Tag: remanded

  • Driver remanded for ‘consuming five buckets of burukutu’

    Driver remanded for ‘consuming five buckets of burukutu’

    A driver in Adamawa State, David Donald, has been remanded at a correctional centre in Yola for allegedly consuming five buckets of the local beer called burukutu and not paying for it.

    The charge against the man includes taking of two plates of pepper soup and not settling the bill.

    Donald, who faces the offence of cheating over which he is arraigned before an Upper Area Court 4 sitting in Yola, was issued the remand order after he pleaded quilty to the alleged offence.

    The offence runs contrary to Section 302 of the Penal Code.

    Donald, who hails from Karin Lamido in neighbouring Taraba State, was arraigned before the Upper Area Court, presided over in Yola by Ibrahim Musa, by the Adamawa State Police Command.

    Read Also: Seventh market woman remanded over Liz Anjorin’s alleged theft

    The Police said David last Wednesday, February 21; at a local joint in Yola, ordered five plastic buckets of burukutu and two plates of fish pepper soup.

    After consuming the beer and eating the pepper soup on the spot, David attempted to leave without paying anything to the joint owners from whom he bought those things.

    He was held back at the joint and then handed to the Police.

    The prosecuting police officer, Sgt Kabiru Abubakar who arraigned David, told the court that David dishonestly collected the beer and pepper soup of the total value of N6,600 from Felicity Sunday and Linda Ali.

    The prosecutor added that the complainants reported the matter to the police, following which the Police took it over.

  • Man remanded for threatening colleague 

    Man remanded for threatening colleague 

    Magistrates’ Court in Ogba, Lagos State has ordered the remand of a 31-year-old businessman, Anaka Onyedika, for allegedly threatening to kill a colleague through the Okija shrine.

    The police arraigned him before Magistrate L. A. Owolabi, who sits in Court 5, Ogba.

    In a four-count charge, police prosecutor said Onyedika, on December 13, at about 9.39hrs, at Oworonshoki, conspired to commit felony to wit: a written threat to life and cyberstalking.

    Onyedika was said to have sent a threatening message to Patrick Ogbonna, saying he would “use both day and night to pursue him” and that “his cup is full, whatever he sees, he will take.”

    The suspect was also accused of sending a video clip to Ogbonna via his phone “of a man killed and placed inside a casket who refused to honour an invitation from Okija Shrine.” 

    Read Also: Oyo traditional ruler, others remanded for assaulting lawyer

    The police said Onyedika “threatened to kill him in the same way the man in the casket was killed if he failed to honour the invitation from Okija shrine.”

    The alleged offences contravene and are punishable under sections 232 and 411 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State 2015 and Section 24(1)(2)(a)(1) of the Cybercrime Act, 2015.

    Onyedika pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    The magistrate granted him bail for N300,000 with two sureties, who must possess three years of tax clearance, all to be verified by the court registrar.

    The court ordered that the suspect be remanded at Kirikiri Correctional Centre until he meets the bail conditions.

  • Man remanded for allegedly raping widow

    Man remanded for allegedly raping widow

    An Abakaliki Magistrate Court has remanded a Chikodili Igboji (29) in prison for allegedly raping a 50-year-old widow, Mrs. Chinyere Igwe.

    Chief Magistrate Chinedu Agama-Agama yesterday turned down the defendant’s request for bail.

    Igboji is charged with one count of sexual assault, allegedly committed on October 5, at Udenyi village, Izzo Imoha, in Ezza North Local Government Area.

    He however pleaded not guilty.

    In his bail application, the defendant’s attorney, Francis Nwelom, emphasised his innocence.

    Read Also: How Tinubu is fighting insecurity, by Gbajabiamila

    But prosecution attorney, Insp. Stanley Ngene, objected to the bail request and asked the court to remand the defendant.

    The victim, while narrating her ordeal, said Igboji came to her home at night with a knife. According to her, the defendant woke her from sleep, grabbed her, and threatened to kill her if she said anything.

    “I was afraid and started shivering. I managed to ask him my offence? I pleaded with him to have mercy on me that I have no husband and I have six children. But he pushed me, raped me and went away with my phone and my hard-earned N20,000,” she lamented.

  • Okon is remanded

    AS the date for the celebrated trial of Okon for bigamy drew nearer, the house has been a beehive of activities with well-wishers and sympathisers coming and going. Some notable lawyers have shown up waiving their hefty consultation fees as a gesture of respect and solidarity with the embattled boy. The entire house had been converted into an Efik sanatorium milling with small creek crooks, drunken hell-raisers and other miserable specimens of humanity.

    Snooper had been wondering why all the fuss about the crazy lad, as if he would be the first person facing the prospects of some spell in prison for amorous misconduct. But the immoral adulation seemed to have gone into the boy’s head. At a point, the mad boy even had the temerity to ask snooper to excuse them in view of the delicate nature of the discussion.

    “Not on your shameless life!” snooper screamed as he was about to be evicted from his own house. One became convinced that a spell behind bar would not be bad thing for Okon, at least this would allow for snooper to reorganise and get on with life.

    The most entertaining but infuriating visitor to the house was Baba Lekki. He would arrive every morning carrying a basket of law books on his bald head and swigging directly from a bottle of illicit gin. Having fortified himself, he would proceed to lecture his captive audience on why bigamy was non-justiciable in an amphibious and bigamous country like Nigeria.”If you live on land and in water at the same time, bigamy is impossible to prove”.

    You could see that he had been refining even this position when one morning, Baba Lekki finally dropped his legal bombshell. “Coming to think of it, the charge of bigamy cannot be sustained against you on grounds of spirituality and nationality’, the old criminal exploded.

    “Baba, how dat one come be now?  You don come with dem jaguda grammar again?”, an anxious but cynical Okon snorted.

    “You see, you cannot charge a spirit with bigamy. As you are Ebora Calabar, the charge is null and void. Secondly, since your grandfathers were from Bakassi, Nigerian laws do not apply to you since you are not a Nigerian”, Baba Lekki proferred.

    “Baba how dat one go be now as I don contest for president?” Okon asked  half-whispering.“How many of the other presidential candidates are Nigerians?” Baba Lekki snapped.

    On judgement day, the house was invaded at dawn by all sorts of ruffians, riff-raff and ragamuffins on the margins of society. They began chanting solidarity songs from the June 12 struggle, daring anybody who cared to listen to send Okon to jail.  When the mad boy suddenly appeared dressed like an Efik chieftain, the crowd went completely gaga. They seized Okon and began carrying him shoulder-high towards the court. Could this be the commencement of the Nigerian revolution, snooper wondered.

    The entire route was lined with well-wishers singing Okon’s praise and asking the God of retribution to deal with his tormentors. The adulation soon led to a fatal dose of delinquent confidence. As soon as the mad boy entered the court room, he sighted a familiar light-skinned policeman on duty .The cop bore a comical resemblance to a recently deposed governor.

    “Ah yellow, you still dey force? I think say dem Sunami don reach una like your tolotolo brother for Agodi. But no forget say you owe me small change from last time ooo”, Okon snorted as the hitherto serene courtroom exploded in laughter. The cop completely ignored Okon. But while they were still trying to restore order, Okon’s eyes lighted on the aging president of the court and his geriatric assistants. One of them was dozing away while the other was battling kola nuts with missing incisors.

    “Chei, na dis Old Peoples Home dem dey call b-gamey court for Yorubaland?” Okon sneered.

    “Who is this fellow?” the old president scowled with impatience and indignation.

    “Sir, he is here for bigamy?” the court clerk replied.

    “And what is brigamy?” the dozing old man asked. The president, a no-nonsense former boxing champion and lay preacher, ignored his colleague and faced down Okon.

    “Youngman, what is your name?” the old man demanded from Okon.

    “I be man, but I no be Young. I be Etubom Okon Anthony Okon”, Okon retorted.

    “I see. Tunbomu Okon. But where is your tunbomu? (drink-sieving whiskers in ancient Yoruba parlance)” the old man asked, trying to inject some humour into the tense proceeding. But Okon remained implacable.

    “Baba, make una remove dem cotton wool from dem ear. I say I be Etubom. I no be Tunbosun, na dem yeye Yoruba singer dey bear dat kind nonsense name”, Okon shouted at the old man.

    “Okay, Etibomb Okon”, the old man sneered but now with ill humour.

    “He be like if say your old head no dey soak petrol again”, Okon blasted. At this point, the old man completely lost his cool.

    “This is a rude and mannerless fool. Let him be remanded in police custody until he has purged himself of contempt”, the old man thundered and rose to his full length as he hammered the gavel on his desk. The fair-skinned cop fell on Okon and wrestled him to the ground. Three other cops surfaced from nowhere to apply reasonable force. The crowd began dispersing immediately. Okon cut a very sorry figure as he was being led away.

    • First published in 2011
  • Motorcyclist remanded for alleged rape

    A 38-year-old motorcyclist, Kunmi Adeyemi, who allegedly raped a 19-year-old girl, was yesterday remanded in Kirikiri Prisons by an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos.

    Magistrate P. E. Nwaka, while remanding Adeyemi, ordered that the case file be sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) for advice.

    He adjourned the case till March 11 for the DPP’s advice.

    The court did not take the defendant’s plea.

    The accused, who lives at 7, Olowoporoku Street, Mafoluku, Oshodi, Lagos, is being tried for alleged rape.

    Prosecuting Inspector Christopher John alleged that Adeyemi committed the offence on January 28 at 3pm in his residence.

    He alleged that the defendant unlawfully had sexual intercourse with the girl.

    John added that the victim was returning from work and due to the rains, she tried to shelter from the rainfall in front of the defendant’s house.

    According to the prosecutor, after sometime, Adeyemi saw her and asked her to enter his apartment for comfort, only to be raped.

  • 18-year-old, others remanded for alleged cultism, robbery

    A Chief Magistrates’ Court in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, has ordered the remand in prison custody of an 18-year-old girl, Gift Emmanuel, for alleged cultism and robbery.

    Remanded with her are Saviour Augustine, 22, Nnana Peter, 19, Friday Daniel, 20, Precious Ubani, 18, and Kwame Atisa, 18.

    The suspects are alleged to have belonged to and participated in the activities of a cult called ‘Degbam’.

    They allegedly terrorised residents of Ojoto, Nanka and Iloabuchi streets, Mile One, Diobu, Port Harcourt.

    The suspects are also accused of robbing the inhabitants of their phones while armed with pistols.

    A document obtained from the court alleged that the suspects had in their possession one revolver pistol with two rounds of 9mm live ammunition.

    Read also: Farmer, timber seller steal car

    The six-count charge of robbery, unlawful possession of arms and cult involvement and participation was not read to them, hence they did not take any plea.

    They reportedly carried out the alleged crimes at Anozie waterside and Eagle Island, Port Harcourt on January 9.

    Magistrate Sokari Andrew-Jaja said the court lacked jurisdiction to hear the matter and ordered the parties to file written addresses on whether the court could grant bail to the suspects or not.

    He ordered that the suspects be remanded in prison custody and adjourned the matter till February 21 for adoption of written addresses.

  • Man, 57, remanded for allegedly defiling girl, 5

    Senior Magistrates’ Court in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, has ordered the remand in prison custody of a 57-year-old man, Okosimeka Jamabo, for allegedly defiling a five-year-old girl.

    Jamabo, a grandfather and landlord to the victim’s grandmother, allegedly had carnal knowledge of the girl at his home in Borokiri Sandfield on October 3, about noon.

    The victim’s grandmother (complainant) kept the girl in the suspect’s custody when she was going to the market, but before she returned, the suspect defiled her.

    The charge was read to him, but he was not allowed to take a plea.

    Jamabo’s lawyer, C.A. Orukwala, applied for his bail, but the prosecutor, Police Inspector Godwin Nwinam, objected to the bail on the grounds that the case was about a capital offence and the court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the matter.

    He said the offence contravened Section 218 of the Criminal Code Cap 37 Vol. I Laws of Rivers State Nigeria, 1999.

    Magistrate Gomba Osaro rejected the bail application and ordered that the bail be sought at the high court.

    She said the suspect should be remanded in prison custody and the case file be forwarded to the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) for legal advice.

    Osaro adjourned the matter till December 20 for DPP’s advice.

     

     

  • OAU ‘sex-for-mark don’ remanded

    A Federal High Court in Osogbo, Osun State, yesterday ordered that the “sex-for-mark” sacked senior lecturer at the Obafemi Awolowo University, (OAU) Ile-Ife, Prof. Richard Akindele, should be remanded in prison custody.

    Justice Maurine Onyetenu ordered that Akindele be remanded at Ilesa prison for demanding sex from his post graduate student, Monica Osagie, before she could pass his course.

    The Professor of Management and Accounting was arraigned on a four- count charge by the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related Offences Commission (ICPC).

    The anti-graft agency alleged that the accused unlawfully demanded sex from his student and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section A (1)(2) of the Corrupt Practices and other related Offences Law.

    The accused pleaded not guilty.

    Read also: Sex-for-marks: Prof. failed me deliberately, says student

    Defence counsel Mr. F. Omotosho, who urged the court to grant his client bail, said: “He is a known professor and cannot jump bail.”

    The prosecutor, who is a senior legal officer with the ICPC, Mr. Kehinde Adetoye, opposed the oral bail application, saying the accused had refused to appear at the commission since he was granted administrative bail.

    He said: “We have been making efforts since November 5 to effect the service of the process. They have refused to come back and they were not reachable on the phone. We are surprised to see them here today. We just served them the process.”

    Justice Onyetenu directed counsel to the accused to file a formal application for the bail of his client.

    She ordered that the accused be remanded in prison custody at Ilesa and adjourned the matter till November 27 for definite hearing.

  • Okon is remanded

    As the date for the celebrated trial of Okon for bigamy drew nearer, the house has been a beehive of activities with well-wishers and sympathisers coming and going. Some notable lawyers have shown up waiving their hefty consultation fees as a gesture of respect and solidarity with the embattled boy. The entire house had been converted into an Efik sanatorium milling with small creek crooks, drunken hell-raisers and other miserable specimens of humanity.

    Snooper had been wondering why all the fuss about the crazy lad, as if he would be the first person facing the prospects of some spell in prison for amorous misconduct. But the immoral adulation seemed to have gone into the boy’s head. At a point, the mad boy even had the temerity to ask snooper to excuse them in view of the delicate nature of the discussion.

    “Not on your shameless life!” snooper screamed as he was about to be evicted from his own house. One became convinced that a spell behind bar would not be bad thing for Okon, at least this would allow for snooper to reorganise and get on with life.

    The most entertaining but infuriating visitor to the house was Baba Lekki. He would arrive every morning carrying a basket of law books on his bald head and swigging directly from a bottle of illicit gin. Having fortified himself, he would proceed to lecture his captive audience on why bigamy was non-justiciable in an amphibious and bigamous country like Nigeria.”If you live on land and in water at the same time, bigamy is impossible to prove”.

    You could see that he had been refining even this position when one morning, Baba Lekki finally dropped his legal bombshell. “Coming to think of it, the charge of bigamy cannot be sustained against you on grounds of spirituality and nationality’, the old criminal exploded.

    “Baba, how dat one come be now?  You don come with dem jaguda grammar again?”, an anxious but cynical Okon snorted.

    “You see, you cannot charge a spirit with bigamy. As you are Ebora Calabar, the charge is null and void. Secondly, since your grandfathers were from Bakassi, Nigerian laws do not apply to you since you are not a Nigerian”, Baba Lekki proferred.

    “Baba how dat one go be now as I don contest for president?” Okon asked  half-whispering.

    “How many of the other presidential candidates are Nigerians?” Baba Lekki snapped.

    On judgement day, the house was invaded at dawn by all sorts of ruffians, riff-raff and ragamuffins on the margins of society. They began chanting solidarity songs from the June 12 struggle, daring anybody who cared to listen to send Okon to jail.  When the mad boy suddenly appeared dressed like an Efik chieftain, the crowd went completely gaga. They seized Okon and began carrying him shoulder-high towards the court. Could this be the commencement of the Nigerian revolution, snooper wondered.

    The entire route was lined with well-wishers singing Okon’s praise and asking the god of retribution to deal with his tormentors. The adulation soon led to a fatal dose of delinquent confidence. As soon as the mad boy entered the court room, he sighted a familiar light-skinned policeman on duty .The cop bore a comical resemblance to a recently deposed governor.

    “Ah yellow, you still dey force? I think say dem Sunami don reach una like your tolotolo brother for Agodi. But no forget say you owe me small change from last time ooo”, Okon snorted as the hitherto serene courtroom exploded in laughter. The cop completely ignored Okon. But while they were still trying to restore order, Okon’s eyes lighted on the aging president of the court and his geriatric assistants. One of them was dozing away while the other was battling kola nuts with missing incisors.

    “Chei, na dis Old Peoples Home dem dey call b-gamey court for Yorubaland?” Okon sneered.

    “Who is this fellow?” the old president scowled with impatience and indignation.

    “Sir, he is here for bigamy?” the court clerk replied.

    “ And what is brigamy?” the dozing old man asked. The president, a no-nonsense former boxing champion and lay preacher, ignored his colleague and faced down Okon.

    “Youngman, what is your name?” the old man demanded from Okon.

    “I be man, but I no be Young. I be Etubom Okon Anthony Okon”, Okon retorted.

    “I see. Tunbomu Okon. But where is your tunbomu? (drink-sieving whiskers in ancient Yoruba parlance)” the old man asked, trying to inject some humour into the tense proceeding. But Okon remained implacable.

    “Baba, make una remove dem cotton wool from dem ear. I say I be Etubom. I no be Tunbosun, na dem yeye Yoruba singer dey bear dat kind nonsense name”, Okon shouted at the old man.

    “Okay, Etibomb Okon”, the old man sneered but now with ill humour.

    “He be like if say your old head no dey soak petrol again”, Okon blasted. At this point, the old man completely lost his cool.

    “This is a rude and mannerless fool. Let him be remanded in police custody until he has purged himself of contempt”, the old man thundered and rose to his full length as he hammered the gavel on his desk. The fair-skinned cop fell on Okon and wrestled him to the ground. Three other cops surfaced from nowhere to apply reasonable force. The crowd began dispersing immediately.

    Okon cut a very sorry figure as he was being led away. The reality now dawned on him that the bigamy plot may just be part of a bigger ploy to put him away for some time.

    “Chei, see how dem Yoruba come get man cheap cheap! Efen dem president ball I no fit watch now for telly.” The feckless chap lamented.

     

  • Man, 30, remanded in prison for ‘assaulting his father’

    A Chief Magistrates’ Court in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, yesterday remanded Clinton Doneh for allegedly assaulting his own father, Chief Roland Doneh.

    The 30-year-old suspect reportedly assaulted his father at Elekahia Housing Estate in Port Harcourt Local Government Area at 9 p.m on September 9.

    He was charged with four-count charge bordering on assault and threat to life.

    The prosecutor, Inspector Wilson Isaiah, told the court the suspect violated sections 86, 451, 355 and 390(9), of the Criminal Code Cap 37, Volume 2, Laws of Rivers State of Nigeria, 1999.

    Clinton pleaded not guilty to the charges and he was not represented in the sitting by any lawyer.

    The documents obtained from the court showed that the suspect allegedly stole two stabilisers valued at N60,000, jewellery valued at N100,000, a generator valued at N85,000 and N28,000 cash, totalling N263,000, all property of his father.

    The suspect’s father was absent in court.

    The court’s document also alleged that the suspect “wilfully and unlawfully damaged his father’s ivory chain door valued at N50,000 and sat on his father’s body, hitting him on the ground”.

    The magistrate, Sokari Andrew-Jaja, ordered that the suspect be remanded in prison custody.

    He adjourned the matter till October 17 for bail consideration.