Tag: jailed

  • Carpenter with toy gun jailed 12 months

    A Karmo Grade 1 Area Court, Abuja, yesterday sentenced a carpenter, Chinonso Eze, to 12 months’ imprisonment, for possessing a toy gun and knife at a public place.

    Eze, 32, of Gwagwa, by Tasha 1, Abuja, was convicted following his guilty plea to charges of attempting to commit an offence and escape from lawful custody.

    The Judge, Mr. Abubakar Sadiq, sentenced him to six months in jail on each of the two counts.

    He said the punishment would have been more severe, if the carpenter had wasted the court’s time and allowed a trial.

    Sadiq advised the convict to desist from committing crimes.

    The prosecutor, Mrs. Florence Avhioboh, told the court that a police patrol unit, led by Abbah Gabriel, arrested Eze, about 12:25 am., on September 1.

    She said he was arrested at an ATM Gallery at Jabi, Abuja, in possession of a toy gun and knife.

  • Scavenger jailed six months for theft

    •Another to be caned for stealing maize

    A Grade 1 Area Court, Kubwa, Abuja, has sentenced a 24-year-old scavenger, Yusufa Idris, to six months’ imprisonment for stealing plastic chairs and tomatoes.

    He admitted committing the offence and begged for leniency.

    The judge, Mohammed Marafa, however, gave Idris an option of N15,000 fine and warned him to desist from committing crimes.

    The prosecutor, John Okpa, told the court that Aminu Mohammed of Kaduna State reported the matter at Kubwa Police Station on August 25.

    He alleged that Idris was caught on Arab Road, Kubwa, with three plastic chairs, one rubber bucket containing onions, tomatoes and a dead chicken.

    Okpa named other items as knife, hoe and umbrella, “which Idris confessed he stole at Gbazango, Kubwa, Abuja.

    He said the offence contravened Section 287 of the Penal Code.

    Another  scavenger, Anas Abdulkari, was ordered by a  court in Karmo, to be caned for stealing maize.

    Abdulkari, 20, resident of Gidan Bola Jabi, Abuja, was sentenced for criminal trespass and theft after he pleaded guilty and begged for leniency.

    He said: “Sir, I’m so sorry for stealing maize. I took only three maize because I was hungry; please forgive me.’’

    The judge, Abubakar Sadiq, said the punishment would have been severe if he had not pleaded guilty.

    The court was told that Alhaji Sale Ali of Jabi, behind Delta Line, reported the matter at Utako Police Station on August 21.

    The prosecutor, Mrs. Florence Auhioboh, told the court that the convict went to Ali’s farm and harvested maize without his consent.

    She said the convict, who was caught and handed over to the police, admitted committing the offence.

    The prosecutor said the actions violated sections 348 and 287 of the Penal Code, and asked the court for summary trial after Abdulkadir pleaded guilty in line with Section 347 of the Administration of Criminal Justices Act, 2015.

  • Teacher jailed one month for mischief

    A Karmo Grade 1 Area Court, Abuja, has sentenced a 32-year-old teacher, Godwin Lawrence, to one-month imprisonment for mischief.

    The judge, Alhaji Abubakar Sadiq, however, gave the convict an option of N5,000 fine.

    He ordered him to pay N15,000 as compensation to the nominal complainant.

    Sadiq advised the convict to desist from crimes, saying the sentence would act as a deterrent to others.

    Lawrence, who lives at Karmo, was convicted on a one count charge.

    The convict, who pleaded guilty, urged the court to be lenient, saying he acted out of ignorance.

    The prosecutor, Florence Auhioboh, told the court that Isiaka Adama of same address with the convict, reported the matter at Karmo Police Station on August 25.

    She said the convict on that day was walking on the main road, the complainant honked his horn several times, but he refused to move.

    “He started insulting him and broke the windscreen of the complainant’s car, valued at N15,000.

    “During police investigation, he confessed to the crime and begged for mercy.”

    The prosecutor said the offence was punishable under Section 327 of the Penal Code.

     

  • Carpenter jailed four months

    A Kubwa Grade 1 Area Court in Abuja has sentenced a 28-year-old carpenter, Rabiu Abdullahi, to four months imprisonment for stealing a turkey.

    The convict, who lives at Kubwa in Abuja, was convicted for criminal trespass and theft.

    The judge, Mohammed Marafa, sentenced Abdullahi after he pleaded guilty.

    He said the sentence would serve as a lesson to Abdullahi because he was an ex-convict, adding that if he returns to court again, the punishment will be more severe.

    Marafa ordered that the turkey returned to the owner.

    The prosecutor, John Okpa, told the court Bello Mark, of Chikakore, Kubwa, Abuja, reported the matter at Kubwa Police Station on August 23.

    He said the convict criminally trespassed into the complainant’s home while he was asleep and stole his turkey, valued at N25,000.

    Okpa said the turkey was recovered from the convict during police investigation, adding that the offences contravene sections 342 and 287 of the Criminal Code.

    He said the convict was previously arraigned, convicted and sentenced for a similar offence  of stealing.

     

  • Driver jailed for stealing employer’s car

    A Grade 1 Area Court in Kubwa, FCT, yesterday sentenced a 28-year-old driver, Peter John, to three months’ imprisonment for stealing his employer’s car.

    The convict, who lives at Gbazango, Kubwa, Abuja, was convicted for theft.

    The judge, Mohammed Marafa, however, gave the convict an option of N10,000 fine.

    He said although the convict was a first offender, he deserved to be punished, warning him to desist from crime.

    Marafa ordered that the car be released to the complainant, Christopher Josephine.

    The prosecutor, John Okpa, told the court Josephine of Pent Estate, Kubwa, reported the matter at Kubwa Police Station on July 12.

    He said the complainant employed John as a driver and entrusted her Toyota Camry car, valued at N800, 000 to him to use in taking her children to school.

    Okpa said John stole the car, adding that it was recovered from him by the police at Ankpa in Kogi State.

    He said the offence contravened Section 289 of the Penal Code.

    John pleaded guilty and begged for leniency, saying he lost his father and brother at the time he stole the car.

    He said he has a wife and children, who depend on him.

  • Estate agent jailed 16 months

    A Karmo Grade 1 Area Court in Abuja yesterday sentenced Husseini Narumfa, an estate agent, to 16 months’ imprisonment for absconding with a would-be tenant’s N800,000.

    The complainant, Prince Sunday, in July, paid the money into the convict’s account as rent.

    Judge Mr. Abubakar Sadiq convicted Narumfa, who admitted committing the offences.

    Narumfa, a resident of Utako in the FCT, was sentenced on a two-count charge of criminal breach of trust and cheating.

    The judge, however, gave the convict an option of paying N20,000 fine, and warned him to view the reprieve as a second chance to become a better citizen.

    He ordered the convict to give the N800,000 back to the complainant, saying returning the money was a condition to regain freedom.

    Mrs. Florence Auhioboh, the prosecutor, told the court Sunday, of 20, Usman Zaki Street, Utako, reported the matter at Utako Police Station on August 16.

    She said in July, the complainant paid N800,000 into the convict’s account to secure an apartment for him in Utako.

  • Butcher jailed 30 days for stealing goat

    A Minna Magistrates’ Court in Niger State has sentenced a butcher, Abdulrahman Umaru, to 30 days imprisonment for stealing a goat.

    Umaru, 28, was arraigned on a count charge of theft.

    The offence is contrary to Section 287 of the Penal Code.

    The Magistrate, Amina Musa, held that the prosecution had proved its case against the accused beyond reasonable doubt and she had taken note of the guilty plea of the accused.

    Musa convicted Umaru of the offence and sentenced him to 30 days in prison.

    However, the magistrate gave the convict an option of N5, 000 fine.

    Musa ordered Umaru to pay N25, 000 to the complainant as restitution for the goat stolen.

    The prosecutor, Alfred Auta, had told the court that Amina Mohammed of Maitumbi in Minna reported the matter at the police station on July 24.

    Auta said Mohammed reported that Umaru stole a goat belonging to her, valued at N25, 000 and slaughtered it in an uncompleted building.

    When the charge was read to Umaru, he pleaded guilty, but implored the court to show him mercy.

    The prosecutor urged the court to try the convict in line with Section 157 of the Criminal Procedure Code.

    He prayed the court to order Umaru to pay N25, 000 as restitution to the complainant for the stolen goat.

  • Fake lawyer jailed two and a half years

    A man, Emmanuel Ojo, has been sentenced to two and a half years for parading himself as a lawyer.

    He was not given an option of fine.

    The 52-year old man, who was apprehended by the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Oyo State branch and arraigned at the Magistrates’ Court 2, Iyaganku, Ibadan on March 27, was caught while appearing as a lawyer in the court.

    He pleaded guilty to the two-count charge.

    Ojo was arraigned for conspiracy, impersonation and announcing himself as a lawyer.

    Delivering judgement, the Magistrate, Mrs. Abiola Richard, sentenced the accused to 30 months imprisonment without an option of fine.

    The prosecutor, Mr. Sunday Ogunremi, said the accused and others at large, between 2010 and 2017, at Mobolaji Law Chambers, 1, Winners Way, Basorun, Ibadan, conspired to impersonate as lawyers.

    He recalled that on March 27, the accused announced himself as a counsel and held brief in a case, but was later found to be an impersonator.

    The prosecutor said the offences contravened Section 516 and 484 Code Cap 38, Vol. II, Laws of Oyo State of Nigeria 2000.

    The accused was later moved to Agodi Prisons where he will serve his term.

  • Jailed for contempt

    Jailed for contempt

    •Two electricity firm’s managers bag three months without option of fine

    July 11, 2017 will remain indelible in the lives of the Manager and Marketing Manager of Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC), Onitsha District. It was the day they were both jailed three months for contempt without an option of fine by an Anambra State High Court sitting in Onitsha. The EEDC had been sued by the Iweka Electronics Amalgamated Traders Association, Onitsha,  for disconnecting their electricity supply after the company had given  them N2m estimated bill, popularly called ‘crazy bill’.

    ‘Crazy bill’ phenomenon is not new to electricity consumers in Nigeria. It had been there right from the days of the National Electric Power Authority (NEPA); it was there in the days of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), both public institutions, with successive governments looking the other way as Nigerians were fleeced by these agencies. Indeed, the rip-off would appear to have an official imprimatur when the Olusegun Obasanjo administration celebrated the then NEPA’s generation of about N6billion monthly revenue in 2003, up from N1.6billion in 2000, at a time when the authority’s performance had reached the nadir. One would have expected the government, as an elected government; to ask the authority’s management the magic wand that made such a feat possible, after all, revenue should be a function of performance.

    This was, largely, what the new owners of the electricity distribution companies inherited and wanted to continue. Unfortunately, the Muhammadu Buhari government insisted that electricity consumers must be provided prepaid meters to let them pay only for energy they consume. However, the electricity firms have largely been reluctant in providing the meters, preferring instead, the old order which leaves so much room for arbitrary billing, an arrangement that is largely tilted against the electricity consumers. Even when electricity is not supplied for weeks consecutively, consumers would still be expected to pay whatever the electricity firms billed them.

    These, apparently, informed the decision of the Iweka Electronics Amalgamated Traders Association, to drag EEDC to court when it slammed them a bill of N2million without basis. The court on May 23 ordered both parties to maintain the status quo in the interim, after the oral submissions of both counsel. However, the EEDC officials disconnected the traders’ lines despite the pendency of the interim order. It is pertinent to mention that this practice is not limited to EEDC; all the electricity distribution companies engage in it. The impunity with which they do it has often led to confrontation with some members of the public or even manhandling of some staff of the electricity firms.

    This is why we commend the traders association for taking the matter to court, instead of embarking on self-help. We commend this to other aggrieved Nigerians in similar situations. Justice Ike Obu who handled the case also deserves commendation for insisting on the sanctity of judicial orders. The point must be made that Nigeria is not banana republic where everybody does as he or she pleases. When courts give orders, they are meant to be obeyed. But what we see often is a situation where all manner of people and institutions treat judicial pronouncements with contempt.

    We guess Justice Obu’s conviction of the officials was informed by this serial impunity against judicial orders. “You are hereby committed to prison for three months until you purge yourselves of the contempt,” he said, after noting that the EEDC officials ought to have obeyed the court order, pending the hearing of the motion on notice. Such crass impunity should not be tolerated. No doubt, the court’s decision would be bad news for the electricity firms and their workers, but it would resonate well with many Nigerians, particularly those suffering in silence after being harassed to pay for electricity they did not consume.

  • Security guard jailed for robbing boss

    Security guard jailed for robbing boss

    A 24-year man, identified as John Kaduna has been sentenced to  one year jail term for robbing his boss, Mr. Nosa Orhue.

    John who worked as a security guard was accused of stealing the sum of N65, 000 and other items worth N150,000.

    The items were an ipad phone worth N128,000), a Nokia Torch Light phone  N4,500, a wristwatch valued at N1,500, a bag worth N4,500) and six clothes valued at N12,000.

    John was said to have committed the offence in February 2017 at No 11, Orhue Crescent, Evbuodia quarters in Benin City.

    He pleaded guilty to the two count charges preferred against him and was subsequently convicted.

    Presiding Magistrate, F. E Akhere, sentenced him to one year imprisonment or an option of N30, 000 fine.

    Two other persons, Amos Daniel and Peter Godwin, who were arraigned alongside John were sentenced to six months imprisonment each or an option of N10, 000 fine.

    Amos and Peter were found guilty of unlawful procurement of items stolen by John.

    They pleaded guilty to the one count charge preferred against them and begged the court for leniency.

    Both claimed that they were not aware that the items were stolen.

    The Presiding Magistrate also directed that the recovered items be returned to the lawful owner 30 days after the judgment.