Tag: Okey Nwosu

  • Okey Nwosu out of social radar

    Sometime you have to fall off the rope in order to get up again and reach heights that wouldn’t have been possible otherwise. Perhaps this explains Okey Nwosu’s sudden decision to stay off the limelight. The former Managing Director of First Inland Bank Plc and maverick banker who left indelible marks on the nation’s financial sector while he held sway at the bank that later transformed to Finbank Plc, has disappeared from the social scene like the early dew that disappears at the blaze of the morning sun.

    Okey has not been seen for quite a long time. He was last visible towards the tail end of last year in those trying days while he was fighting tooth and nail to exculpate himself from the grip of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for alleged financial impropriety in office.

    After the Court of Appeal in Lagos stopped breathing hell down his neck and ended his ordeal by striking out the charge of stealing Finbank’s N10.9bn preferred against him by the EFCC, Okey heaved a sigh of relief and crawled into an anonymous cocoon. It will be recalled that just a few years ago before his EFCC travail, Okey’s was a name, which titillated dreams and awakened the passion of many success hopefuls who were driven to be like him. His sudden disappearance has been a cause of concern to many and it has elicited speculations about his whereabouts.

  • New lease of life for okey Nwosu

    New lease of life for okey Nwosu

    The name Okey Nwosu spurs memories of a former Managing Director of First Inland Bank Plc. The banker left some indelible marks on the nation’s financial sector while he held sway as the MD of the bank that later transformed to Finbank Plc.

    But like an insignificant proletariat, Nwosu faded off the social scene at a point, causing the imagination of many to run wild as they tried to envisage what Nwosu has been up to in recent times.

    The last time he made the headlines was at the end of last year when he was striving to pull himself free from the clutches of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), which was closing in on him for some alleged financial impropriety in office. His ordeal with the EFCC ended when the Court of Appeal in Lagos struck out charges of stealing Finbank’s N10.9 billion preferred against him by the EFCC.

    Before Nwosu’s encounter with the EFCC, he was a force to reckon with in the Nigerian banking sector. Okey was a name which titillated dreams and awakened the passion of many success hopefuls. The former MD of the defunct First Inland Bank traversed the local banking sector like a modern emperor. His sudden disappearance from the social milieu has spurred speculations on his whereabouts.

  • Okey Nwosu goes off social radar

    Given his accomplishments as a banker, the name Okey Nwosu would always be remembered by many. So also will his battles with the anti-graft agency, Economic and Financial Crimes Commissions (EFCC)

    The name of the former Managing Director of First Inland Bank Plc, which later transformed to Fin Bank Plc, titillated dreams and awakened the passion of many success hopefuls. The former Managing Director of Fin Bank reigned like a king before he ran into trouble with EFCC.

    As would be expected, his sudden disappearance from the social scene has sparked speculations on his whereabouts. For years, he was in the net of the EFCC after he was asked to account for the sum of N10.9bn that was missing from Fin Bank.

    The development made him the butt of negative media reports and a regular face in the courts. His last public appearance occurred at the tail end of last year when the Court of Appeal in Lagos ended his ordeal by striking out the charges against him.

    After his long battle with EFCC, it seems Nwosu has decided to stay away from the public to savour his newfound freedom.

  • Where is Okey Nwosu?

    Like the early morning dew which disappears at the rising of the sun, Okey Nwosu has been missing from public glare for some time. But while nothing is being heard about him at the moment, it will take decades for his memory to fade away from the minds of many Nigerians who were witnesses to his travails as a former MD of First Inland Bank.

    For years, Nwosu was involved in a battle with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) after he was accused of mismanaging the sum of N10.9 billion belonging to Finbank. This consequently made him a major victim of negative publicity and a regular face in court. Towards the tail end of last year, he heaved a sigh of relief after the Court of Appeal in Lagos ended his ordeal by striking out the charges against him and declaring him a free man.

    But it would seem that Nwosu has decided to enjoy his freedom in isolation. Nothing has been heard of him and it appears he has retired to the four walls of his home, finding solace in the intimacy of his immediate family.

  • Court adjourns trial of ex-Finbank MD ‘sine die’

    Court adjourns trial of ex-Finbank MD ‘sine die’

    Justice Lateefat Okunnu of a Lagos High Court sitting in Ikeja on Monday adjourned sine die (indefinitely), the trial of a former Managing Director of Finbank Plc, Okey Nwosu and three former directors of the bank.

    Nwosu, Dayo Famoroti, Danjuma Ocholi and Agnes Ebubedike were charged to court by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for allegedly stealing N10.9 billion belonging to the bank.

    In the ruling delivered yesterday, Justice Okunnu adjourned the matter indefinitely sequel to three judgments delivered on November 21 by the Court of Appeal, Lagos Division.

    The Court of Appeal struck out the theft charges preferred against Nwosu, Famoroti and Ebubedike by the Commission.

    The court held that the High Court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the charges.

    According to the upper court, a state high court cannot entertain matters arising from capital market transactions.

    The appellate court held that matters that are capital market-based case can only be handled by the Federal High Court.

    Ocholi’s counsel Lanre Ogunlesi (SAN) urged the court to dismiss the charge against his client in view of the Appeal Court’s judgment.

    EFCC’s counsel Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), however, informed the court that the prosecution has appealed “the three judgments of the Appeal court at the Supreme Court”.

    Jacobs, subsequently, asked the court to adjourn the matter indefinitely in the interest of justice.

  • Court adjourns Okey Nwosu’s trial indefinitely

    Justice Lateefat Okunnu of the Lagos High Court, Ikeja, on Monday adjourned the trial of a former managing director of Finbank Plc, Mr. Okey Nwosu and three others indefinitely.

    Nwosu and three former directors – Dayo Famoroti, Danjuma Ocholi and Agnes Ebubedike were charged for allegedly stealing N10.9 billion, belonging to Finbank (now First City Monument Bank).

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Okunnu’s decision to adjourn the matter indefinitely was premised on three separate judgments delivered by the Court of Appeal, Lagos Division, on November 21.

    The Court of Appeal had, in the judgments, struck out the theft charges preferred against Nwosu, Famoroti and Ebubedike by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    The appellate court held that the Lagos High Court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the charges because they emanated from capital market transactions.

    It also held that such a capital market-based case should be handled by a Federal High Court.

    During Monday’s proceedings, the counsel to Ocholi, Mr. Lanre Ogunlesi (SAN) urged the court to dismiss the charge against his client because of the appeal court’s judgments.

    The EFCC counsel, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), however, informed the court that the prosecution had filed an appeal against the three judgments at the Supreme Court.

    “We have filed a notice of appeal in respect of the three judgments.

    “The records have been compiled and our brief will also be filed this week.

    “In the interest of justice, the matter should be adjourned sine die,” Jacobs said.

     

  • Atuche wants theft charges dismissed

    Atuche wants theft charges dismissed

    Former Managing Director of defunct Bank PHB, Francis Atuche, on Wednesday asked a Lagos High Court, Ikeja, to dismiss the N4.2 billion theft charges preferred against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    The request to quash the charges was contained in an application filed by his counsel, Mr. Abubakar Shamsudeen before Justice Adeniyi Onigbanjo of the Lagos High Court, Ikeja.

    Atuche’s application to quash the charges was based on a judgment delivered by the Court of Appeal, Lagos Division, on November 21, which dismissed the theft charge preferred against a former managing director of Finbank Plc, Mr. Okey Nwosu and some others.

    The Court of Appeal had in Nwosu’s case, held that the Lagos High Court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the charges preferred against him.

    The court had ruled that the state High Court cannot adjudicate on the charges because they emanated from capital market transactions.

    The court held further that a state High Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain the charges which are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal High Court.

    The EFCC had charged Atuche to court alongside a former director of Bank PHB, Funmi Ademosun.

    The commission had alleged that they stole N4.2 billion belonging to Caverton Helicopters Limited in September 2007.

    Atuche and Ademosun had pleaded not guilty to the charges.

     

     

  • Ex-Finbank chiefs ask court to dismiss theft charge

    Ex-Finbank chiefs ask court to dismiss theft charge

    A former Managing Director of Finbank Plc, Okey Nwosu and his co-defendants, on Monday asked a Lagos High Court, Ikeja, to dismiss the N10.9 billion theft charge preferred against them.

    Nwosu and three former directors of the bank made the request in separate no-case submissions filed by their counsel.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Nwosu is standing trial alongside the trio of Dayo Famoroti, Danjuma Ocholi and Agnes Ebubedike before Justice Lateefat Okunnu.

    According to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the former bank chiefs are facing a 26-count charge of stealing to which they had pleaded not guilty.

    The EFCC had closed its case on June 28 after calling nine witnesses to testify against the bank chiefs.

    At the resumed hearing of the case on Monday, the defendants’ counsel — Messers James Ocholi (SAN), Seyi Sowemimo (SAN) and Okorie Kalu — said they had filed no-case submissions.

    They told the court that they filed the applications because no prima-facie case had been established against the defendants to warrant them to open their defence.

    The EFCC counsel, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), opposed the applications, saying the prosecution had filed its counter-affidavit to the applications which had been served on the defendants.

    Justice Okunnu adjourned the matter till September 30 for hearing of the applications.

     

  • The Sanusi – CBN years

    The Sanusi – CBN years

    With less than 12 months left for Sanusi Lamido Sanusi to complete his first term of five years as Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor, talks are on in high places on who will succeed him. By now, the desk of President Goodluck Jonathan may be full with the resume of those who feel that they have what it takes to do the job. The CBN governor’s job is not a piece of cake. It is a job with a lot of headache

    At this critical juncture in our country’s life, we need a CBN governor, who is versed in economic matters, and can hold his own among his colleagues globally. What is the worth of a CBN governor who cannot stand head to toe with Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer or America’s Chairman of the Federal Reserve?

    Our CBN governor should not feel intimidated by others because they are from the so – called developed economies. No, he should be bold, assertive and daring in the discharge of his duties because on him rests the hope of a nation, talking monetarily, that is. As an international scholar, Sanusi’s predecessor, Prof Chukwuma Soludo, had what it takes to play on the global field. When Soludo spoke while in office, the world listened because he was seen as a man of clout. Despite that, Soludo did not get a second term, which he badly wanted to enable him consolidate on the gains of his first term.

    However, being an international scholar will not automatically translate to success for one as CBN governor. The CBN chief should also understand the terrain in which he operates and do all he can to win the confidence of the people. As CBN governor, has Sanusi been able to do this? In the past four years that he has been in office, what can he point to as his achievements? Can he be said to have enjoyed cordial working relationship with his fellow bankers/economists without breaching the trust reposed in him by the government and the people of this country?

    There is need for us to look at these issues before he leaves so that our leaders will be guided in appointing his successor. Sanusi has already said he is not interested in a second term. Even if he has such an interest, chances are that he may not be considered again, considering his relationship with the present government, Sanusi knows that he is not in the good books of this administration and, as such, it will be implausible to seek a renewal of his tenure under this presidency. He knows that is a dream that will never come true. But should the appointment of a CBN governor be based on relationship with the government in power or on competence?

    Both factors matter because there is no way any president will appoint someone as CBN governor if they cannot work in sync no matter how competent that person may be. Sanusi was lucky because he was appointed by the late President Umaru Yar ‘ Adua, who believed in him. The late president, according to Segun Adeniyi in his book : Power, Politics & Death : A front – row account of Nigeria under the late President Yar ‘ Adua was virtually over the moon following Sanusi’s appearance before the Senate for screening. Segun quoted the late Yar ‘ Adua as saying :

    ‘’I watched some of the exchanges between Sanusi and the senators, and I was impressed. I think the guy is brilliant, but I have also been told about his integrity. I hope I made the right choice’’. Would the late Yar ‘ Adua have said the same thing about Sanusi today if he was alive? The late Yar ‘ Adua gave Sanusi a free hand to run things. Going by Segun’s account in his book, the late president seemed to have more faith in Sanusi than the then Attorney – General of the Federation, Michael Aondoakaa (SAN). This was why he authorised Sanusi to bypass his minister in order to get some bank chiefs.

    Under his banking reform, Sanusi published the list of debtors in newspapers shortly after he took office. We were told the amount these big debtors were owing and they were asked to pay up or face prosecution. For weeks, the alleged debtors and their banks engaged in newspaper battle over the issue. Some debtors denied owing their banks, while those who admitted owing, said they were servicing their debts. Many of the banks rose in support of their customers, saying they were enjoying cordial relationship with them, debt or no debt. The question now is how much of those debts have been defrayed?

    Will it not be good to also publish the list of those who have paid just as the CBN went to town a few years ago with the names of those owing? By far, the most controversial action taken by Sanusi is his removal of the chief executives of Intercontinental Bank, Finbank, Afribank, Oceanic Bank and Union Bank. In one fell swoop, Erastus Akingbola (Intercontinental), Okey Nwosu (Finbank), Sebastian Adigwe (Afribank), Mrs Cecilia Ibru (Oceanic) and Bartholomew Ebong (Union) were sent packing by Sanusi because of alleged mismanagement of funds. He also accused them of stealing. He took the action following the examination of the banks’ books by CBN and the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC).

    In law, you don’t punish a

    suspect before his trial. He is

    punished after trial. But in CBN’s handling of this matter, the reverse is the case. In a few days from now, it will be four years that Sanusi removed these bank chiefs and even sold their banks to boot. Many of the things Sanusi claimed to have found out about these banks were for long pepper soup joint gossips during which revellers sat over bottles of beer to give what they consider insider accounts of the rot in our banking system. It is good that Sanusi has unearthed all these as a risk management expert.

    But many find it hard to believe that such a thing could be happening in the sector and yet Soludo, his predecessor, was giving the banks a clean bill of health. By his action, Sanusi is insinuating that Soludo was privy to all the mess. As Segun asked in his book, ‘’the pertinent question therefore was, how could all this have escaped Soludo?” It is a difficult question to answer, but in clearing the ‘mess’ he believed he inherited Sanusi should not be seen doing things to tarnish the reputation of his predecessor and the affected bank chiefs. He should bear in mind that those hailing him today for doing a good job will not hesitate to join others in stoning him if tomorrow they hear that he was involved in one deal or other while in office.

    Some of the questions that will be asked once he leaves are : Is it true that the affected banks were forcefully taken over to discredit Soludo’s banking consolidation? Is it true that two banks were spared similar treatment because of their owners’ connection with the power – that – be? Is it true that BankPHB was seized in order to return the old Habib Bank to the Yar ‘Adua family to reverse the effect of the Soludo banking reform? Was due process followed in the acquisition of the affected banks? How was it possible for smaller banks to acquire some of the banks that were bigger and better than them? Where did the money come from? From Sanusi’s CBN or where?

    Sanusi may believe that he has done well, but I pray that he will not have a successor who will be like him. We can only wish him well after he leaves office next year.

     

  • Court orders release of ex-Finbank MD’s passport

    Court orders release of ex-Finbank MD’s passport

    A Lagos High Court in Ikeja on Friday granted the application by a former managing director of Finbank Plc, Okey Nwosu, seeking for the release of his international passport for renewal.

    Justice Lateefat Okunnu ordered the release of the passport while ruling on the application filed by Nwosu’s counsel, Mr. O. Kalu.

    The Judge, however, directed that both the new and old international passports be returned to the custody of the court’s Registrar after the renewal.

    Nwosu and three former directors of Finbank Plc, Dayo Famoroti, Danjuma Ocholi and Agnes Ebubedike, were charged for allegedly stealing N10.9 billion belonging to the bank.

    Following the discovery, the Economic and Financial Crimes called one of its investigative officers, Mr. Emmanuel Damudu, to testify against the defendants.

    Damudu told the court how N18 billion was debited from Finbank’s sundry account and used to purchase bank shares for seven fictitious companies.

    The witness, who was led in evidence by EFCC counsel, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), said the transactions were carried out on the instructions of the defendants.

    He said the companies were Ferbond Real Estate Ltd., Busch Modern Machine Tools Ltd., Tyco Food Processing Ltd., Omdidem Ltd., Eureka Ventures Ltd., Coastal Lake Ltd. and Cannon Investment Ltd.

    He said some of the shares purportedly bought for the companies were later allocated to the defendants and other directors, who paid for them.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the case was then adjourned till February 26 for continuation.