Four
companies linked to former First Lady Patience Jonathan, yesterday
pleaded guilty to laundering $15,591,700 (about N5billion).
They are: Pluto Property and Investment
Company Ltd (represented by Friday Davis), Seagate Property Development
and Investment Company Ltd (represented by Agbor Baro), Trans Ocean
Property and Investment Company Ltd (represented by Dioghowori
Frederick) and Avalon Global Property Development Ltd (represented by
Taiwo Ebenezer).
The companies, along with a former
Special Adviser on Domestic Affairs to former President Goodluck
Jonathan, Waripamo Dudafa, a lawyer, Amajuoyi Briggs and a banker,
Adedamola Bolodeoku, were arraigned at the Federal High Court in Lagos.
Dudafa, Briggs and Bolodeoku pleaded not guilty to a 17-count charge before Mr. Justice Babs Kuewumi.
The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) said the accused persons conspired on November 13,
2013 in Lagos to launder $15,591,700.
It said the defendants “reasonably ought to have known that the funds form part of the proceeds of an unlawful act”.
The alleged offence is contrary to
Section 18(a) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) (Amendment) Act 2012
and punishable under Section 15 (3).
Mrs Jonathan sued EFCC and Skye Bank over the freezing of her bank accounts, demanding N200 million damages.
She said the funds in the accounts of the companies, which pleaded guilty, were hers.
An aide, Sammie Somiari, who deposed to
an affidavit on behalf of the former first lady, claimed she helped Mrs
Jonathan open the accounts.
He said Dudafa, on March 22, 2010
brought two Skye Bank officers, Bolodeoku and Dipo Oshodi, to meet Mrs
Jonathan at home, following which she authorised the accounts’ opening.
She was the sole signatory.
Somiari, however, added that after the
five accounts were opened, Mrs Jonathan discovered that Dudafa opened
only one of the accounts in her name; the other four were opened in the
names of Dudafa’s companies.
According to Somiari, Mrs Jonathan had been operating the accounts after Oshodi promised to change the accounts’ names to hers.
“Since 2010 up until 2014 and
thereafter, the applicant (Mrs Jonathan) had been using the cards on the
said accounts and operating the said accounts without let or hindrance.
“Even in May, June and July 2016, the
applicant travelled overseas for medical treatment and was using the
said credit cards abroad up until July 7, 2016 or thereabouts when the
cards stopped functioning,” he said.
Mrs Jonathan is urging the court to compel the EFCC to immediately remove the “No Debit Order” placed on her accounts.
Seagate Property, Dudafa, Bolodeoku and
Sompre Omiebi (said to be at large) were accused of indirectly retaining
$1,094,500 through a Skye Bank Plc account (2110002207) between
November 14 and 19, 2013. EFCC said the money “forms part of an unlawful
act to wit: stealing.”
They were also accused of indirectly
retaining $1,200,000 through the Skye Bank account between January 21
and December 19, 2014; as well as $1,349,700 through the same account
between March 31 and May 20, 2015.
Trans Ocean and others were said to have
“indirectly retained” $1,897,600 and $1,839,900, through Skye Bank
account 2110002245 between February 2014 and last May.
Pluto Property and others allegedly
retained $1,895,400 and $1,200,000 through Skye Bank account 2110002238
between February 21, 2014 and last May.
EFCC said Avalon Global and others, last May 28, indirectly retained $250,000 through a Wema Bank Plc account no 0122493290.
The commission said Dudafa, Briggs,
Bolodeoku and Omiebi, on November 26, 2013, conspired to forge a Skye
Bank mandate card purportedly signed by Friday Davis as Signatory A, an
offence punishable under Section 1 (19)(6) of the Miscellaneous Offences
Act, 2004.
It said the forged document was to the
prejudice of Skye Bank which was induced to open an account no.
2110002238 in Pluto Property’s name.
EFCC said they also forged mandate cards
with which the accounts of Trans Ocean (no. 2110002245, with Kola
Fredrick as Signatory B), Avalon Global (2110002252, with Taiwo Ebenezer
and Chima John as Signatory A and B) and Seagate Property (2110002207,
with Agbo Baro as Signatory A) were opened.
Dudafa, Bolodeoku and Omiebi were also accused of forging a Wema Bank corporate account mandate card to the bank’s prejudice.
EFCC said the mandate card with which Avalon Global’s account was opened, was signed by Taiwo Ebenezer and Chima John.
Before the arraignment, defence counsel
had objected to the charge on the basis that the individuals who claimed
to represent the companies did not exhibit any authorisation letters.
“EFCC could have picked them on the
street. There has to be a letter in writing from the companies in line
with Section 477 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act,”
Dudafa’s lawyer Gbenga Oyewole said.
Bolodeoku’s lawyer, Joseph Okobiemen said: “This is a joint trial. Whatever plea given by the companies will rub off on others.”
Briggs’ lawyer, Tochukwu Onyiuke, added:
“They merely claimed they’re representatives, but they have not
exhibited any documents appointing them.”
Mr. Justice Kuewumi discountenanced the objections and directed the court’s registrar to read the charges.
After the representatives had pleaded
guilty on the companies’ behalf, prosecution counsel Rotimi Oyedepo
asked the court to allow him review the facts of the case so the judge
could sentence the companies, but the judge said that would be done on
the next adjourned date.
Mr. Justice Kuewumi granted Briggs and
Bolodeoku bail for N250million with one surety, who must be a property
owner in a “highbrow” area of Lagos.
The surety must deposit the Certificate
of Occupancy and his International Passport at the court. The land
registry is to verify the CofO, the judge ordered.
Dudafa’s lawyer, Gboyega Oyewole urged
the court to allow his client to continue on the bail terms earlier
granted him by Justice Mohammed Idris of the same court.
EFCC first arraigned Dudafa on June 16
on 23 counts of conspiracy and concealment of crime proceeds. He and
Iwejuo Joseph Nna (alias Taiwo A. Ebenezer and Olugbenga Isaiah) were
accused of conspiring to conceal proceeds of crime amounting to over
N1.6billion on June 11, 2013. They pleaded not guilty to all the counts.
Mr. Justice Kuewumi said since the charge was different, a fresh bail application ought to be filed.
He adjourned until September 27 for trial.
Former First Lady, Mrs.
Patience Jonathan has picked holes in the authenticity of the
representatives of the four companies who pleaded guilty on Thursday to
charges of money laundering at a Federal High Court in Lagos, presided
over by Justice Babs Kuewumi.
The 1st, 2nd and 3rd defendants told the court through their counsel
that their clients were challenging the validity of the representatives
of Pluto Property and Investment Company Limited; Seagate Property
Development and Investment Company Limited; Trans Ocean Property and
Investment Company Limited; and Avalon Global Property Development
Company Limited on the basis that they failed to produce a letter of
authority to represent the companies as required under section 477 (2)
of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015.
The companies are facing a 15-count 2nd Amended Charge along with
Waripamo Dudafa, a former aide to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, and
two others. While Dudafa and the two others pleaded not guilty, the
fourth to seventh defendants whose authenticity as the true
representatives of the company was challenged proceeded to curiously
plead guilty and admitted culpability before the court.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has since frozen the
companies’ accounts with Skye Bank, while Mrs Jonathan has sued the
commission and the bank, laying claims to the accounts.
The former First Lady’s through her media aide, Chima Osuji alleged that
the EFCC presented four unknown people as representatives of the
companies, all of who did not show letters authorising them by their
respective boards to represent them in the case. “This is a clear
evidence of the desperation of the prosecution to pull down the former
First Lady and confiscate her hard-earned money,” he quipped.
Osuji stated: “It is an irony. it was the former first lady who went to
court for the repatriation of her confiscated money when she realised
that the EFCC and its co-travellers were playing politics with this
issue after she had come out publicly to say that the said money
belongs to her and that she has all evidence to prove the sources of her
money. Up till this very moment, EFCC has refused to interrogate or
invite her for
EFCC boss Magu and Patience Jonathan
EFCC boss Magu and Patience Jonathan
questioning.
He further said: “The biggest twist in court on Thursday was that the
fourth to seventh defendants pleaded guilty to all the 15-count charges.
It is clear that these unknown faces were agents of the EFCC, who have
been stage-managed and tutored to come to court to complicate the case
as a strategy to confiscate her money.”
The aide reiterated the respect of his boss for the sanctity and
integrity of the judiciary as the bastion of hope for every citizen of
the country.
He however expressed disappointment that Mrs. Jonathan well-earned image
was being maligned in the court of public opinion through the “tissues
of lies being churned out by the EFCC in respect of the matter.”
He continued that “Mrs Jonathan is not a Director, shareholder, promoter
and/or participant in any of the four companies now under trial, and
that she was the sole signatory to all the said accounts, contrary to
the fabrication that she used her driver and cook as proxies”.
Finally, he said Mrs Jonathan has denied ever receiving any monies from
any unknown sources into her accounts and that the accounts were opened
in order to facilitate her travel overseas particularly for medical
treatment, sundry purchase for herself and her late mother Mrs. Charity
Oba (Mama Sisi).
Read more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/09/patience-jonathan-accuses-efcc-of-hiring-mercenaries-to-plead-guilty/