Tag: jailed

  • Nigerian native doctor jailed in US for preparing fake charms for drug pushers

    Nigerian native doctor jailed in US for preparing fake charms for drug pushers

    A Nigerian-born native doctor   has been jailed for  14 years in the United States of America (USA)  for collecting hundreds of thousands of dollars from cocaine traffickers looking to get his supernatural protection from authorities.

    Christopher Omigie, a naturalized U.S. citizen, was said to have portrayed himself as a witchdoctor.

    He was sentenced Thursday in  a federal court in Beaumont, Texas after  pleading  guilty last year to conspiracy to distribute cocaine.

    Omigie  has been living in Lafayette, Louisiana,

    Prosecutors said  the 58-year-old provided traffickers with card readings, massages with magic ointments, razor blade cuttings and various magic powders, belts, coconuts and rocks to keep law enforcement away.

    They didn’t work.

    His main clients were caught and  pleaded guilty to schemes, involving cocaine trafficking.

  • Jailed Al Jazeera journalist freed, deported

    Jailed Al Jazeera journalist freed, deported

    Peter Greste, one of the three jailed Al Jazeera journalists in Egypt has finally reunited with his family in Australia after 400 days behind bars in Cairo.

    Greste was arrested in December 2013 and jailed last June alongside two other Al Jazeera colleagues – Canadian-Egyptian Mohamed Fahmy and Egyptian national Baher Mohamed.

    The trio was sentenced to between 7 and 10 years for allegedly aiding terrorist Muslim Brotherhood however, a court in Egypt ordered their retrial about a month ago.

    As at the time of filing this report, despite that all the defendants denied the charges against them saying their trial was a sham, it was gathered that  Mr Fahmy may be deported to Canada while concern remains about Mr Mohamed, who holds no dual nationality.

    Mr Fahmy, who holds dual Egyptian and Canadian citizenship, may be freed after having his Egyptian nationality revoked, presidential sources said.

    “This is what we expected would happen,” his brother Assem told pressmen: “Those who rule the country, this is not the first time they’ve done this, there have been foreigners who they have let leave the country when they were in trouble and their Egyptian colleagues are the ones who paid the price.”

    Responding to the release, Al Jazeera said its campaign to free the journalists from Egypt would not stop until all three were freed.

    “We’re pleased for Peter and his family that they are to be reunited. It has been an incredible and unjustifiable ordeal for them, and they have coped with incredible dignity,” it said adding: “We will not rest until Baher and Mohamed also regain their freedom.”

     

  • Man jailed for assaulting policeman

    An Upper Area Court in Kado, Abuja, yesterday sentenced a 33-year-old applicant, Paul Peter, to two months in prison for beating up a police officer.

    The presiding judge, Abubakar Sadiq, sentenced Peter after he pleaded guilty to  assault on police officer and mischief.

    Sadiq gave Peter an option of N6, 000 fine and warned him be of good behaviour.

    The prosecutor, Sgt. Simon Ibrahim, told the court that Corporal Ali Abubakar of the FCT Police Command arrested and took the convict to Utako Police Station on June 8.

    Ibrahim said the complainant sighted the accused wandering about at the Berger Roundabout and when he questioned him he started beating him.

    He said the accused injured the police officer in the face and also tore his uniform.

    Ibrahim said during investigation the accused confessed that he committed the crime.

    Peter said: “I was waiting for my friend when the police man approached me and started asking me questions.

    “He insulted me and I became angry. Have mercy on me I will not do it again.’’

  • Atiku: my father was jailed for refusing to let me attend school

    Atiku: my father was jailed for refusing to let me attend school

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar at the weekend stunned his audience in Geneva, Switzerland, when he relived how his late father was jailed for refusing to let him attend school in his hometown of Jada, Adamawa State.

    Atiku spoke at a ceremony in the European city when he was conferred with an honorary doctorate degree by the Geneva School of Diplomacy and International Relations.

    “When my father was put in jail by local authorities because he needed my assistance with herding the livestock, it seemed like a harsh punishment,” he said.

    The former Vice President noted that “were he (his father) to be alive to witness this day and the last 30 or so years of my life, I am sure that he would exclaim ‘wow! Education pays, after all’.

    The founder of the American University of Nigeria (AUN), Yola, recalled that as a boy growing up in his rustic village of Jada, he had dreams.

    According to him, it was education that made his dreams come true.

    Atiku said: “Education is what brought me in contact with members of the United States of America’s Peace Corps when I was still a little boy. It was a contact and interaction that would have profound impact on my life, especially my love for education and service.”

    Underscoring the imperative of education to personal growth and development, the former Vice President said it gave him the friends he made across Nigeria as he attended high school and university; gave him a job in the civil service and provided him with opportunities to meet and form more life-long friendships from across the world.

    Atiku attributed the modest achievements he has made in business and politics as well as his contributions to improving the lives of others to education.

    He advised parents not to choose career options for their children but allow them to discover their innate potentials by charting their own disciplines.

     

  • Woman jailed for human trafficking

    An Edo State High Court sitting in Benin City has sentenced Ms Tobias Rose Esther to 18-month imprisonment for trafficking in humans.

    She was arraigned by the National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons (NAPTIP) on a two-count charge of deceitfully inducing two girls to Togo.

    The offence is contrary to Section 19(b) of the Trafficking in Persons (Prohibition) Law Enforcement and Administration Act 2003(as amended).

    The court was told how the accused recruited the victims under the pretence of learning a trade in Togo but forced them into prostitution.

    The accused pleaded guilty to the charges but asked for mercy.

    Justice Alero Eruaga sentenced her to 18-month imprisonment.

  • N23.3m fraud: Ex-pension boss jailed for two years

    …To forfeit N325m

    An Abuja High Court on Monday sentenced a former director, Police Pension Board, Yakubu Yusuf to two years in prison for embezzlement of N23.3bn pension funds.

    He will also forfeit N325m and property.

     

  • Two Beninoise jailed for stealing motorcycle

    A Magistrate’s Court in Osogbo, the Osun State capital, has sentenced two Beninoise to four years imprisonment for stealing a motorcycle.

    Jagunoyeji Adeniyi (25) and Sunday Adesade (25) allegedly committed the offence on June 25, last year, around 10am at Aye, Ejigbo Local Government Area.

    The Bajaj Motorcycle, which belongs to Mr. Kehinde Olajide, a commercial motorcyclist, was valued at N110,000.

    Adeniyi and Adesade pleaded guilty to the two-count charge of conspiracy and stealing.

    The defence counsel, Mr. Ameachi Ngwu, prayed the court to temper justice with mercy.

    Ngwu said his clients have been in detention since their arraignment last year and urged the court to give them an option of fine, a plea the court refused to oblige.

    The Magistrate, Adebayo Lasisi, sentenced them to a four-year imprisonment without option of fine.

  • South African jailed for drug trafficking

    A Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday sentenced a 37-year-old South African to 18-month imprisonment for attempting to export about 5.5 kilogrammes of Methamphetamine narcotic to her country. Mrs Duru Lindiwef, a mother of one, was arraigned in November 26, 2012, on a one-count charge of unlawful dealing in narcotic

    She pleaded guilty to the charge and was accordingly convicted by the trial judge, Justice Benedicta Molokwu,who adjourned to January 23, 2013 for sentencing.

    Yesterday, defence lawyer, Eugene Okenyi pleaded with the court to be lenient with his client.

    He said the mother of one, who is HIV-positive was frustrated because she did not know the whereabouts of her husband and only son.

    Okenyi also said the convict was only misled into conveying the substance which she had no prior knowledge, adding that it was put in her bag by a supposed samaritan who paid her flight ticket back to South Africa.

    Justice Molokwu, in her judgment, sentenced Mrs Lindiwef to 18-month imprisonment.

    The judge ordered that the term of imprisonment should run from June, 27, 2012 (when she was first arrested and detained).

    “Considering the passionate plea of learned counsel for the convict, and her health challenges, the court is swayed to tamper justice with mercy. The convict is hereby sentenced to 18 months imprisonment, which shall run from the date of apprehension. Moreso, the convict is ordered to be repatriated back to South Africa at the expiration of her jail terms” Molokwu ruled.

    Prosecution lawyer, Femi Oloruntoba told the court that Mrs Lindiwef was arrested at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos on June 27 last year.

    Oloruntoba said she was apprehended during an outward clearance of South African Airline flight to Johannesburg, with about 5.5 kilogrammes of Metamphetamine narcotic recovered from her.

    He told the court that the substance was concealed in a carton of sardine, to avoid suspicion, but was discovered by a female clearing officer at the South Africa departure table.

    Oloruntona said the offence contravened Section 11 (b) of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency Act, Cap N30, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004

  • London-based Nigerian fraudsters jailed for £2.7million scam

    London-based Nigerian fraudsters jailed for £2.7million scam

    Two Nigerian fraudsters, whose global £2.7m scam had deadly consequences for one family they mercilessly ripped off, were jailed yesterday.

    Police identified a total of thirteen victims all over the world, who each lost an average of £207,000, after the duo convinced them they were due for an Australian lottery pay-out, inheritance, investment benefit or were sold non-existent heavy plant machinery.

    Obinnam Nwokolo, 37, of 20 Chesworth Close, Erith, who amassed a valuable property portfolio in the UK and Nigeria, received six years and four months and Uchechhukwu Onuoha, 40, of Aspen Green, Erith, who entered the country on a student visa, received five years and two months.

    Both pleaded guilty at Croydon Crown Court to conspiracy to defraud between October 1, 2008 and September 15 last year.

    One of their victims, Betty McClellan, 62, of Hyde Park, Los Angeles was shot dead by her husband Hersey McClellan, 63, who then shot himself on June 20, 2010 after she wired £264,000 — blowing the couple’s hard-earned pension.

    She transferred the sums to accounts controlled by fellow Nigerians Sergius Ene, 44, of 111 Rushden Gardens, Ilford and Osas Odia, 33, of 15 Windrush Court, Chichester Wharf, Erith, who both admitted conspiring to launder criminal property.

    Ene, who received sixteen months in March for a £27,000 Euromilions lottery scam on an 83-year-old Northampton pensioner, was jailed for two years and eight months. for laundering £342,400.

    The accountant, a former Haringey Council housing benefit officer, drove a Mercedes with a personalised ‘ENE’ number plate. He is currently appealing deportation and it was revealed the mother of his three children entered into a sham marriage with a French citizen of African origin just to stay in the UK.

    Student Odia, who laundered £149,000, was deported in 2005 as an illegal overstayer after a forged passport conviction, but is now a permanent resident after marrying a UK national. He will be sentenced on February 11 so he can complete a management degree.

    Victims were telephoned, emailed or written to by Nwokolo and Onuoha, who between them spent at least £22,500 on stationary supplies as they convinced the dupes to pay for administrative fees, insurance, certificates and other charges to release funds due to them.

    The criminals convinced Betty McClellan, 62, that she had won $2.8m on the Australian lottery. She sent them £264,000 to ‘cover tax and admin costs’.

    Some victims paid money to a bogus charity claiming to assist West African refugees, and one even paid for a non-existent U.S. Army General to ship his trunk of belongings from Afghanistan to Australia.

    “These monies were placed in a series of bank accounts and laundered,” said prosecutor Mr. Andrew Evans. “The fraud was carried out on an international scale.”

    Mrs McClellan was convinced she had won $2.8m on the Australian lottery and sent £264,000 to cover taxes and admin costs to release the win.

    “When her husband discovered she had lost all of their pension savings he shot her dead and then turned the gun on himself and committed suicide,” added Mr. Evans. Their bodies were found by their son.

    An Indiana farmer, believing he had a claim on a £14.9m inheritance, lost over £339,000 and a Venezuelan businessman lost £163,000 buying a mobile crane Nwokolo and father-of-two Onuoha advertised for sale on a Spanish website.

    A Bristol woman lost £312,000 chasing a £1.8m Australian lottery win and found herself arrested after paying the counterfeit £158,000 cheque the defendants sent her into her account.

    “She was buying a new home and intended to settle the balance from the winnings she was expecting.

    ‘She is now living in sheltered accommodation and feels vulnerable and extremely embarrassed and her family have lost their inheritance.”

    Father-of-three Nwokolo even bought three 1,350 per-hour letter-folding machines to increase the volume of mail shots and his home contained lists with details of thousands of individuals and businesses.

    Onuoha had a pile of 593 scam letters ready for postage when police raided the home he rented off Nwokolo and officers also found a prepared ‘script’ he used when duping victims over the phone.

    “It is difficult to think of a larger advance free fraud than this,’ announced Judge Jeremy Gold QC. It is on an enormous scale. Thousands of emails and letters were sent out across the world promising money from non-existent relatives from inheritances or non-existence lottery wins.

    “You preyed on the naivety or generosity of people to extract large amounts of money from them with devastating effects on their personal lives.

    “I regard this fraud as one that falls into the most serious category of advanced fee fraud, targeting vulnerable victims.”

    Proceeds of Crime Act confiscation proceedings will follow.

     

    • Culled from Daily Mail

  • Amaechi: tax defaulters’ll be jailed next year

    Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi yesterday said the state’s law will be amended to ensure that tax evaders go to jail.

    He said the state government would be ruthless in tax collection next year.

    The Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) decried the delay in the dispensation of justice.

    He assured members of the legal profession that his administration’s policies would aid prompt and effective justice delivery.

    Amaechi spoke at the maiden Town Hall Meeting on the Roadmap to Effective Justice Administration, which was held at the Chief Judge’s Ceremonial Court at the Rivers High Court Complex in Port Harcourt, the state capital.

    The theme of the meeting was: “Justice delayed equals justice denied”.

    The governor said his administration was doing everything possible to ensure even development in the state.

    He said: “There are many ongoing development projects and I assure you that we will complete all of them. We will be ruthless in tax collection next year. Everybody must pay their taxes.

    “We will amend the law to ensure that those who do not pay taxes go to jail. We need the money to provide free education and health care.

    “We will stop our brothers from collecting taxes on the roads and stop multiple taxation. We have sent the bill to the House of Assembly and are waiting for them to pass it into law.”

    Amaechi said his administration would continue to fund the judiciary.

    He said not only funds makes the judiciary independent, but the ability to be assertive and say no to any arm of government, individual or organisation, no matter how highly placed.

    Amaechi said: “The day you compromise is when you will know that independence is beyond funding.

    “It also has to do with the discipline of the leadership, not followership. If a judge says he will sit at 9am and punishes anyone who comes late, you will be punctual next time.”