Tag: witness

  • EFCC lines up nine witnesses against Adegboruwa

    EFCC lines up nine witnesses against Adegboruwa

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Thursday said nine witnesses will testify against activist-lawyer Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa who was arraigned at the Federal High Court in Lagos for allegedly dealing in a seized property.

    He was charged under Section 32 (1) of the EFCC Establishment Act 2004.

    It reads: “Any person who, without due authorisation by the Commission, deals with, sells or otherwise disposes of any property or assets which is the subject of an attachment, interim order or final order, commits an offence and is liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term of five years without the option of a fine.”

    The commission said Adegboruwa and Jonathan Udeagbala, said to be at large, committed the alleged offence on August 13, 2013 in Lagos.

    The defendant, who was arrested on Monday, allegedly conspired to lease the property at House 105, NICON Town Estate, Lekki.

    EFCC said the property was a “subject of interim orders of attachment made by Justice Christopher Balogun of the Lagos State High Court” on June 18, 2012.

    Adegboruwa allegedly leased the property to Shelf Drilling Nigeria Limited for N61, 631,944.65, which was credited to his Zenith Bank account, with number 1010240758.

    The lawyer pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    His lawyer, Chief Emeka Etiaba (SAN), urged the court to grant him bail on self-recognition, adding that he would not jump bail.

    He said: “EFCC, while investigating the matter, never detained the defendant for one day. He attended all invitations extended to him. He conducted himself in a manner most becoming of a senior member of the Bar.

    “The defendant, apart from being a legal practitioner of note who is at the vanguard of the protection of the interest of the downtrodden, is also married to a lawyer.

    “He is also a parish pastor of the Redeemed Christian church. He runs a robust legal practice with office in Lekki. Over 50 per cent of his briefs are pro-bono (free) cases for the indigent.”

    EFCC’s lawyer, Ibrahim Mohammed, said the prosecution was not opposed to the application.

    “We leave the bail application at the court’s discretion,” he added.

    Ruling, Justice Oluremi Oguntoyibo, said Adegboruwa deserved bail, but not self-recognition.

    She granted him bail for N10million with two reputable sureties who must own landed properties in Lagos.

    The sureties, the judge said, must also submit their phone numbers and bank accounts, details of which shall be verified by the court’s registrar.

    Adegboruwa, who wore a dark blue suit and a white shirt, waved to members of his church and associates who were in court. He stood in the dock as the charge was read and his bail application argued. Beside Etiaba, ten other lawyers, including his wife, announced appearance for him.

    The lawyer had denied the allegation in a statement by his firm on Wednesday, saying there could not have been a freezing order on the property because the substantive case had been dismissed.

    Justice Oguntoyibo adjourned till June 12, 14 and 15 for trial.

     

  • Witness: how ex-director defrauded advert giant of N1.767b

    Witness: how ex-director defrauded advert giant of N1.767b

    The company gave Gobir  $1,000,000 and paid for his travel expenses on a first class return ticket to UK where he would meet with the purported investors, which investigation revealed never existed nor were the meetings ever held.

    An Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) witness, Akinlola Olapade, yesterday told an Igbosere High Court, Lagos, that Mohammed Gobir, a former non-executive director of Outdoor Advertising Company, Afromedia, defrauded the firm of N1.767 billion.

    Olapade, Afromedia’s Group Managing Director (GMD), testified yesterday as the first prosecution witness before Justice Raliat Adebiyi that Gobir obtained the money from the firm in various currencies by false pretence.

    Kwara State-born Gobir, 55, is accused of fraudulently obtaining $3,500,000 (N696,675,000); N514,457,151.87; $2,102,740 (N418,171,903.80); N123 million and £51,000 (N14,667,898.25) totalling N1.767b.

    He is facing a 17-count charge of obtaining money under false pretence, stealing, fraud, use of forged documents, and possession of forged documents preferred against him by the commission.

    Led in evidence by Mr. A.B.C. Ozioko, Olopade testified that Gobir was introduced to Afromedia in 2008 through their Private Placement Consultants, Synergy Capital Advisory Limited, as a high net-worth investor willing to inject N1 billion into the company through the acquisition of shares.

    Based on the defendant’s touted pedigree, he was made chairman, Business Development Committee (BDC) of Afromedia’s board of directors.

    According to the witness, the defendant allegedly used the position to defraud the firm.

    “Having earned the trust of the company, Gobir started demanding large sums of money which he termed as fees to international consultants, Royal Exchange Bureau, in the United Kingdom to facilitate and secure investments from a UK-based bank.

    “The company gave Gobir  $1,000,000 in cash and paid for his travel expenses on a first class return ticket to UK where he would meet with the purported investors, which investigation revealed never existed nor were the meetings ever held”, the witness told the court.

    The defendant, Olopade added, claimed his $250,000,000, £250,00,000 and 250,000,000 Euros was frozen in London, and he needed to defroze it with $3,817,000 through a European Union Money Laundering Waiver Certificate.

    However, after obtaining part of the money from Afromedia, Gobir allegedly presented a certificate that was confirmed by Trinity Solicitors in the United Kingdom, to be a forgery.

    Olopade alleged that after obtaining other sums from Afromedia, the defendant sought to evade meeting with the firm, until his arrest by the anti-graft agency.

    “We have electronic recordings of every meeting we had with him,” Olapade added.

    The testimony of the witness will continue today.

  • Witness: how N60m was moved from NIMASA’s  contractor’s account’

    Witness: how N60m was moved from NIMASA’s contractor’s account’

    A Compliance Officer with Access Bank Plc, Mr. Oliver Enwerem, yesterday testified on how N60 million was moved out of a Nigeria Maritime and Safety Agency’s (NIMASA’s) contractor’s account between last February 2 and 16.

    Enwerem appeared before Justice Raliat Adebiyi of a Lagos State High Court in Igbosere, as an Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) witness in a N754.7 million theft case filed against ex-NIMASA’s Director-General Patrick Akpobolokemi and six others.

    Facing trial with him are Ezekiel Agaba, Ekene Nwakuche, Governor Juan, Vincent Udoye, Adegboyega Olopoenia and Gama Marine Nigeria Limited.

    They were arraigned on January 25, 2016, but pleaded not guilty to the 13 counts.

    Led in evidence by EFCC prosecutor Mr. I. Muhammed, Enwerem said yesterday that on February 2, 2015, NIMASA’s Committee of Voluntary International Maritime Organisation Member State Audit Scheme (VIMSAS), paid N67,450,000 into Gama Marine’s account.

    The first payment, he said, was N28 million while the other was N39.45 million, all paid into an Access Bank account, owned by Gama Marine Ltd.

    Enwerem further testified that on February 10, N30 million in three tranches of N10 million was withdrawn from the account in favour of one of the defendants, Vincent Udoye.

    The following day, another N30 million in three tranches of N10 million was also withdrawn in Udoye’s favour, he said.

    However, under cross-examination by Akpobolokemi’s counsel, Dr. Joseph Nwobike (SAN), the witness affirmed that he could not find Akpobolokemi’s name in the documents before the court as a beneficiary of the payments.

    He also affirmed to the other defendants’ counsel that Ezekiel Agaba, Ekene Nwakuche and Governor Juan were also not named as beneficiaries of the payment.

    During cross examination by counsel to the sixth defendant, Chukwudi Enebeli, Enwerem affirmed that the payments of February 2, were not made by NIMASA but by the Committee of VIMSAS.

    He added that he did not know anything about the nature of the transactions in the statement of accounts admitted by the court.

    Justice Adebiyi adjourned till today for continuation of trial.

     

  • How Badeh used N1.1b to buy property in Abuja, by witness

    A prosecution witness, Air commodore Saliu Abdulahi Yushau, yesterday continued his evidence against the former Chief of Defence Staff Air Marshall Alex Badeh.

    He revealed how himself and Useni Umar, a lawyer, inspected some properties in Maitama and Wuse 2.

    Badeh and a firm, Lyanikam Nigeria Limited, are being tried before a Federal High Court on a 10-count charge, bordering on money laundering.

    The ex-Chief of Defence Staff is accused of diverting N3.97 billion belonging to the NAF, which he allegedly deployed in acquiring property using his firm.

    The anti-graft agency accused Badeh of using the funds to buy landed assets in Abuja for himself and two of his sons between January and December 2013.

    He pleaded not guilty to these charges.

    But yesterday, Yushau told the court that Badeh used N1.1 billion meant for the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) to purchase a house at Ogun River Street, Maitama, Abuja.

    He said: “I cannot remember everything I said to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) because I was answering a question based on how they are being put across to me by my investigators.

    “I know it is not everything I am telling the court that is captured in my statement, but the fact still remain that everything I told the EFCC was within my knowledge and records are there.

    “After the agent we hired inspected the property on Ogun Rivers Street in Maitama and the one belonging to Alex Badeh Jnr. at Wuse2, we inspected the properties with my boss, Air Chief Marshall Alex Badeh.

    “After being satisfied with the property, Badeh gave me a name that the property will be bought and I forwarded the name following his instructions, Lyanikam Nigeria Limited.”

    The witness contradicted himself when he was cross-examined on the mode of payment for a shopping complex belonging to Badeh.

    The witness testified to the EFCC in one of his statement that the money for the development of the shopping complex was paid for in dollars at once, but later admitted it was an error.

    “I cannot remember saying once, but if I said so, then it is an error,” he said.

    Yushau said based on his directive from his boss, he had engaged Saka to draw the building plan for the shopping complex, adding that the man was not paid, only to turn around to say he asked Mustapha Yerima, the managing director, Rytebuilders, that handled the shopping complex to give something to Saka.

    He said: “After the construction job was given to Yerima on the instruction of my boss, I called him to give Saka something since the job was not given to him and I was told that he was given N10 million.”

    On balance payment for the land acquired, the witness admitted instructing the command finance officer of the Nigerian Air Force Headquarters to pay the remaining balance.

    “I am aware that N558 million was in the NAF account when I instructed the CFO to pay after he was supposed to change it into dollars, instead he transferred the money in naira into the account of Rytebuilders. I did not ask him to transfer the balance in naira,” the witness said.

    “From the evidence, you instructed Group Captain Sinni, the then command finance officer to pay the balance of the payment for the land to Yerima from the money you take to your boss every month, but later when you visited EFCC you said Captain Sinni paid in dollars?” Olujimi queried.

    Responding, Yishau said he told the EFCC that Captain Sinni paid the money in dollars, but that he had already made this statement before realising that it was transferred from the account of the NAF to the Rytebuilders.

    “The statement was given before I knew that my CFO paid the money in naira instead of dollars,” Yashau maintained.

    The case continues today by 11:30am.

  • Badeh got N558.2m NAF funds monthly, court told

    Badeh got N558.2m NAF funds monthly, court told

    • ‘I’ve no proof of ex-CDS alleged monthly loot’

    A former Director of Finance and Account of the Nigerian Air Force (NAF), Air Commodore Aliyu Yishau (rtd), told a Federal High Court yesterday in Abuja that he personally handed dollars equivalent of N558.2million monthly to the immediate past Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh.

    When asked yesterday whether he knew if Badeh was always in receipt of the money, Yishau declared that he always handed the money to Badeh in person. He, however, said he did not have personal records of the transaction, but that all records in relation to the money handed to Badeh, while he (the witness) was in office, were with NAF’s Command’s Finance Officer, Group Captain Sini.

    Yishau, who retired from service in December 2013, said Badeh benefited from the practice of setting aside N558.2million monthly from the remnant of NAF staff salary funds for the personal use of the Chief of Air Staff from October 2012 (when Badeh became Chief of Air Staff) to December 2013 (when the witness retired from service).

    “I always collect the dollar equivalent of N558.2m from Group Captain Sini and hand them to the 1st defendant (Badeh),” Yishau said, in response to a question from Badeh’s lawyer Akin Olujinmi (SAN) at the resumption of proceedings in the trial of the former Chief of Defence Staff yesterday.

    Badeh and a firm, Iyalikam Nigeria Limited, are being tried before a Federal High Court in Abuja on a10-count charge of money laundering, in which the ex-Chief of Defence Staff is accused of diverting N3.97 billion belonging to NAF, which he deployed to acquiring property, using the firm.

    Yishau, the first prosecution witness, had earlier testified to the effect that he routinely assisted Badeh to divert N558.2 million, which he always converted to dollar equivalent before handing same to Badeh at his official residence all through his time as COAS between September 2012 and December 2013.

    Yishau said the N558.2 million formed part of the leftover after salaries and allowances of permanent and temporary staff have been defrayed from the N4 billion received monthly by NAF in its Personnel and Emolument Account.

    He admitted assisting Badeh to acquire and develop landed property in Abuja with the N558.2 million taken monthly from the NAF Personnel Emolument Account.

    The witness told the court that before becoming the Chief of Air Staff, Badeh once served as the Director of Policy and Plans of the NAF, whose responsibilities include preparing NAF’s annual budgets.

    “In my statement to the EFCC, I said Air Marshal M.D. Umar (Badeh’s predecessor as Chief of Air Staff) purchased a house in Kano at N250 million. I also said M. B. Umar purchased another house in Mabushi worth between N350 million to N450 million. I equally stated that he (Umar) bought a house in Kaduna worth N80 million and reconstructed it with N75 million, making N155 million. He (Umar) equally acquired another house in Maitama worth over N500 million.”

    On how he knew about these transactions, the witness said he was instructed by Air Marshal M.D. Umar to facilitate the purchase of those properties.

    “The first house was not paid for by me. Payment for the second, third and fourth property were made by me,” he said.

    On how he paid the N558.2 million, he said it was always exchange into dollars for onward transfer to Badeh.

    Yishau said: “During the period of Umar, it was Group Captain Bukar, who was involved in exchanging the N550.2 million into dollars. Group Captain Bukar is still in service. He was removed from the office, where he was involved in exchanging the currency because he was posted on foreign assignment.”

    He added that on his resumption as the Chief of Air Staff, “the 1st defendant (Badeh) directed me to post Group Captain Sini to take over the office of Group Captain Bukar and that responsibility. Group Captain Sini has a junior officer by name, Squadron Leader Abu, who normally assists him in running the Finance Office at the Air Force headquarters”.

    On whether he knew how the money was exchanged, he said “mine was to give instructions to Command Finance Officer, who was reporting directly to me. Air Chief Marshal Badeh was not exchanging the money personally, but was given the dollar equivalent.”

    “I remember that the 1st defendant (Badeh) was appointed Chief of Air Staff on October 4, 2012 and assumed office on October 8, 2012.”

    On whether he remembered the exact amount in dollars, he claimed he always handed to Badeh, the witness said he could not remember.

    He added: “My Command Finance Officer, Group Captain Simi has all the records of all the money I have given to Air Chief Marshal Badeh. I was the one collecting the money to give to the Chief of Air Staff. I was the one that gave the money to him (1st defendant).

    “I do not have any record that he received these monies from me which I gave him between October 2012 and December 2013,” the witness said.

    He said he could not remember when Group Captain Sini was brought to Command headquarters

    He said he disclosed the issue of N90 million, used for the furnishing of the house Badeh bought for his son (Alex Badeh Jr.), for the first time in court because he was not asked by the EFCC how much was used to furnish it.

    When asked whether he was compelled to make statements to the EFCC, Yishau said the statements he made to the EFCC were his and that he made them on his own free will.

    At a point, Olujinmi gave the witness his statement dated February 4 and drew his (witness’) attention to pages 86 to 90 where he wrote that part of the dollars so exchanged were used to pay estacode of officers, for aircraft repairs and repairs of NAF health centres in some states.

    Based on what he wrote on those pages, Olujinmi asked him where he got the N558.2 million he claimed to be giving Badeh monthly when he wrote that the money used for the expenses he referred to in his statement was from the left-over salaries.

    Yishau explained that the he meant the entire left-over after payment of salaries, which the N558.2 million that was usually set aside for the Air Chief of Staff was also part of.

    On whether he knew how the NAF budget was computed, Yishau said “the budget office of the Air Force was under the Director of Account and Finance, so I did not know what was going on at that time in respect of budgeting and budget collation.

    “The responsibility of budgeting for the Nigerian Air Force was under the Director of Policy and Plans. And the 1st defendant, Air Chief Marshal Bade was in charge of that office from August 2010 to sometime in 2012, during the time of M.B. Umar.

    Trial judge Justice Okon Abang adjourned to April 19 for further cross-examination of Yishau by the defence.

     

     

  • Witness tells court how Lamido, sons diverted Jigawa funds

    Witness tells court how Lamido, sons diverted Jigawa funds

    A Federal High Court in Abuja heard yesterday how former Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido,  his two sons and three others allegedly diverted funds belonging to the state.

    Lamido, his sons – Aminu and Mustapha, and his former aides are being tried before Justice Adeniyi Ademola, on a 27-count of abuse of office and money laundering.

    They are being prosecuted by the Economic an Financail Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    A prosecution witness Michael Wetkas told the court how Lamido, his sons, and cohorts allegedly received kickbacks.

    Wetkas, the 18th prosecution witness and an operative with EFCC, said investigation into the alleged fraud started in 2007 through to 2015.

    Wetkas said: “We discovered that Dantata and Sawoe Construction Company, which executed over 21 contracts totalling almost N30 billion, continuously paid over N1 billion into the accounts of Speeds International Limited and Bamaina Holding Company – both accounts, whose sole signatory is Alhaji Sule Lamido,” he said.

    Dantata and Sawoe Construction Company, according to Wetkas, was one of the contractors to the state.

    He said, “Investigation also shiowed that about N100 million of third party cheques were cleared into the Access Bank Account of Speeds International Limited, where the 3rd defendant (Mustapha Sule Lamido) is a signatory.

    “These resulted in the invitation of the Managing Director of Dantata and Sawoe Construction Company, Mr Udo, to the commission, where Udo claimed that the money was for sub-contracts awarded by Dantata and Sawoe Construction Company to the defendants’ companies for supplies of Bitumen, Diesel and Steel Iron Wrought – construction consumables used by the company.

    “A close inspection of Dantata and Sawoe’s electronic records, physical books, financial statements, consumable journals, and waybills  by the investigators and the forensic team showed discrepancies which could not be explained.

    “In one of such cases, a forensic report showed that entries dating back to between 2007 and 2013 were only entered into records in 2014-2015, long after EFCC investigation had commenced.

    “Upon further questioning, the 9th defendant, Mr Bartholomew could not provide any evidence that the company procured any items to execute the sub-contract.

    “As part of the investigation, the team of operatives discovered another company, A.G. Ferrero and Co. Limited, which was also a contractor to the state between 2007 and 2013, when the 1st defendant was governor of Jigawa State. A.G. Ferrero was awarded contracts by the Jigawa State government, one of which was the construction of the Jigawa State Secretariat, Dutse. The contract for the project was initially awarded for N6 billion but later reviewed to over N9 billion,” he said.

    Wetkas added that Interior Woodwork Limited was awarded contracts by the Jigawa State government for interior furnishings, and paid N65.5 million and N48 million into accounts of the 3rd and 6th defendants’ accounts.

    He further said the 4th defendant, Aminu Wada Abubakar, introduced Alhaji Suraju Ahmadu, MD/CEO of Rauda Integrated Services Limited, who previously testified as PW12, to the 3rd defendant, Mustapha Sule Lamido, under the guise that he (Aminu) was going to assist Ahmadu to secure contracts from the state goverment. Alhaji Ahmadu thereafter handed over his company profile documents for that purpose.

    “Alhaji Ahmadu got and executed two  contracts, valued at N62 million. During the investigation, however, other contracts were discovered to have been executed by the duo of Mustapha Sule Lamido and Aminu Wada Abubakar, totally over N150 million.

    “We discovered an account in Access Bank in the name of Rauda Integrated Services Limited, which had the 3rd and 4th defendants as signatories, into which part of the payments for these contracts, which had been executed without the knowledge of the owner of the company, had been paid,” the witness said.

    Earlier, the prosecution’s 17th witness, Rasaq Adetuyi, a Compliance officer with Access Bank Plc, tendered certified account statements of Dantata and Sawoe Construction Company, which were admitted in evidence.

    Also tendered were: letters written to the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) to confirm the existence of the companies, which were admitted in evidence as Exhibit EFCC 59a, b, EFCC 60 and EFCC 61;  as well as the letter from CAC, which stated that the company,  Gada Construction Ltd, was non-existent.

    Further hearing resumes on April 12, 2016.

  • Witness: Saraki got salary for four years after tenure

    Witness: Saraki got salary for four years after tenure

    The Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) in Abuja heard yesterday that the Kwara State Government paid about N1.2million monthly as salary and pension to former Governor Bukola Saraki, four years after he ceased to occupy the office.  Saraki was governor between 2003 and 2011.

    A prosecution witness in his false assets declaration trial before the CCT said although Saraki had been a senator since May 2011, after the expiration of his second term as governor, the state government only “stopped crediting his account with N1,165,466.12 monthly as salary and or pension on August 31, 2015”.

    Michael Wetkas, an official of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), who opened his testimony on Tuesday as the first prosecution witness, continued yesterday.

    Wetkas, led in evidence by the lead prosecution witness, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), testified for about five hours, during which he gave details of transactions in Saraki’s three accounts operated in naira, dollar and pound sterling with the Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB).

    The witness gave details of how several funds, which he said belonged to Kwara State, were allegedly diverted into Saraki’s private accounts both in Nigeria and overseas, with which he purportedly acquired property and liquidated some personal loans.

    Wetkas, who drew the tribunal’s attention to some “suspicious” transactions in the defendant’s accounts with GTB, noted that during investigation, it was discovered that the identity of those making payments into the accounts were deliberately hidden by the bank.

    The witness, who was part of the investigating team, said most of the bank tellers for payment were completed in similar hand writing, but without the address and phone numbers of the depositors.

    He said the investigators also found that staff of the bank allegedly aided the defendant in some of the suspicious transactions in his accounts.

    Wetlkas said although the EFCC confronted the bank with the conduct of its staff and that most of the tellers were not properly completed, the bank said it had reported the discovery to the National Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) as required.

    The witness said the defendant transferred about $3,400,000 to the United States through his dollar account in GTB.

    He said the defendants and those, who aided his transactions in the accounts failed to make payments in large sums to beat the Money Laundering Act provisions.

    “From Exhibit 15, which is the statement of the defendant’s salary account in Intercontinental Bank (now Access Bank), it was found that in 2009, N254,412.25k was paid as salary for July 2007; for May 2011, N291,124  was paid on June 10, 2011. The narration reads: KWSG May 2011 salary.

    “On July 4, 2011, there was another payment of N572,286.32k, with the narration: KWSG June salary; on August 29, 2011 there was also N744,002.22k payment as salary. On September, 29, 2011, there was a transaction of N 743,902.22 with the narration as September salary. October 27, 2011, a transaction of N1,165,466.12 as October salary.

    “On December 27, there was a payment of the same N1,165,466.12. On December 28, 2011, there was payment of the same N 1,165,466.12. The narration said December pension. In February 2012, he was paid the same amount, with the narration saying salary,” Wetkas said.

    He said by his team’s investigation, Saraki was still earning money from the state government as either salary or pension up until August last year, even whe he was serving his second term as a senator.

    “Exhibit 7 is the bank statement in respect of the defendant’s naira account with GTB), from which he made N200,240,000 bank draft to the Implementation Committee on the Sale of Federal Government Property.

    On 29 March 2005, there was a loan disbursement of N200m which preceded the earlier bank draft. On October 16, 2006, the defendant obtained a loan of N380m. On the same day, there were two bank drafts, combined in one transaction, in favour of the Implementation Committee. The drafts of were valued at N256,312,815.

    “On October 16 of 2005, there was another draft of N12,815,000. On February 5, 2007 there was a transaction in the sum of N380m in the naira account. On February 27, 2007 there was a cash deposit of N3m by one Samuel. On the April 3, 2007 there was a telegraphic transfer of N180,675,000 at the instance of the defendant as part payment, to the Implementation Committee, for another property. The total lodgement in the account was N77m.

    “On, November 22, 2007, there were cash lodgements into the account by Adul Adama in 50 different transactions. Before the lodgements, the account was in debit balance of N80,210,976.70. On November 29, 2007 there were cash lodgements by Ubi in about 20 transactions, the total sum being around N20m.

    “On March 15, 2008 there were cash lodgements by various individuals. Before then the account was in a debit balance of N96,857,885.17. On April 18, 2008, there were also cash lodgements by several individuals with different names. On September 23, 2008, there was also the same pattern of cash lodgements by different individuals.

    “On April 30, 2009, there was a draft in favour of BGL Assets Management Limited in the sum of N400m. There were also cash lodgements by different individuals on the same day. There was a lodgement of N65,000.00 into the account, after which there was a loan disbursement of N400m that same day.

    “On October 26, 2009 there were also cash lodgements by many individuals about 87 times. Investigation revealed that the account was in debit balance. These several payments were made to repay the loan.

    “The money was not paid at once to circumvent the Money Laundering Act. If the payment was made in a lump sum and above these amounts, the bank would have been required to report in line with the Money Laundering Act. The transactions would have been in violation of the Act.

    “We demanded for the deposit slips from Guaranty Trust Bank. We raised issues with the bank because there were no details of those who made the payment, but only their names.

    “Since there were no addresses in the deposit slips, so we could not trace them. The deposit slips were not filed in the normal way because the handwriting filled many of the deposit slips. All the bank told us was that they had since reported the suspicious transactions to the National Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU).

    “Exhibit 8 is the statement of the US dollars account. On May 18, 2009 there was lodgement by Todimu (a banker), at Ilorin GRA branch $8,000, and another $8,000.

    One Bayo (also a banker) made payment of $4,000. All the transactions amounted to $20,000 on the same day.

    “On May 19, 2009, payments of $10,000 were made into the dollar account with GTB 18 times, totalling $180,000. The last three deposits of $10,000 each were made by the defendant himself, totalling $30,000.

    “On June 12, 2009, there was lodgement of $50,000 by one Garba Dare. Another payment of $99,975 was transferred into the account by Bin Dahuur, a Bureau de Change operator. On August 26, 2009, there was $49,969 lodgement by Carstle Properties and Investment Ltd. On September 2009, there was also $59,964 paid by the same company.

    “Most of the outflow from the account were to American Express Services,Europe Limited. Part of the outflow was to bureau de change companies. From our investigation, the total transfer to the American Express Services Europe Ltd account was up to $3,400,000.

    “Based on Exhibit 8, the defendant gave the instruction for the transfers made to American Express Services, whose account number is 730580. According to the telex for transfer that we have, American Express Services only received the money for onward transfer to the beneficiary banks, one of which is American Express Bank, New York.”

    At a point, lead defence lawyer and former Attorney-General of the Federation and Justice Minister Kanu Agabi sought an adjournment, a request the judge rejected, insisting that the witness be allowed to conclude his evidence-in-chief.

    When the witness resumed, Jacobs tendered some documents relating to the transactions, through the witness.

    Some of them were search warrants and documents in relation to the properties at 2A and 37A Glover Road, Ikoyi, Lagos, and letters written by the investigators to the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) and its response in relation to some companies in which the defendant has interest, some of which he declared in his asset declaration forms.

    Wetkas said: “All the funds that entered the defendant’s salary account with Access Bank were from the Kwara State Government.

    “On June 3, 2015 the balance in the account was N52, 372,417.61 On the June 3, there was a transfer to GTB of N25m, leaving the account with a debit balance of N2,628,632.39. On June 3, there was also a debit transaction of N30m transferred to GTB from his salary account in Access Bank.

    “On the closing of the account on September 16, 2015, it was a debit balance of N599,019.63,” the witness said.

    While the witness spoke, Saraki, dressed in white agbada, a cap and black pair of shoes, sat quietly in the accused box. He occasionally wrote on a plain sheet.

    At about 5.30pm, when the  power generating set supplying electricity to the tribunal suddenly went off, Kanu rose for the third time to plead with the tribunal Chairman, Justice Danladi Umar, to adjourn the hearing.

    Kanu pleaded for a minimum of two weeks adjournment, perhaps to coincide with the hearing of the appeal he filed at the Court of Appeal against the tribunal’s decision to assume jurisdiction over the case. His application for stay of proceedings has been slated for April 26 for hearing.

    Justice Umar adjourned till April 18 for Wetkas to conclude his testimony and for the defence to cross-examine him immediately.

  • Fadipe was stabbed to death, says witness

    Fadipe was stabbed to death, says witness

    An Ikeja High Court heard yesterday the late human rights activist, Kunle Fadipe, was stabbed to death and not shot by his suspected killer.

    Inspector James Adetoye, who was testify in the trial of Oluwaseun Oladapo for Fadipe’s death, said there were no bullet wounds on his body but several wounds caused by knife stabs.

    With Adetoye’s testimony, the prosecution close its case, paving the way for Oladapo to open his defence today before Justice Oluwatoyin Ipaye.

    Led in evidence by the prosecutor, Jide Martins, a lawyer from the office of the Director of Public Prosecution (DSP), Adetoye said the photographs tendered in the case were taken at the crime scene.

    His team, he said, was involved in the investigation into Fadipe’s death, adding that the photographs were part of the evidence against the defendant.

    Defendant’s counsel Walter Oduagbaka urged the court not to admit the photographs as exhibit because they were not taken by members of the police forensic team.

    Justice Ipaye over-ruled him and admitted the photographs as exhibit 14.

    Under cross-examination by Oduagbaka, Adetoye said the defendant was not shot by the police. He said Oladapo was  shot in the leg by security guards when he was trying to overpower them at the crime scene on Harmony Close in Harmony Estate, Ifako-Ijaiye Local Government.

    The witness said that the defendant’s right was read to him before  his statement was taken, adding that he thumb printed the statement after it was written and read to him in Yoruba.

    Adetoye said Oladapo was not in pain when he gave his statement, adding: “The defendant was taken to our clinic for treatment and he was okay before the statement was taken from him.”

    Justice Ipaye adjourned the matter till today for Oladapo to open his defence.

  • We got N905.8m  for no contracts, says witness

    We got N905.8m for no contracts, says witness

    A lawyer and businessman, Uche Obilor, yesterday told the Federal High Court in Lagos that three of his companies got N905,800 million from the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) without bidding for any contract.

    He said the firms – Seabulk Offshore Limited, Southern Offshore Limited and Ace Prothesis Limited – were paid for a contract they never executed.

    He was testifying in the trial of a former NIMASA Director-General, Patrick Akpobolokemi, who is accused by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) converting N2.6billion.

    He was also accused of defrauding the Federal Government of 795.2million.

    Akpobolokemi was arraigned before Justice Ibrahim Buba along with three others – Captain Ezekiel Agaba, Ekene Nwakuche, Governor Juan – and three companies – Blockz and Stonz Limited, Kenzo Logistics Limited and Al-Kenzo Logistic Limited.

    Led in evidence by EFCC prosecutor Rotimi Oyedepo, Obilor said he was approached by NIMASA to provide vessels for the implementation of an ISPS Code project.

    Oyedepo asked: “Did you bid for the contract?” The witness said: “We did not officially bid for the contract.”

    The EFCC lawyer asked: “Did you execute the unofficial contract?” Obilor responded: “The contract was not executed.”

    According to the witness, the companies received letters of award of contracts although they did not submit any bids.

    He said the monies were paid before they got confirmation that they had been awarded the contract.

    “When we had the letter of award, by then the monies had been paid upfront.

    “We were later approached that we should stay action, and that we should remit the money to certain companies and individuals,” he said.

    He said his companies got the following sums: Seabulk Offshore, N437million; Southern Offshore, N402million and Ace Prothesis, N66.8million.

    Obilor said they neither issued requests for payment, nor submitted any invoices.

    When he was showed a request document for the payment of a particular sum, he said: “We did not issue this document.”

    The witness said he received instructions from Captain Agaba, and that they discussed verbally.

    Under cross examination by Akpobolokemi’s lawyer Dr Joseph Nwobike (SAN), Obilor said he never dealt with or met the former NIMASA boss.

    “I did not meet the first defendant,” he said.

    When Agaba’s lawyer, Edoka Onyeke, showed the witness a document signed by his executive directors, Obilor denied that any of his staff signed any papers bidding for the contract or demanding payment.

    “I am very much aware of what happens in my companies. If the documents had emanated from the companies I would have known. I am unaware that my directors signed the documents,” he said.

    Obilor said he took steps to confirm if indeed his workers signed the documents, but admitted there was no documentary evidence showing their denial.

    “I am not aware of any statements from them denying the documents. I didn’t take them along to the EFCC to deny those documents,” he said.

    Adjourning, Justice Buba joked that he had to force himself to sit for the trial even though he was treating malaria.

    “My temperature was very high yesterday (Monday), but I forced myself to be here so that the press will not write a bold headline that ‘judge’s absence stalled trial,’” he said.

    The Trial continues on Friday.

    A lawyer and businessman, Uche Obilor, yesterday told the Federal High Court in Lagos that three of his companies got N905,800 million from the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) without bidding for any contract.

    He said the firms – Seabulk Offshore Limited, Southern Offshore Limited and Ace Prothesis Limited – were paid for a contract they never executed.

    He was testifying in the trial of a former NIMASA Director-General, Patrick Akpobolokemi, who is accused by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) converting N2.6billion.

    He was also accused of defrauding the Federal Government of 795.2million.

    Akpobolokemi was arraigned before Justice Ibrahim Buba along with three others – Captain Ezekiel Agaba, Ekene Nwakuche, Governor Juan – and three companies – Blockz and Stonz Limited, Kenzo Logistics Limited and Al-Kenzo Logistic Limited.

    Led in evidence by EFCC prosecutor Rotimi Oyedepo, Obilor said he was approached by NIMASA to provide vessels for the implementation of an ISPS Code project.

    Oyedepo asked: “Did you bid for the contract?” The witness said: “We did not officially bid for the contract.”

    The EFCC lawyer asked: “Did you execute the unofficial contract?” Obilor responded: “The contract was not executed.”

    According to the witness, the companies received letters of award of contracts although they did not submit any bids.

    He said the monies were paid before they got confirmation that they had been awarded the contract.

    “When we had the letter of award, by then the monies had been paid upfront.

    “We were later approached that we should stay action, and that we should remit the money to certain companies and individuals,” he said.

    He said his companies got the following sums: Seabulk Offshore, N437million; Southern Offshore, N402million and Ace Prothesis, N66.8million.

    Obilor said they neither issued requests for payment, nor submitted any invoices.

    When he was showed a request document for the payment of a particular sum, he said: “We did not issue this document.”

    The witness said he received instructions from Captain Agaba, and that they discussed verbally.

    Under cross examination by Akpobolokemi’s lawyer Dr Joseph Nwobike (SAN), Obilor said he never dealt with or met the former NIMASA boss.

    “I did not meet the first defendant,” he said.

    When Agaba’s lawyer, Edoka Onyeke, showed the witness a document signed by his executive directors, Obilor denied that any of his staff signed any papers bidding for the contract or demanding payment.

    “I am very much aware of what happens in my companies. If the documents had emanated from the companies I would have known. I am unaware that my directors signed the documents,” he said.

    Obilor said he took steps to confirm if indeed his workers signed the documents, but admitted there was no documentary evidence showing their denial.

    “I am not aware of any statements from them denying the documents. I didn’t take them along to the EFCC to deny those documents,” he said.

    Adjourning, Justice Buba joked that he had to force himself to sit for the trial even though he was treating malaria.

    “My temperature was very high yesterday (Monday), but I forced myself to be here so that the press will not write a bold headline that ‘judge’s absence stalled trial,’” he said.

    The Trial continues on Friday.

  • How Dariye shared Plateau’s N1.162b, court told

    How Dariye shared Plateau’s N1.162b, court told

    For about three hours yesterday, a witness in the trial of former Plateau State Governor Joshua Dariye gave details of how he allegedly shared to political associates, the N1.162 billion he obtained from the Ecological Fund in the name of the state.

    Reeling out names and figures from documents submitted to the court, including Dariye’s statement made to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the witness, Musa Sunday, explained how Dariye allegedly shared the N1.162 billion he obtained in 2004 as a governor.

    Dariye, who served between 1999 and 2007, is being prosecuted for allegedly diverting Plateau State’s funds while in office as governor.

    Sunday, an investigator with the EFCC, was cross-examined by Dariye’s lawyer, Garba Pwul (SAN).

    He said investigations by his team of investigators assigned to the Dariye case showed that the ex-governor gave N100 million to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, who was then the coordinator of the Ecological Fund; N100m to Southwest PDP, which was received by then Minister of Special Duties, Yomi Edu, N80m to then permanent Secretary of the Ecological Fund agency in the Presidency, Kingsley Nkoma; N10m to former Deputy Senate President, Ibrahim Mantu, N6.8m to PDP Plateau State and N66m to 274 PDP wards in the state.

    Sunday, who is the first prosecution witness, read out where Dariye confirmed the distribution of the money among his political associates in a statement he wrote to the EFCC in July 2007.

    “The Ecological Fund is under the Presidency, but the Office of the Vice President oversees it and chairs the Funds activities. The Vice President at that time was Alhaji Abubakar Atiku.

    When given Dariye’s statement to read, the witness read from page 10 of the statement marked exhibit P13(a) how Dariye gave a breakdown of how he disbursed the N1.162b received from the Ecological Fund.

    The witness said Dariye informed him that he gave Senator Mantu, who was then a Deputy Senate President, N10m; PDP, Plateau State, N6.8m, while N66m was distributed among 274 wards of PDP in the state.

    Sunday also read from page 11 of the statement, where Dariye said the N100m given to PDP Southwest was received by Yomi Edu (then Minister for Special Duties), while the N100m paid to Marine Float Limited, was given to Vice President Atiku.

    “In the course of investigation, Marine Float was found to be a company owned by the former President, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku. As at when the money was paid, the Vice President was the Chairman of Ecological Fund,” the witness said.

    He denied knowledge whether the N100m recovered was recovered from Atiku.

    When Pwul suggested to the witness that the then President, Olusegun Obasanjo, returned to Plateau State in 2004, the N100m paid to the Southwest PDP by Dariye, the witness denied knowledge of such development.

    He said further investigation on the issue also revealed that Dariye paid N80m to the then Permanent Secretary of the Ecological Fund, Kingsley Nkoma, N80m, “for facilitating the prompt release of the N162b.

    “The N80m paid in favour of Union Savings and Loan, was traced to Kingsley Nkoma, Permanent Secretary of Ecological Fund. We recovered the N80m from Nkoma, who said that was his share for facilitating the release of the money. That was the bribe he collected.

    “Investigation proved, while he was invited, that the N80m paid to him through Union Savings and Loan was bribe money paid to him by the defendant. The money was recovered from him. The N80m registered from Nkoma is registered as Exhibit and it is with the EFCC. When we invited him, Nkoma said that was his share of the money and he was made to return it.”

    The trial resumes today at noon.

     

    The witness reiterated his earlier claim that Dariye made his banker, All States Trust Bank (now defunct), to conceal his identity. He said their investigation showed that the mandate card for the account allegedly operated by a firm linked to Dariye – Ebenezer Ritnan Venture – did not carry anybody’s photograph as required. He said they were able to uncover the company’s true ownership by Dariye’s signature on the mandate form.

    He said Dariye allegedly diverted his share of the N1.162b into the company’s account.

    The witness said the bank and its officials, who claimed to have granted Dariye waiver by not including his photograph in the account opening documents, have since been convicted by a Federal High Court in Kaduna for aiding fraud.

    “In the course of investigation, we found the waiver granted Dariye not to be proper, and as a result, the maker, the Account Officer, A. Awe Odesa, was charged before the FHC, Kaduna. The issue of the waiver was part of the charge.