Tag: Kirikiri prison

  • Court remands mechanic in Kirikiri for stealing

    An Ikeja Magistrates’ Court, Mr T. O. Ojo, presiding over the case, however, fixed Aug. 10 for judgment following plea of guilty by the accused.

    The accused, whose residential address was not provided, is facing a four-count charge bordering on stealing and house-breaking.

    Read Also: Suspect arraigned for wine theft

    The prosecutor, Sgt. Nomayo Kenrich, told the court that the accused committed the offences on Aug. 2 at 2.00a.m. at No. 9 Ogungbeye St., Olowora in Ojodu area of Lagos.

    Kenrich said that the accused stole four cell phones valued at N120, 000, after he unlawfully broke into the room of the complainants, Yinusa Saheed, Christopher Obiti and Joel Oyewumi.

    “The accused broke into the room while the complainants were fast asleep and unplugged the phones from where they were plugged.

    He stole an Infinix Hot phone valued at N25, 000; one Tecno phone valued at N40, 000; one Blackberry Z10 phone valued at N25, 000 and one LG K7 worth N30, 000, totalling N120, 000.

    “He was caught after one of the complainants woke up and raised alarm,” the prosecutor said.

    The offences contravene Sections 287 and 308 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015 (Revised).

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Section 287 prescribes seven years jail term for stealing, while Section 308 stipulates two years jail term for house-breaking.

  • Bus conductor jailed 90 days for assaulting woman

    An Ikeja Magistrates’ court on Thursday, sentenced a 20-year-old “homeless’’ bus conductor, Faruk Yusuf, to 90 days in Kirikiri prison with hard labour for assaulting a woman.

    The magistrate, Mrs M.O Tanimola, sentenced Yusuf, after he pleaded guilty to assault and pleaded for mercy.

    Tanimola, in her verdict, however, gave the accused an option to pay N10,000 fine.

    “You are hereby sentenced to three months imprisonment with hard labour or an option of N10,000 fine.

    “The sentence will serve as a deterrent to others who might want to engage in similar acts,” she ruled..

    Read Also: Man jailed 12 months for forging bank statement

    Earlier, the Prosecutor, Insp Aondohemba Koti, told the court that the accused committed the offence on Jan. 6, at Ojuwoye Market, Mushin. Lagos.

    He said that the accused beat up and punched Miss Oyindamola Omoniyi, in her mouth, after an argument.

    Koti told the court that the offence contravened Section 170 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015(Revised).

  • Alleged $1.046m fraud: Court remands Ajudua in Kirikiri prison

    Suspected serial fraudster, Fred Ajudua, was remanded in Kirikiri prison custody yesterday by an Ikeja Special Offences Court for allegedly defrauding Ziad Abu Zalaf of Technical International Limited in Germany of $1.046 million.

    The court held that Ajudua will remain in prison custody pending the hearing of his bail application and commencement of trial today.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) arraigned Ajudua before Justice Mojisola Dada on a 12-count charge bordering on fraud and conspiracy.

    According to the EFCC, Ajudua and his accomplice, Joseph Ochunor, defrauded Zalaf on April 2, 1993.

    The arraignment of Ajudua and his accomplices had suffered series of setbacks that led to 44 adjournments before several judges.

    The same scenario played out before Justice Josephine Oyefeso who took over the matter last year before the Lagos State Chief Judge (CJ), Justice Opeyemi Oke, reassigned it to a special court for accelerated hearing.

    In the fresh charge filed before the court yesterday, the EFCC said Ajudua, on April 2, 198 in Ikeja, allegedly conspired with Ochunor, said to be on the run, and obtained $268,000.00 from Zalaf of Technical International Limited, a division of Mystic Company Limited in Germany.

    Ajudua was also accused to have obtained $225,000.00 by false pretence from Zalaf.

    EFCC accused Ajudua of uttering and forging Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) official receipt numbers 128 and 138, purported to have been issued by the apex bank to Zalaf.

    “On May 12, he was also said to have forged a Contract Completion Certificate (CCC) purported to have been issued by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Falomo, Lagos, to defraud Technical International Limited.

    Ajudua pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    Following the defendant’s plea, his lawyer, Norrison Quakers, through an application dated June 1, applied for his bail.

    Quakers urged the court to grant his client bail and allow him to continue to enjoy same bail conditions as earlier granted by Justice Josephine Oyefeso in a related charge.

    The lawyer assured the court that his client would not jump bail.

    “We urge your lordship to grant the defendant’s bail because he was granted bail by your learned brother. He has never for once absented himself from court except when he was out of the country.

    “Also, we want my Lord to consider his bail application because of his health condition.

    “He will need medical attention from time to time and he cannot access that in the prison custody,” Quakers said.

    Counsel to the EFCC, Mr. Seidu Atteh, opposed the bail.

    He said: “My Lord, we shall be opposing the bail application but we leave the decision at the discretion of the court.”

    Justice Dada ordered that Ajudua be remanded in prison custody pending the court’s ruling on his bail application.

  • Suspected cultist remanded in Kirikiri Prison

    A 29-year-old man, Azeez Morouf, has been remanded in Kirikiri Prison for allegedly being a cultist.

    He will remain in prison custody until he meets his bail conditions.

    The police arraigned Morouf on a one-count charge before an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court for allegedly belonging to the Eiye Confraternity.

    Prosecuting Inspector Peter Nwagwu said Morouf was arrested on May 5 at Ogudu by some Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) officials.

    Azeez pleaded not guilty.

    Chief Magistrate Y.O. Aje Afunwa granted him N200,000 bail, with two sureties in the like sum.

    The case continues on  July 9.

     

  • Lagos to intervene in indigent Kirikiri Prison inmates’ cases, challenges

    Lagos to intervene in indigent Kirikiri Prison inmates’ cases, challenges

    As part of its commitment to protect the fundamental rights of its citizens irrespective of their status, the Lagos State government has resolved to intervene in the cases of indigent  Kirikiri Prison inmates without legal representation and other challenges.

    The inmates were identified and shortlisted for intervention when the Directorate of Citizens’ Rights under the Lagos State Ministry of Justice visited the prison. Speaking after the visit, the Director of the Directorate, Mrs Omololu Idowu Adesina, said: “The visit was one of our quarterly activities. We visit prisons to see the appropriateness of the detainees, the awaiting trial inmates and the conditions of the prisons.

    “Some of the inmates have health issues, some of them just need our intervention to get out of the prison. Some of them have bail conditions that they cannot meet, at times we can help.  It could even just require us to contact their people for them to take up their matters in the way of providing sureties and all that.”

    She said the directorate is intervening for over 20 inmates in all and that include those who no have no legal representation, adding: “

    “When the police arrest people and they are detained by the order of court, their parents or guardians may not know.

    When this kind of situation arises, it is now the duty of agencies of government  to intervene. That is why the OPD has been established to defend the defenceless or people that have no money to defend themselves.  Our office is to defend indigent citizens, people who no money because to employ the services of a lawyer doesn’t come cheap. That is why we do it free of charge.”

    She remarked that many inmates will rot in the prison if the state government is not rendering the service through the directorate  “because there would be nobody to defend them.”

    She cautioned that the gesture is in not in any way meant to encourage crime.

  • Foundation donates to Kirikiri Prison

    Foundation donates to Kirikiri Prison

    AS part of its support for the effective rehabilitation of prison inmates, the Nero Asibelua Foundation (NAF) has donated some educational materials to Cottage of Hope Institute located within the Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison in Lagos. The items included computer printer/photocopy machine, writing materials, devotional books, tables and chairs.

    According to the Chairman of the foundation, Mr. Nero Asibelua, who was represented by Mrs. Vivian Asibelua, “We need to rehabilitate people in our prisons, so they can come out as better Nigerians.”

    He commended the competency of the prison authority, saying ‘I am particularly moved by the initiative of the prison authorities at the Kirikiri Maximum Prison for setting up such a laudable programme that accepted our humble support’. He prayed Almighty God to keep them strong and enable them to transform the lives of the inmates assigned to them for good.

    Asibelua said the foundation is simply supporting the ongoing reformatory structure already in place in order to make a difference to the lives of inmates and ultimately when released and become free in the larger society. “This gesture symbolises our need as citizens to rehabilitate our thought-process towards nation building.” She added that well-meaning Nigerians should engage in humanitarian service and consider being humane at all times, whatever the situation.

    “This report would be inconclusive if we do not add that the educational centre located within the Maximum Security Prison is being managed by the inmates, some of them lawyers, bankers and PhD holders who are serving terms. Cottage of Hope Institute runs Primary and Secondary Schools Curriculum, which prepare the inmate for WAEC examinations,” he noted.

    In appreciation of the gesture, Deputy Comptroller of Prison, Seye Oduntan said: “We appreciate this donation and we believe the materials will go a long way to enable effective educational delivery to the inmates”.

    The NAF team were conducted round the facility by the officers in charge, DCP Seye Oduntan, ACP Henry Onyeze, and other officers.

  • Man jailed for smuggling marijuana to brother in kirikiri prison

    Man jailed for smuggling marijuana to brother in kirikiri prison

    A Federal High Court in Lagos, on Friday, sentenced 24 year-old-man, Patrick Amadi to two years in prison for smuggling marijuana into kirikiri prison.

    Amadi was charged by National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) on one count of drug trafficking.

    Justice Ayotunde Faji sentenced Amadi after he pleaded guilty and begged the court to temper justice with mercy and promised not to engage in crime again.

    Justice Faji said the prison term should begin from the date of his arrest and admonished him to use the jail period to turn a new leaf and become a better person.

    Earlier, the prosecutor, Mr Jeremiah Aernan, told the court that the accused was arrested on June 18 at the Kirikiri Maximum Prison in Lagos with 200 grammes of the narcotics.

    Aernan said Amadi was caught with the substance in his sandals, which he planned to hand over to his brother, whom he went to visit.

    The prosecutor said officials who arrested Amadi said he hid the weed in the sandals he wore when he visited his brother who was serving jail term in kirikiri.

    The offence contravened the provisions of Section 11(c) of NDLEA Act Cap. N30, Laws of the Federation 2004, he added.

  • ‘Policeman framed me for robbery for denying him sex’

    ‘Policeman framed me for robbery for denying him sex’

    A 27-year-old trader, Mrs Victoria Amodu, Wednesday told an Ikeja High Court, Lagos that an Investigative Police Officer (IPO) at the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS), Ikeja Division, demanded sex from her to release her from custody.

    Amodu, a mother of four, gave the testimony as a defence witness in her trial for alleged conspiracy and armed robbery, before Justice Kudirat Jose.

    The defendant, who denied the allegation, was arraigned alongside one Hammed Isiaka on a six-count charge of conspiracy to commit robbery and armed robbery, contrary to Section 295(2)(a) of the Criminal Law No 11 Laws of Lagos State, 2011.

    One of the charges reads, “Hammed Isiaka, Victoria Amodu and others now at large, on or about August 12, 2014 while armed with a pistol did rob one Elizabeth Moses of a cash sum of N35, 000 and a cheque of N1.4m.”

    However, while being led in evidence by her counsel, Nelson Onyejaka, Amodu told Justice Jose that she was unjustly arrested by the police on August 12, 2014 at Church Bus stop, Badagry, Lagos.

    She said she was selling bread at the bus stop when policemen raided the area, arrested her and others and bundled them into their truck, where they met some men who were already tied up.

    Narrating the incident, Amodu said: “I was arrested by the police while I was selling bread and taken to the station at SARS, Ikeja. An IPO (name not mentioned) there told me to call someone that would come for my bail. I called a neighbour, a lady that helps me look after my kids. When she arrived, the IPO said a woman could not sign my bail bond, which he put at N400,000.

    “I became worried because I didn’t know any man to call since I was no longer living with my husband and I was also new in Lagos. I decided to call my father but he refused coming to the station. He said since I was married he had no hand in anything concerning me.

    “I didn’t know what else to do at this time, so I started begging the IPO to let me go and take care of my kids since I didn’t commit any offence. The IPO took me outside the cell to a corner and said that I am a pretty lady and that if I submit myself to him, I would be freed. I got angry and shouted at him, asking why he would make such a statement to me. He immediately, dragged me back to the cell. Some others who were arrested that day were released after they paid money, though I don’t know how much they paid.

    “Nights after, the IPO brought out some case files and told me and others in the cell to sign them. He said that when we were done signing, we would be released. I agreed to sign the documents on the condition that he would not touch me. But the other men refused saying they couldn’t sign what they didn’t know.

    “The IPO immediately brought out his gun and threatened to shoot them if they didn’t sign and they fearfully signed it.

    “After signing the documents, we were all taken to a Magistrates Court and from there, to Kirikiri Prison.

    Amodu pleaded with the court to tamper justice with mercy and permit her to go home to cater for her children.

    During cross-examination by prosecution counsel, Mrs. Awosika, Amodu denied knowing the first defendant, Isiaka.

    She said she had never seen him before and only met him for the first time in court on the day of arraignment.

    Isiaka, a driver, who also testified while being led by his counsel, Mrs Olamide Amore-Akintoye, said he was arrested on his way from Seme border while carrying food items belonging to a customer.

    He said his car was impounded and taken to the station where he was locked up after he failed to pay for his release.

    Justice José adjourned till November 29 for adoption of final addresses.

  • Alleged $565,000 scam: American seeks bail variation 

    Alleged $565,000 scam: American seeks bail variation 

    An American, Marco Ramirez, who allegedly defrauded three Nigerians of $565,000 in a United States Green Card scam, has asked a Lagos High Court in Ikeja to vary the terms of his bail.

    Last June 22, Ramirez was arraigned for the alleged offence by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) before Justice Josephine Oyefeso.

    He pleaded not guilty to a 16-count charge of obtaining $565,000 under false pretence from three Nigerians.

    On July 10, Justice Oyefeso granted him $250,000 bail with two sureties in the like sum among other conditions.

    One of the sureties, the judge added, should be resident in Lagos, be a director of a reputable company and have landed property in Lagos.

    Ramirez was remanded in Kirikiri Prison pending the fulfillment of his bail conditions.

    He approached vacation judge Justice Ganiyu Safari Friday through his counsel Ademola Adefolaju, seeking a reduction of the bail conditions.

    Adefolaju told Justice Safari that Ramirez’s health condition had deteriorated in Kirikiri Prison since his detention.

    He prayed the court for an order to allow the defendant to bring one surety that is in a directorate cadre in the Lagos State civil service as a substitute for a director in a reputable company.

    Adefolaju, who stated that the application was served on the EFCC on August 21, said Ramirez was dying in prison and the failure “to expeditiously determine the motion is dangerous as his health is deteriorating in prison custody.”

    However, Justice Safari reasoned that since the EFCC was not aware of the proceedings it was better for the matter to be adjourned.

    He ordered that a hearing notice be issued to the commission informing it of Ramirez’s application.

    The judge adjourned hearing of the application till Monday, August 24.

    According to the anti-graft agency, Ramirez, the Managing Director of three companies – USA Now Plc., Eagleford Instalodge Group and USA Now Capital Group – committed the offences between February 2013 and August 2013.

    The American was alleged to have fraudulently received $545,000 dollars from one Godson Echejue to invest in one of Ramirez’s firms.

    The plan was to procure an American green card (permanent residency card) for the Nigerian.

    Ramirez also allegedly received $10,000 from one Abubakar Umar through a non-existent investment programme in the U.S. which would make Umar eligible to obtain an American passport

    The EFCC also accused Ramirez of illegally receiving $10,000 from one Olukayode Sodimu on the pretext that the funds were facilitation fees with the American Immigration Services for an American Green Card.

  • Man remanded over theft of bus brain box

    Man remanded over theft of bus brain box

    An Ikeja Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday remanded a 29-year-old, Osemeka Ekene, in Kirikiri Prison over alleged theft of the brain-box of a school bus.

    The accused, who resides at Ojota area of Lagos, is facing a two-count charge of burglary and stealing.

    The Magistrate, Miss A.R. Onilogbo, who gave the ruling, said the accused should remain behind bars pending advice from the State Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP).

    Earlier, the Prosecutor, Sgt. Ishola Samuel said the accused broke the side mirror of a Toyota Hiace bus with registration no. KTU 237 XU and also stole its brain box, property of Kingstripes School.

    Samuel alleged that the accused committed the offences on June 1 at Degree Event Centre, Oregun, Lagos.

    He said the accused was earlier sighted at the event centre, where the vehicle was parked.

    “The was caught with a brain box which he stole from the Toyota bus parked at the event centre.’’

    The offences contravened Sections 287 and 348 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

    The magistrate adjourned the case until Aug. 24.