Tag: stealing

  • Banker arrested for stealing customer’s N4.7m

    A banker, identified as Robert Olusegun, was among the 3,241 suspects arrested by the Kano State Police Command between January and June this year for various criminal offences.

    Police Commissioner Musa Daura addressed reportersn in Kano yesterday on the mid-year scorecard of the command yesterday, where the suspects were paraded.

    He said assorted weapons were recovered from suspects.

    Daura said Robert allegedly conspired with another accomplice, now at large, and attacked a customer of the bank where he worked with a pistol and a knife when the bank’s customer was on his way to deposit the money.

    He said: “They (suspects) robbed him of N4,755,200. The suspects were vigorously pursued by members of the community and Robert was arrested with the money. One revolver pistol loaded with three live ammunitions and a knife were recovered from him. Investigation is on top gear to arrest the fleeing suspect.”

    The police chief said in the last six months, items recovered from robbers include two AK 47 rifles, 60 rounds of live ammunitions, nine locally made pistols, 47 cartridges, huge scissors, cutlasses and house breaking implements.

    He said 52 robbery cases were recorded within the period while recovered stolen property include 30 vehicles (of various brands), 98 GSM handsets, jewelry, pumping machines, electric generators, cable fuses from vandalised Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) installations, among others.

  • Two held for ‘shooting’, ‘stealing’

    Two masquerade worshippers have been arrested by the police in Oyo State for allegedly shooting and dispossessing a man of valuables worth N127,000.

    Olukunmi Egbelade of Bode in Ibadan and Monsuru Abiola of Ayeye were arrested around 8pm on Saturday in “possession” of a dane gun.

    Police spokesman Olabisi Ilobanefor (DSP) said Egbelade allegedly shot into the air to scare people away and dispossessed a man of his handsets.

    The complainant said he saw the suspects assaulting people and warned them against to stop.

    He said the suspects beat him up and stole a Black Berry handset valued at N75,000, one Nokia handset valued at N19,000, a Sagem handset valued at N8,000 and N25,000 from him.

    The police warned masquerade worshippers against disturbing public peace.

  • Man gets 14 months for stealing PHCN cable

    AYaba Magistrates’ Court, Lagos, has sentenced a 32-year old wheelbarrow pusher to 14 months in prison for stealing cables belonging to the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).

    The convict, Lawrence Ojo, was sentenced by Magistrate M.A. Ladipo, after he pleaded guilty to a charge of stealing levied against him.

    Prosecuting Inspector Peter Nwangwu, told the court that Ojo committed the said offence on March 12, at about 7:30am, at Agunbiade Street, Somolu.

    He said the convict stole over 4 metres of the cable, which is about 11 yards, adding that the value of the stolen item was not known.

    Nwangwu said the convict, who pretended to be excreting, had a sword with him, which he used in cutting the armoured cable.

    He said: “The suspect is a wheelbarrow pusher who carries luggages for a fee. On the day he committed the crime, he went close to the armoured cable and bent as though he was passing out faeces.

    “His long stay aroused the suspicion of the residents in the area, who had suffered the theft of the cable which made them stay without light until they contributed and bought another one.

    “One of the landlords in the area, went to ascertain what the man was doing only to discover that he was cutting the cable with a sword.

    “He was then arrested by the residents, who brought him to the police station with the cable and the sword.”

    Ojo, who pleaded for leniency, said that it was frustration pushed him into the act.

    He said he came from Ibadan four years ago and was a bus conductor, but when things were not moving smoothly for him, he started pushing barrow.

    Ojo said it was his first time of engaging in the act, adding that it was the devil’s work.

    Delivering judgement, Ladipo sentenced the convict to 14 months in prison without an option of fine.

     

  • Bankers’ bonus; In 2013, will political  parties stop stealing from budgets?

    Bankers’ bonus; In 2013, will political parties stop stealing from budgets?

    No doubt we will again have the Bonus Saga with billions paid to managers and ‘wiz kids’ just because they handle cash and not like for professions which deliver blood, passengers, babies or children in schools. Can someone, may be CBN, tell us exactly what the bonus levels are in Nigeria – the richest poorest country in Africa. The subjugation of the world to monetisation is ugly and wrong, monetarily and morally. At the very least let all workers get a bonus equivalent to their worth calculated by an actuary. Landing a plane with 800 passengers, docking a ship with 5,000 passengers, running a university with 100,000 students, driving 33,000 litres of fuel from Lagos to Langtang or guiding 30 children through a year in school should all be more worthy of a ‘pilots’, captains’, vice-chancellors’, drivers’ or teachers’ bonus’ than the banker sitting in an office playing Russian roulette with other people’s money, stocks and shares and manipulating COT, bank charges, lending rates etc. A banker’s satisfactory outcome and cost cutting and increased share price is often won at the cost of job losses, death and destruction in the countryside. Nigerians also say no to Nigerians bankers’ bonuses, secret or revealed.

    We Nigerians have been bogged down with failed expectation and begging politicians to give us our rights to water, quick transportation, internationally accepted optimal education, adequate security and adequate recreational facilities. But ‘change has to come’! To correct the past, government must accept its errors, take budgeting line items more seriously, eliminate fraud in the contractor chain and get out of the ‘financial food chain’. The top priority question for all Nigerians is ‘Can political parties stop stealing and if not, will Nigeria survive 2014?

    It is March. Beware the Ides of March, Shakespeare writes! What are the omens? Are they good or bad? The budget is now signed. How much will be spent as budgeted and how much will be misused and stolen? It is a time of upheaval and restructuring and new decision-making in the major political parties. Many parties have been de-registered by INEC and many more may follow, releasing a tsunami of non-conformist, often idealistic and individualistic members, to choose a future in other surviving or merging parties or quit politics in disgust.

    Change is personal and political. Change is political party survival and revival of Nigeria. No change will mean death. We must all stop stealing from the budget and its derivatives during 2013 in preparation for 2014, the 100thyear of the infamous amalgamation. With new budgets in every LGA, state, the FCT, Abuja, and every MDA what political party resolutions have been made to change the culture of corruption? Or are the resolutions merely to continue the age-long ‘shortening the ration’ of the masses by theft alias corruption? Which media hungry TV political personality is making these stealing and theft resolutions in the political hierarchy, at party BOT meetings, in NASS, governor’s and minister’s and commissioner’s and top civil servants offices like Permanent Secretary Director etc? Before you steal, you must decide to steal!

    Just as you plan 2013 and your children’s school fees in your office, know and remember that these other places are real places where the real crime, stealing and theft, official and unofficial, legalised illegality, corruption against the people of the Nigerian nation, is hatched. There the crime is approved and rubber-stamped at 10,000 different levels each January including the tax office. Is no one clean in Nigeria’s political and civil servant hierarchy? Can we have such meetings where they will swear ‘We will not steal any of the budget?’ Or ‘We will steal only 10 or 20 or 30 or 40 or 50 or 60 or 70 or 80% of the budget.’ Who is the chief thief who speaks at the party meetings and directs the theft at every level of corrupt government? For Nigeria to change, the first thing is for every political party to change from thieving, bribing, grabbing mode to service mode. If it happens it will immediately retain trillions in the budgets.

    From exorbitant parking fine fees-N25,000 in Ibadan while it is N4,000 in Abeokuta; to ridiculous environmental and land use bills, outrageous personal assessments, huge energy costs, to budgetary theft, the Nigerian suffers at every turn.

    Nigeria will never achieve the higher ground of better living standards unless we, the citizens, manage to reverse positions with the politicians and wrestle the budget from them. How do we control the political profession’s appetite for the public funds and manipulation of laws for party members’ maximum gain? It is certain Nigeria’s politicians need education and massive reorientation towards service and humility. Arrogance is a disease among politicians and they certainly need deliverance from the vices of greed, theft, stealing, arrogance, corruption of thoughts and actions and policies.

    Political parties must curb their appetites for the public purse and find new ways to raise money. They already have high fees for political office seekers and underhand bribes within the party including new words for theft like ‘palliatives’ and ‘soft landing’ funds. Let them study and use the mechanisms of relatively honest political parties abroad –membership, announced donations etc. and stay away from percentages of budgets, contracts and extortion. Nigeria cannot survive another year of this method of bleeding the state in addition to the murderous multibillion SAPing of political ‘Salaries and Perks’ and constituency projects.

  • ‘I started stealing when I couldn’t travel out’

    A 27-year-old man, Amode Adewale, was yesterday remanded in prison custody for allegedly stealing a Mazda 626 salon car, valued at N850,000, and N30,000.

    Adewale allegedly committed the offence at Christ Avenue, Araromi Jimoh Aliu area of Ado-Ekiti, the Ekiti State capital.

    The stolen items belong to Mr. Adebayo Adekunle.

    Adewale’s counsel urged the court to grant him bail on liberal terms, but prosecution counsel Ewuola Ebenezer opposed it.

    Magistrate Bayode Owoeye said although “the Nigerian Prison system is not reformative”, he had no option than to remand the accused in prison custody.

    He said Adewale was granted bail last Thursday when he was arraigned for another offence, adding that “one of the conditions for granting bail was the possibility that the accused would not commit another offence”.

    The case was adjourned till January 28.

    Adewale said he started stealing because he was defrauded while trying to go to Malaysia.

    He said he was a marketer of petroleum products until his plans to travel out collapsed.

    Adewale said: “I was a petroleum marketer, but they defrauded me when I was trying to travel to Malaysia. I am from Erin-Osun. I went to learn printing in Osogbo, where my father stays, but the business is not doing well.”

     

  • Brothers arraigned for assaulting in-law, stealing

    Two brothers have been arraigned before a Yaba Magistrate’s Court, Lagos for allegedly beating their sister’s husband.

    Esonwanne Ikechukwu, 29, and Esonwanne Okechukwu, 25, are standing trial on two-count charge of alleged assault and stealing under Sections 171 and 285(1) of the Criminal Laws of Lagos, 2011.

    Prosecuting Sergeant Philip Osigale told the court that the accused on September 29, around 10:45pm, at 17, Fagbile Street, Surulere, Lagos unlawfully assaulted their in-law, Umeh Obinna, by hitting him with a wood. He said the accused injured the complainant on his left eye and head.

    Osigale said the accused also stole an LG225 phone valued N12, 000 and N120, 000 belonging to their in-law.

    They pleaded not guilty. They alleged that the complainant, who has been married, to their sister for seven years, always battered her.

    Ikechukwu alleged that he had on several occasions, beaten their sister to coma, even when she was seven months pregnant.

    He said they had warned him severally to stop beating her until it got so bad that she had to run home for safety only for him to come back and beg them that it would never happen again.

    He claimed that they had to sign an agreement with him never to touch her again, else they will deal with him, but he continued to beat her.

    Ikechukwu said they had gone to ask him why he beat their mother who came to mediate between him and his wife.

    According to him, Umeh did not give them any good reason for beating their sister and also pushing their mother when she came to his house the following morning to know why they were fighting.

    He said: “Because he could not give us any reason for pushing our mother, we had to beat him because it showed that he does not have respect for our family.

    “My sister was the one who called us about midnight the previous day that he wanted to kill her. She called my father’s phone that he has started beating her again that we should come to her rescue. Then, the following morning, my mother went to their house and he pushed her out.

    “So, my brother and I decided to go and visit him to know what was wrong with him and why he did not keep our agreement but instead of answering us peacefully, he started shouting. That was why we beat him. We did not collect any money or phone from his house.”

    Magistrate, Mrs. A.O. Gbajumo granted the defendants bail in N50, 000 with two sureties each in like sum and adjourned the matter till October 29.