoral sexual advances on the woman Inspector Adebayo”.

    The lawyer alleged that when she refused, she was maltreated and eventually tortured.

    “In the course of torturing and brutalising the woman, she slumped and was about  to die when her colleagues raised alarm and the woman Inspector was rushed to the hospital for treatment,” the petition alleged.

    Adebayo’s husband filed a fundamental human right suit at the Federal High Court in Lagos on her behalf. He demanded N71 million and an order enforcing her right.

    Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Assistant Inspector-General of Police (AIG) Police Medical, Police Service Commission, ACP Olubunmi Ogunsanwo, Inspector Ibrahim Babatunde and Sgt. Gbenga Agboola, are the respondents.

    The petitioner said there was a plot to kill her husband over the suit. “In order to achieve their dastardly purpose, they went to arrest the woman Inspector from her office and demanded that she produced her husband,” Ukaegbu alleged.

    The lawyer said following Adebayo’s refusal to disclose her husband’s whereabouts, she was detained and has been in the cell at Area F Command for over two weeks.

    He said efforts to make the Area Commander understand that he could not interfere in the matter as it was already before a court failed.

    “He insisted that unless the woman Inspector produces her husband, she would die in the cell.

    “What is more worrisome is that the Area Commander has ordered people at the counter not to allow anybody bring food or drugs for her in the cell,” Ukaegbu added.

    Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Bala Elkana, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said the CP would investigate the allegations.

    “We have received the petition and the Commissioner of Police, Lagos State, (CP) Zubairu Muazu, has ordered an indepth investigation into the allegations raised by the petitioner.

    “We will make our findings public as soon as investigation is completed please,” he assured.

  • CP orders arrest of Inspector seen with bottle of beer

    Lagos State Commissioner of Police (CP) Imohimi Edgal has ordered the arrest of Inspector Emmanuel Egba, who was seen with a bottle of beer.

    The police boss also ordered that the incident be investigated to ascertain its veracity.

    The picture of the Inspector holding a beer bottle was published by a newspaper yesterday.

    Reacting yesterday, Edgal said the inspector would be held, pending investigation.

    In a statement, spokesman Chike Oti, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), said the Inspector claimed that he recovered the bottle from a driver.

    Oti said: “The attention of the Commissioner of Police has been drawn to a publication in which a police Inspector was caught on camera holding a bottle of beer.

    “The officer in question has been identified and arrested. He is Inspector Emmanuel Egba, a police motorcycle rider attached to Area ‘M’ Command, Idimu and not Rapid Response Squad (RRS).

    “When the Inspector was questioned by senior officers, he denied the allegation; stating that he recovered the beer bottle with liquid contents from a driver who was drinking right inside his car in traffic.

    “He feared that the driver might get himself intoxicated thereby endangering his life and that of other road users.

    “The case is however being investigated at the Command Provost Section and if his claim is found to be false, appropriate disciplinary action will be meted out to him after an Orderly Room Trial.”

  • Outrage as police fail to arrest Inspector who demanded bribe from firm boss

    •Victim invited to police command HQ

    There were outrage on the social media over the inability of Lagos State Police Command to arrest Inspector Jude Akhoyemta and some officers, who allegedly demanded bribe from the Managing Director of Planex Finishing Nigeria Limited Immanuel James Ibe-Anyanwu.

    The officers, attached to the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) Ikeja, seized the handset of Ibe-Anyanwu for reporting them to the Lagos State Command Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Chike Oti, a Superintendent (SP).

    Oti had requested to speak with them before the FSARS seized Ibe-Anyanwu’s handset.

    Jessica Nnadi, while commenting on the issue, described FSARS men as “hungry looters.”

    She said: “Once those bastards see you’re looking well and all knitted up, they will think you are a Yahoo boy. Stupid sets of Loosers!

    “They have harassed my neighbour also at the front of that Zenith Bank Ago Palace when he went to do some transactions. Immediately, they saw him coming out from the bank, they hurried and blocked him, raised the alarm as though he was a suspect. Imagine the embarrassment! Passersby were even thinking his either an armed robber or a fraudster. They seized his car keys and asked him to bring out his documents. After checking, they took him to Okota Police Station and later started asking him for money. He refused and told them that he won’t give them one naira. He called a lawyer and they discharged him immediately.”

    According to Emmanuel Okunlola, “Last Thursday was the third time I got arrested this year. It was one of the most frustrating moments of my life. My phone was seized and I couldn’t even make any calls out. Seriously, these guys (FSARS) have a way of messing people up no matter how strong hearted you are. They went as far as accusing me of forging a DG’s signature after they found a friend’s scanned signature on my phone. Helpless, you would have no choice than to part with hard-earned money to prevent further troubles.”

    To Vincent Emeka, Ibe-Anyanwu was clever enough to hide in the bank.

    “I know of someone who was abducted by SARS at Eleme Port Harcourt, beaten and held up for days. He later realised that he has been taken to Okigwe in Imo state, where he was made to request an Automated Teller Machine (ATM) card and withdraw his last dime from the Fidelity Bank around.

    They agreed to ”waste” him afterwards, and one of them was given the job to do. Along the line he felt ”pity” for my friend and gave him some token as transport. My paddy, had his over N200,000 ransomed by SARS and had his shoulder dislocated. At a point, he became suicidal,” Emeka said.

    Ibe-Anyanwu told The Nation yesterday that he was invited to the command headquarters to identify some officers suspected to be on patrol at the area as at the time of the incident.

    “I met the PPRO Oti and some other senior officers. They brought some officers but none of them is among those who accosted me. They said there’s another group that patrolled that area. I later gave them the phone number one of them used to call me while I was hiding inside the bank’s toilet. He called me to quickly come out to settle them. The officers admitted that the line belongs to an officer in the other group,” he said.

    Ibe-Anyanwu was stopped by the FSARS officers at about 3pm for search in Ago Palace, opposite Zenith Bank, Okota, Lagos.

    Having found nothing incriminating, the officers allegedly humiliated Ibe-Anyanwu and accused him being a fraudster.

    The officers told him to lead them to his Ikoyi office to confirm.

    It was at that time that people intervened and Ibe-Anyanwu called the police spokesman.

    Ibe-Anyanwu wrote on his Facebook wall: “I was accosted by SARS officers at Ago-Palace, Okota, opposite Zenith Bank. They humiliated me and accused me of being a fraudster.

    “Checked my documents and found nothing, and then said I should follow them back to my office in Ikoyi to confirm my claims. People intervened. I called the PPRO of Lagos State and he asked to speak with them. They took the phone and seized it.

    “They are still holding my documents. Later one called me aside and asked me to go arrange money. I asked for my phone to let me make a transfer to my ATM (Automated Teller Machine) account and he gave me. I took the phone and card and went into the bank and have gone into hiding here. I’m updating from my hiding place. They are waiting for me by my car. Please share.”

    In a chat with The Nation last night, Ibe-Anyanwu said: “It was past 2pm yesterday and I was at Zenith Bank, Okota Branch to submit a document prepared on my company letterhead. I was asked to edit a part of it and re-submit.

    “Because I wanted to conclude the transaction yesterday, I had to look for a business centre around to type and edit. Across the bank was one and, as I walked towards it, a young man accosted me saying he was a police officer, His superiors would like to see me inside a bus waiting around, he said.

    He was slightly bearded and in mufti, so I was skeptical. I asked for his ID (Identity) card and he unhooked it from his waist and showed me. The prints were tiny and blurred, so I reached out to collect it and read properly. ‘So you want to snatch my ID card,’ he shouted.

    “He took from me the PLANEX-branded envelope containing plain letterheads and other documents, and walked towards the bus, asking me to come along. Right away, I made a call to Ekene Okoro and briefed him. By the time I got to the bus, the story had changed: that I snatched his ID card from him. They were about seven armed men, and one of them started interrogating me. Why did I choose to use this branch of Zenith Bank instead of the one close to my office in Ikoyi? Where is the other director of PLANEX? Why was the document I went to edit not stamped with my company stamp?

    “Dismissing all my answers, he said they would take me to my office in Ikoyi to confirm. He said he knew people on that street and had just spoken to them and they couldn’t identify me. I asked him to speak to my office landlady, he ignored me.

    At that point, I stepped aside and called the Lagos PPRO and narrated my experience. He asked me to pass the phone on to them and they took the phone from me, cut the call, and seized the phone. At that point I started inviting passers-by into the argument and people gathered.

    “One of them intervened and begged them a lot and they calmed down, insisting that they were still going to take me away anyway. Then they asked to search my car and I let them. Finding nothing, they took my ID and demanded my car key and car documents. I had to corner their leader to a side and beg him, telling him he was like a father to me and should appeal to his men. His men were almost going violent with me but he kept calming them down.

    “He told me to arrange some money and I told him I needed the phone to transfer money from the corporate account to my ATM account. I needed the car key too to get the ATM card. On my way to the ATM, the one who arrested me asked me how much I was going to withdraw. I told him N5, 000 and he flared up.

    “At the ATM booth, I called back the PPRO. “Don’t give them any money”, he warned, promising to send down a band of policemen. I withdrew some money and ran into the banking hall instead, went straight to the bank toilet and hid. Then, made an update on Facebook. I sat there in the toilet for close to two hours. By after 4pm, I feared the bank would soon close and called the PPRO again, who assured me his men were on the way. He asked me to put the CSO of the Branch on the line for him. They spoke and he asked the CSO to put the bank mobile police unit on the line too for him to instruct them on what to do. But before the bank policeman could come on phone, the phone had died.

    “I narrated everything to him, the bank policeman. But he was skeptical, saying if I did nothing, SARS would not be after me. I learnt from the CSO that the SARS people actually came inside the bank to look for me while I was in the toilet, purporting to want to give me back my documents. The bank policeman now said I should leave the bank, that the bank was not the place for people to hide. So he eased me out of the bank and, outside where my car was parked, I noticed the number plates had been taken away. The police bus was no longer around. So, I assumed they had left.

    “I got into my car, plugged my phone because I was desperate to reach people. As soon as I started the car, the SARS bus came from nowhere and double-crossed me. I turned swiftly facing the bank gate, hooting crazily for the bank security to let me in. The bank security, on the order of their skeptical policeman, refused me entry, leaving me out for SARS to devour. It is a branch I have used to for 10 years, visiting there almost weekly.

    The SARS people jumped out of their bus and started banging on my windows. One attempted to puncture the tyre but that superior asked him not to. My phone was still yet to come on, heightening my fear. It was the longest moment of my life, as I was surrounded by seven armed policemen who had patiently waited for me for over two hours.

    “They ordered me to wind down but I wouldn’t and a crowd began to form. They stepped aside, speaking to the bank policeman. The bank policeman later came to me and asked me to wind down, that he had spoken to them, and that I should leave even outside the bank premises where this was happening.

    “The management had asked him to chase me away, he said, adding that the bank was not the place for me. Shouting through shut windows, I pleaded with him to let my phone come on so help could reach me. He threatened to use force on me if I didn’t leave that very minute.  I hunched over my steering and said a short prayer.

    “They (SARS) came back to me again, asking me to wind down, and I pretended to be making a phone call. One was impatient and wanted to smash the glass. Their superior who had been soft all along got angry and dumped the number plates and documents on my bonnet and stormed out. The others followed him, entered their bus, and they drove ahead and waited.

    “I was scared that they were still waiting along the same road I was to take, so I remained in the car. The bank policeman came back again, fuming, banging on the car and urging me to leave. I had to take the opposite direction amid a slow-moving traffic, driving insanely cutting through the traffic until I found a free road which was in the opposite direction to my house. I fled, literally.

    “At that point my phone had come on. The PPRO and his deputy called respectively. They had been trying to reach me. Their men who were on the way also called me saying they had been unable to reach me since. For the next hour, they kept calling checking up on me. Even the Lagos SARS commandant called, apologetic. They all rose to the challenge and began to look for the erring officers. The response on social media had been overwhelming, from colleagues, friends and family.  I was in shock, I have read stories of SARS tracing people home in the night and killing them and I still fear for my life.”

    Police spokesman said the erring officers hurriedly left the scene in a manner suggestive that they were on illegal duty when a team of policemen from the Command X-Squad Section, led by Musa Shuaibu, an Assistant Superintendent (ASP) arrived the scene.

    The erring officers, he said, were led in that inglorious duty by one Inspector Jude Akhoyemta attached to FSARS Ikeja.

     

  • Lagos CP orders arrest of Inspector for demanding bribe from firm boss

    Some officers attached to the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) of the Nigerian Police yesterday took their audacity for robbing innocent Nigerians to an unimaginable level.

    Led by Inspector Jude Akhoyemta from FSARS Ikeja, the officers seized the handset of Immanuel James Ibe-Anyanwu, the Managing Director of Planex Finishing Nigeria Limited, for report them to the Lagos State Command Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Chike Oti, a Superintendent of Police (SP).

    Oti had requested to speak with them before the FSARS seized Ibe-Anyanwu’s handset.

    The officers stopped Ibe-Anyanwu at about 3pm for search in Ago Palace, opposite Zenith Bank, Okota, Lagos.

    Having found nothing incriminating, the officers allegedly humiliated Ibe-Anyanwu and accused him being a fraudster.

    The officers told him to lead them to his Ikoyi office to confirm.

    It was at that time that people intervened and Ibe-Anyanwu called the police spokesman.

    Ibe-Anyanwu wrote on his Facebook wall: “I was accosted by SARS officers at Ago-Palace, Okota, opposite Zenith Bank. They humiliated me and accused me of being a fraudster.

    “Checked my documents and found nothing, and then said I should follow them back to my office in Ikoyi to confirm my claims. People intervened. I called the PPRO of Lagos State and he asked to speak with them. They took the phone and seized it.

    “They are still holding my documents. Later one called me aside and asked me to go arrange money. I asked for my phone to let me make a transfer to my ATM (Automated Teller Machine) account and he gave me. I took the phone and card and went into the bank and have gone into hiding here. I’m updating from my hiding place. They are waiting for me by my car. Please share.”

    In a chat with The Nation last night, Ibe-Anyanwu said: “It was past 2pm yesterday and I was at Zenith Bank, Okota Branch to submit a document prepared on my company letterhead. I was asked to edit a part of it and re-submit.

    “Because I wanted to conclude the transaction yesterday, I had to look for a business centre around to type and edit. Across the bank was one and, as I walked towards it, a young man accosted me saying he was a police officer, His superiors would like to see me inside a bus waiting around, he said.

    He was slightly bearded and in mufti, so I was skeptical. I asked for his ID (Identity) card and he unhooked it from his waist and showed me. The prints were tiny and blurred, so I reached out to collect it and read properly. ‘So you want to snatch my ID card,’ he shouted.

    “He took from me the PLANEX-branded envelope containing plain letterheads and other documents, and walked towards the bus, asking me to come along. Right away, I made a call to Ekene Okoro and briefed him. By the time I got to the bus, the story had changed: that I snatched his ID card from him. They were about seven armed men, and one of them started interrogating me. Why did I choose to use this branch of Zenith Bank instead of the one close to my office in Ikoyi? Where is the other director of PLANEX? Why was the document I went to edit not stamped with my company stamp?

    “Dismissing all my answers, he said they would take me to my office in Ikoyi to confirm. He said he knew people on that street and had just spoken to them and they couldn’t identify me. I asked him to speak to my office landlady, he ignored me.

    At that point, I stepped aside and called the Lagos PPRO and narrated my experience. He asked me to pass the phone on to them and they took the phone from me, cut the call, and seized the phone. At that point I started inviting passers-by into the argument and people gathered.

    “One of them intervened and begged them a lot and they calmed down, insisting that they were still going to take me away anyway. Then they asked to search my car and I let them. Finding nothing, they took my ID and demanded my car key and car documents. I had to corner their leader to a side and beg him, telling him he was like a father to me and should appeal to his men. His men were almost going violent with me but he kept calming them down.

    “He told me to arrange some money and I told him I needed the phone to transfer money from the corporate account to my ATM account. I needed the car key too to get the ATM card. On my way to the ATM, the one who arrested me asked me how much I was going to withdraw. I told him N5, 000 and he flared up.

    “At the ATM booth, I called back the PPRO. “Don’t give them any money”, he warned, promising to send down a band of policemen. I withdrew some money and ran into the banking hall instead, went straight to the bank toilet and hid. Then, made an update on Facebook. I sat there in the toilet for close to two hours. By after 4pm, I feared the bank would soon close and called the PPRO again, who assured me his men were on the way. He asked me to put the CSO of the Branch on the line for him. They spoke and he asked the CSO to put the bank mobile police unit on the line too for him to instruct them on what to do. But before the bank policeman could come on phone, the phone had died.

    “I narrated everything to him, the bank policeman. But he was skeptical, saying if I did nothing, SARS would not be after me. I learnt from the CSO that the SARS people actually came inside the bank to look for me while I was in the toilet, purporting to want to give me back my documents. The bank policeman now said I should leave the bank, that the bank was not the place for people to hide. So he eased me out of the bank and, outside where my car was parked, I noticed the number plates had been taken away. The police bus was no longer around. So, I assumed they had left.

    “I got into my car, plugged my phone because I was desperate to reach people. As soon as I started the car, the SARS bus came from nowhere and double-crossed me. I turned swiftly facing the bank gate, hooting crazily for the bank security to let me in. The bank security, on the order of their skeptical policeman, refused me entry, leaving me out for SARS to devour. It is a branch I have used to for 10 years, visiting there almost weekly.

    The SARS people jumped out of their bus and started banging on my windows. One attempted to puncture the tyre but that superior asked him not to. My phone was still yet to come on, heightening my fear. It was the longest moment of my life, as I was surrounded by seven armed policemen who had patiently waited for me for over two hours.

    “They ordered me to wind down but I wouldn’t and a crowd began to form. They stepped aside, speaking to the bank policeman. The bank policeman later came to me and asked me to wind down, that he had spoken to them, and that I should leave even outside the bank premises where this was happening.

    “The management had asked him to chase me away, he said, adding that the bank was not the place for me. Shouting through shut windows, I pleaded with him to let my phone come on so help could reach me. He threatened to use force on me if I didn’t leave that very minute.  I hunched over my steering and said a short prayer.

    “They (SARS) came back to me again, asking me to wind down, and I pretended to be making a phone call. One was impatient and wanted to smash the glass. Their superior who had been soft all along got angry and dumped the number plates and documents on my bonnet and stormed out. The others followed him, entered their bus, and they drove ahead and waited.

    “I was scared that they were still waiting along the same road I was to take, so I remained in the car. The bank policeman came back again, fuming, banging on the car and urging me to leave. I had to take the opposite direction amid a slow-moving traffic, driving insanely cutting through the traffic until I found a free road which was in the opposite direction to my house. I fled, literally.

    “At that point my phone had come on. The PPRO and his deputy called respectively. They had been trying to reach me. Their men who were on the way also called me saying they had been unable to reach me since. For the next hour, they kept calling checking up on me. Even the Lagos SARS commandant called, apologetic. They all rose to the challenge and began to look for the erring officers. The response on social media had been overwhelming, from colleagues, friends and family.  I was in shock, I have read stories of SARS tracing people home in the night and killing them and I still fear for my life.”

    Police spokesman said a team of policemen from the Command X-Squad Section, led by Musa Shuaibu, an Assistant Superintendent (ASP) was dispatched to intervene in the matter.

    Oti said: “However, on sighting the X-Squad personnel, the erring officers hurriedly left the scene in a manner suggestive that they were on illegal duty.

    “The Commissioner of Police directed the officer in charge of the X-Squad Section to fish out the policemen within two hours and that directive has been actualised with the identification of the policemen involved. They were led in that inglorious duty by one Inspector Jude Akhoyemta attached to FSARS Ikeja.

    “The general public is hereby informed that the CP has ordered for their arrest and as soon as that is done, the public would be communicated as usual.”

  • Man allegedly beats up female inspector

    Man allegedly beats up female inspector

    A 41-year-old man, Kazeem Balogun, who allegedly beat up a female inspector attempting to invite him for questioning, on Tuesday appeared before an Ikeja Magistrates’ Court.

    The police charged Balogun with threat to life, assault and damage to property, but the accused pleaded not guilty.

    According to the prosecutor, Sgt. Godwin Awase, the accused, who resides at Sogunle, Lagos State, beat up Insp. Airat Ajayi, who came to his residence to invite him for questioning for beating up his neighbour.

    “The complainant (Ajayi) was sent to invite the accused for beating up and dragging his female neighbour, Mrs Eniola Awawu on the floor.

    Read Also: Village head, three others held over inspector’s death

    “When the complainant asked him to follow her to the station, the accused refused and descended on her through beating.

    “In the process, he damaged her recommended eyeglasses valued at N15,0000,” the prosecutor  said.

    He said that the offences contravened Sections 56,174 and 350 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015(revised).

    The Magistrate, Mr J.A. Adigun granted bail to the accused in the sum of N50,000 and two sureties  in like sum.

    Adigun directed that the sureties should be gainfully employed and show evidence of two years’ tax payment to the Lagos State Government.
    The magistrate adjourned the case until Jan. 31 for mention.

    NAN

  • Armed men kill police inspector in Anambra

    Armed men kill police inspector in Anambra

    Two armed men operating on a motorcycle on Saturday shot dead a police inspector in Ogidi, near Onitsha in Anambra, police authorities have confirmed.

    The Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Ogidi Police Station, Mr Hassan Musa, who confirmed the incident, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the hoodlums collected the AK47 riffle the deceased was carrying.

    He said that the incident occurred at about 2.45 p.m. at a police road block near Ugwunwasike Roundabout in Ogidi, where a police team was conducting “stop and search”.

    An eyewitness had told NAN that the armed men took the policeman unawares as they rode straight and shot him at a close range while he was flagging down a vehicle for a search.

    “Other policemen who were with him took cover on hearing the gun shots while the armed men escaped,” the source said.

    NAN gathered that the incident, which happened within minutes, caused people in the vicinity, including motorists and commuters, to abandon their vehicle and scamper for safety.

    The DPO said that the remains of the late inspector had been deposited at Iyi-Enu Hospital’s mortuary.

    He said that the police had commenced investigation into the incident. (NAN)

  • Police Inspector kidnapped

    Gunmen suspected to be militants have kidnapped a police Inspector identified as Sunday in the Ibeju-Lekki area of Lagos.

    It was gathered that a rescue mission for the Inspector kidnapped about two weeks ago, has commenced with operatives of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) and Rapid Response Squad (RRS) combing possible hideouts of the gunmen.

    The Inspector, attached to SARS, was said to have been kidnapped while attempting to rescue a resident from suspected land grabbers.

    The land grabbers were said to have stormed a community in the area, brandishing guns and other weapons to dislodge their rivals.

    Unconfirmed reports stated that the hoodlums killed three residents before kidnapping the man, whom the police went to rescue.

    Unfortunately, it was gathered that the gunmen shot a policeman and then kidnapped Sunday.

    An AK47 rifle was allegedly found at the scene during a visit by the police team.

    A source who requested anonymity said: “The gunmen kidnapped a man. They shot at the others and killed three persons.  Police learnt of the attack and chased the hoodlums. One policeman was shot while they kidnapped an Inspector identified as Sunday.”

    But police spokesperson, Dolapo Badmos, a Superintendent (SP) denied a policeman was kidnapped, insisting that it was untrue.