Tag: Prison

  • Court sentences bank MD to four years in prison for $166m fraud

    Justice Mojisola Olatoregun of a Federal High Court, Lagos, Thursday, sentenced a former Managing Director of the defunct Integrated Microfinance Bank Ltd, Simon Akinteye to four years in prison, over 166.9 million dollars fraud.

    The court sentenced the convict to four years concurrent term of imprisonment on the nine count charge preferred against him by the Ministry of Justice.

    The court however, gave him an option of fine of two million naira on each of the counts, adding that same shall be computed cumulatively.

    Olatoregun had convicted Akinteye on Feb. 4, after finding him guilty of all nine counts charge bordering on reckless granting of loans without collateral, preferred against him.

    Meanwhile, the court had on same Feb. 4, discharged and acquitted his co defendant, Gabriel Adepoju.

    The court had then adjourned Akinteye’s sentence untill Feb. 21, (today)

    When the case was called on Thursday, the court called for addresses from counsel before reading the sentence.

    In addressing the court, the prosecutor, Mrs O. Ndidi, urged the court to impose the maximum sentence as prescribed by law, adding that a person so convicted of such offence, is liable to an imprisonment term of five years.

    She argued that in addition, the court is empowered to order a refund of the money.

    I submit that the convict be sentenced based on the appropriate law, and that the money be returned to the NDIC,” she said.

    On his part, defence counsel Mr A. O Sherif, in urging the court for a mitigation before sentence, referred the court to the provisions of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act.

    He urged the court not to impose the maximum sentence on the defendant, adding that he is a first offender with no past criminal records.

    He urged the court to temper Justice with mercy and impose a light sentence on the convict, adding that same should be allowed to run concurrently.

    Delivering judgment, Olatoregun held that the court had been told that the convict is a first offender with no past criminal records.

    She however, held that the convict betrayed the trust of clients of the bank, who had deposited their monies there.

    Taking into consideration that the convict is a first offender, the court sentenced the convict as follows.:

    On count one, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count two, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count three, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count four, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count five, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count six, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count seven, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count eight, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    On count nine, four years imprisonment or an option of N2 million fine.

    The judge held that while the sentence is to run concurrently, the fine imposed would be cumulative, adding that the sentence should serve as a deterrence to others.

    In the charge marked FHC/L/234c/16, the prosecution alleged that the convict recklessly and without collateral, approved credit facilities running into 166 million dollars and N33.3 million to themselves

    The convict was said to have at different times, withdrawn from the bank’s account the total sum of N11 million and diverted it to his personal company named ‘Deblad Nigeria Ltd. ‘.

    He was also said to have unlawfully withdrawn the total sum of 166 million dollars and paid same into account of one Temitope domiciled with Citi Bank in the United State of America;.

    The offences according to the prosecution contravene the provisions of sections 15 (1)(a) ,18() and 18(3)a)(I) of the Banks and other Financial Institution Act Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

    The convict had pleaded not guilty on arraignment.

  • Deji Adeyanju speaks from prison, ‘I’m in good spirit’

    Deji Adeyanju speaks from prison, ‘I’m in good spirit’

    Incarcerated political activist, Deji Adeyanju has assured Nigerians that he ‘is in good spirit’

    This was confirmed by his friend, Theophilus Agada who was in Kano Central Prison on Christmas Day.

    His message to Nigerians is that he is in good in spirit,” Agada said on Tuesday night. “Although he looks really emaciated, in all he is doing fine.”

    I met him playing football with the inmates,” he added.

    According to a report by Premium Times, Agada arrived at the prison at about 2:00 p.m., and spent some time with the activist before leaving.

    Recall that Adeyanju has been in prison since November 28 when the police first arrested him as he led a protest to demand police neutrality ahead of the general elections in February.

    President Muhammadu Buhari is seeking a reelection, and Adeyanju and other members of his Concerned Nigerians group said the police and other security agencies have become increasingly partisan in recent months and may ultimately work to ensure the president returns to office.

    The police denied all allegations of bias, but did not stop there. They arrested Adeyanju during the protest outside police headquarters in Abuja, alongside two others.

    The two others were later released following a bail granted by a magistrate. The magistrate also extended bail to Adeyanju, and the activist was briefly set free on December 3.

    As he was emerging from the federal prison in Keffi, when he was yet again picked up by the police. The police said a petition from the Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, had been pending against the activist.

    He was arraigned on December 4, but was not granted bail until December 6.

    After eight days, Adeyanju left police custody on December 6, and celebrated his 39th birthday at a dinner on December 10 in Abuja.

    On December 13, Agada and other associates of Adeyanju said, the police called him to come around for the last of his three mobiles telephones that were seized from him when he was initially arrested on November 28.

    He obliged, only to be detained upon arrival. The police held him in Abuja for five days without trial, over allegations that he had an unresolved homicide case from the 2000s.

    Court documents obtained however showed Adeyanju was tried for murder charges by Kano State government between 2005 and 2009, but he was discharged and acquitted by the Kano State High Court which found that the activist was not in Kano when the murder occurred in January 2005.

    Adeyanju’s associates said the police asked them to provide evidence that the activist was discharged and acquitted, but refused to release him even after this was provide.

    Disclosure by Festus Keyamo, a rights activist who now heads communications strategy for Mr Buhari’s reelection campaign, that he was Mr Adeyanju’s defence attorney in the case and his client was discharged and acquitted also did little to persuade the police to free the activist.

    The police moved Adeyanju to Kano on December 18, five days after holding him in Abuja without trial.

    He was arraigned before a Chief Magistrate’s Court in Kano on December 21, but the court remanded him in prison until February 2019 despite pleading a lack of jurisdiction to hear the case.

    The magistrate’s decision came as the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory in Abuja was ordering the immediate release of Mr Adeyanju in a fundamental rights enforcement suit filed by his associates.

    The police have declined to recognise the decision of the superior court, indicating that Adeyanju might be in custody for as long as the lower court in Kano had decided.

    The police have come under heavy criticism for their continued incarceration of Adeyanju, with many describing it as the latest of a string of antidemocratic tendencies the force had displayed under the current administration.

    The Nigerian Senate and Amnesty International are amongst some of the institutions that have demanded Adeyanju’s release, appealing to Mr Buhari to weigh in on the matter which could stand as a test of his administration’s tolerance towards civil liberties, especially free speech.

    A former political operative of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party, Adeyanju resigned from partisan politics in early 2017, and had led several protests for freedom, including for the Shiite members of Islamic Movement of Nigeria.

    He has been detained several times during protests by the police, but he was often released, until the latest rash of detentions.

    His message from prison was tailored around resilience, Mr Agada said.

    He wants Nigerians to be resilient until this despotic regime is voted out of power next February,” Agada said. “In a nutshell, Deji is doing okay in prison and hopeful that freedom would come not only for him for Nigerians as a collective.”

  • Prison Comptroller urges Nigerians to accept re-integrated inmates

    Prison Comptroller urges Nigerians to accept re-integrated inmates

    Mr Ndubuisi Ogbodo, Comptroller, Enugu Command, Nigeria Prison Service (NPS), has appealed to Nigerians to accept re-integrated inmates, who had gone through reformation and served their terms.

    Ogbodo disclosed this while speaking on Sunday in Enugu, saying “Nigerians should please patronise inmates’ products such as handicraft materials, clothes, leather works, furniture among others”.

    He said there is a reformation programme ongoing in prisons facilities across the state especially through value re-orientation, handicraft learning and formal educational training.

    “In this facility (Enugu Prisons); like other prisons facilities in the state, reputable educational institutions like National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) and other lower levels educational schools have their centres here.

    “We have produced graduates of various courses here; while some are even aiming higher by going for their masters.

    “So, we are appealing to Nigerians to accept these people and utilise their new skills and professional services for the general good of the society.

    “Some of them are highly gifted and exceptional in what they do and had learnt.

    “Engaging or utilising their products and services will help give them a sense of belonging and love towards the society,’’ he said.

    On the handicrafts, the comptroller noted that the authorities had to allow the inmates to showcase their handicraft, furniture, cloths designed and agricultural products at the just-concluded Nsukka International Trade Fair.

    According to him, we want Nigerians to patronise these products by the inmates, which some part of the proceeds will go into inmates support fund.

    “We also have lots of chicken and eggs to sell this yuletide season from the poultry farm being maintained and managed by some inmates in Enugu Prison.

    “We want residents of Enugu metropolis to come to our poultry section to buy at subsidised and friendly-price,’’ he said.

    Enugu State has four prisons -Enugu, Nsukka, Oji River and Eziagu Farm Settlement Prison.

     

  • Prison service spends N275 million to feed inmates in Nasarawa

    Prison service spends N275 million to feed inmates in Nasarawa

    The Nigeria Prison Service (NPS) spends N275 million annually to feed inmates across six prisons in Nasarawa state.

    TheNewsGuru (TNG) reports Mr Patrick Dalyop, Controller of Prisons in the State, disclosed this on Thursday in Lafia.

    He was addressing a summit on criminal justice reforms and human rights when he said NPS spends N818,550 daily to feed the 1,819 inmates across the six prisons in the state.

    Dalyop, represented by ACP Rabiu Ibrahim, decried the level of congestion in prisons across the state.

    He disclosed that the state’s six prisons had a carrying capacity of only 908 inmates, but currently housed 1,819 inmates.

    According to the controller, each inmate is fed with N450 daily.

    He identified inadequate health personnel as a major challenge facing the prisons, and called for government intervention in that direction.

    “None of the prison formations in the state can boast of a single doctor as we have to refer ailing inmates to hospitals for treatment,’’ he said.

    Dalyop stressed the need for stakeholders to increase free legal services as part of efforts to decongest the prison, saying that most inmates awaiting trial in the state could not afford legal services.

    He commended Gov. Umaru Al-Makura’s recent intervention in securing the freedom of over 60 inmates by paying their fines.

    The controller appealed to magistrates and judges in the state to consider options such as fines, unconditional bail, community service, parole and suspended sentences as alternative to remand orders and imprisonment to decongest the prisons.

    He harped on the need for criminal justice reforms that would decriminalise certain offences that are not very serious, but often resulted in remand and imprisonment.

    “The state ministry of justice should consider proactive sentencing, guidelines for judges and magistrates.

    “The state government should also support the Legal Aid Council with logistics in order to assist indigent offenders languishing in the various prisons in the state,’’ Dalyop said.

    Mr Nor Chia-Shaku, Nasarawa State Coordinator, National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), urged stakeholders to embrace alternative conflict resolution mechanism.

    Chia-Shaku said that alternative conflict resolution mechanism was an integral aspect of the criminal justice reform.

    Also, the Chief Judge of the state, Justice Suleiman Dikko, said the judiciary in the state had taken far-reaching measures towards speedy dispensation of justice aimed at decongesting the prisons.

    Dikko directed lower courts to reject cases beyond their jurisdiction as well as conduct regular prison visits to release inmates that were wrongly detained.

     

  • Senate pays Dariye N85.5m allowances in prison

    Indications emerged that six months after his conviction by a Federal Capital Territory High Court, Senator Joshua Dariye is still receiving the N750, 000 salary and N13.5m monthly running cost from the National Assembly.

    According to a report by The Punch, Dariye, who represents Plateau-Central Senatorial District, was still receiving the allowances because his seat had yet to be declared vacant by the leadership of the National Assembly.

    Dariye, who was governor of Plateau State from 1999 to 2007, was prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and convicted by Justice Adebukola Banjoko of an FCT High Court for embezzling N1.162bn.

    He was subsequently sentenced to 14 years in prison, but his sentence was reduced to 10 years by the Court of Appeal which upheld his conviction last month.

    The ex-governor had even made a non-refundable payment of N8m for the All Progressives Congress’ Senate forms but was screened out by the party in September.

    An aide to Dariye, Mr Christopher John confirmed that his boss and his aides were still receiving their full allowances.

    He said Dariye had appealed his conviction at the Supreme Court and it would be unfair for his seat to be declared vacant when he had not yet exploited all legal channels.

    John said, “He has already appealed the case; so he is still a senator pending the decision of the Supreme Court.

    It is right for us to still be receiving salaries because his case has not ended. There are many other senators having issues with the courts like Senator Attah Idoko from Kogi State. Judgment was given in favour of AVM Isaac Alfa but since Idoko has appealed the case, he is still serving and attending sittings as a senator pending the outcome of the case.

    Aides should still be receiving salary because Dariye is still a senator. And he is still receiving his allowances and will continue to do so until the case is closed.”

    However, the Special Adviser to the Senate President on Media, Yusuph Olaniyonu, said he could not confirm if Dariye was still receiving allowances or not.

    Olaniyonu, however, said the former governor’s seat could not be declared vacant until the leadership of the Senate received official communication from the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation.

    When asked if the Senate was not aware of the highly publicised conviction of Dariye, Olaniyonu said the legislative arm of government does not act based on media reports but on official communication.

    He said, “The Senate President has no power to declare any seat vacant except he is presented with a request. We have to receive official communication from those who prosecuted him. We cannot read a report in the newspapers and go ahead to declare his seat vacant.

    Even if a senator dies, his family would inform the leadership of the Senate or senators would go and pay a condolence visit and officially confirm that he is dead and then the Independent National Electoral Commission will be notified that the seat is vacant.

    Those who convicted Senator Dariye never informed us that he had been convicted. In fact, we even read that he bought the APC ticket to contest for re-election. The AGF prosecuted him and he ought to write the Senate so that the seat can be declared vacant and another election conducted.”

    But the Director for Information at the National Assembly, Mr Jerry Agada, said there was no court order or directive from the Senate President to stop Dariye’s salary and so it could not be stopped.

    Agada said it was possible for Dariye’s salary to be withheld pending the outcome of the case in court but the National Assembly Commission had no such powers to stop it.

    He said, “The procedure of the National Assembly is that a person’s seat must be declared vacant before he is no longer a senator. Based on the latest information we have, they said he had taken the matter to the Supreme Court.

    On our own, we have no power to stop the salary or allowances of any senator whose seat has not been declared vacant. Our intention was that his pay would be put on hold pending the outcome of the case but do we even have such powers?

    He remains a senator in the eyes of the law. It is not a matter of morality now but a matter of law. The power to declare any seat vacant resides in the Senate President or the Speaker.”

  • Detained activist, Deji Adeyanju to remain in prison till 2019

    Detained activist, Deji Adeyanju to remain in prison till 2019

    Human rights activist Deji Adeyanju has been remanded by the Nigerian Police for protesting against the security outfit.

    Adeyanju, who was arrested on Wednesday by the police, was summarily arraigned alongside Daniel Abobama and Boma Williams at Karshi Magistrate Court, Federal Capital Territory, shortly after his arrest.

    The police arrested the Kogi-born activist at about 10.55am on Wednesday at the Force Headquarters, while he was leading a peaceful protest against the alleged undue interference of the Nigeria security agencies in the political processes.

    Adeyanju had also in recent times lambasted the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Tukur Buratai, calling for his sack over the recent killing of soldiers by Boko Haram in Nigeria’s northeast region.

    He has also used the social media to chastise the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, over his indictment by a House of Representatives report on Nema probe.

    Those were all tendered against Adeyanju and others, as exhibits in court.

    The Police said they were charging them for “criminal offences of Joint Act, Criminal defamation, Disturbance of public peace, Threat to public security and safety and inciting public disturbance under the Penal Code Law.”

    Though the lawyers to the suspects were equally in court during the summary arraignment on Wednesday, they were unable to meet up with the bail conditions for their clients.

    They were to be remanded in Keffi, Nasarawa State, till January 21, 2019 for continuation of trial.

  • [TRENDING VIDEO] ‘Mad man’ prophesises, says ‘Okorocha is going to prison’

    A video has surfaced online of a man believed to be mentally unstable insisting that Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State must be jailed after the expiration of his second term as Imo governor.

    The ‘mad man’ whose identity remains unknown as at the time of filing this report accuses the governor of presiding over a poor and unaccountable leadership in the state.

    He also lamented over the state of some roads in Imo and alleged that the governor did nothing in eight years.

    I am not against Rochas, now we under hold-up, Weldral road, the suncity construction company that is handling Weldra, the road has been under construction for six to seven months now, no headway, the hold-up, the erratic bottle-neck traffic gridlock that is causing in this Weldra road is something that Nigeria as a whole should be concerned about,” he said.

    Rochas is a hypocrite, eight years in office he did nothing, now he’s trying to bring in some kind of modalities so that we’ll not send him to prison. Rochas is going to prison, he wanted to bring in Ogunba to cover up his atrocities, and will still be manipulating Ogunba against us, it cannot be, it cannot be. Solidarity continues, Rochas is going to prison, the second governor that will go to prison.”

    See video below:

  • Alleged money laundering: Fayose yet to meet bail condition; to spend weekend in prison

    The immediate past governor of Ekiti State, Ayodele Fayose, will spend the weekend in prison as he failed to meet his bail condition before the close of work on Friday.
     
    Fayose who is facing an 11-count charge of conspiracy and money laundering amounting to ₦2.2 billion was granted a N50 million bail on Wednesday by a judge of the Lagos Division of the Federal High Court, Mojisola Olatoregun.
     
    The judge ordered that Fayose should provide two sureties who must issue a ₦50 million bond in a reputable bank as well as possess three years tax clearance.
     
    She also directed that the former governor deposits his international passport with the court.
     
    However, the former governor, who pleaded not guilty to all the charges leveled against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has struggled to meet the bail conditions and could not do so on Friday before close of business.
     
    He will therefore spend the weekend at the Ikoyi Prison in Lagos, where he is currently being held.
     
    However, Fayose’s spokesperson, Lere Olayinka said his principal has met his bail conditions but filed the papers Friday afternoon after the judge had closed for work.
     
    “There are two questions. Has he met his bail conditions? The answer is yes. All the documents were brought to the court around 2 pm by that time the judge had left,” he said.

  • Alleged fraud: Fayose might go to prison on Wednesday

    Former Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose might be remanded in prison custody on Wednesday if hearing on his bail application fails to pass through Justice Mojisola Olatoregun.
    TheNewsGuru (TNG) reports the former Governor was on Monday arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) before Justice Olatoregun of the Federal High Court in Ikoyi, Lagos.
    Fayose, alongside his company, Spotless Limited, was arraigned on an 11-count charge bordering on fraud and money laundering to the tune of N2.2bn.
    The former governor is facing trial in connection with N1.299 billion and $5.3 million allegedly allocated to him out of the N4.65 billion slush fund shared by the Office of the National Security Adviser, ONSA, through a former Minister of State for Defence, Musiliu Obanikoro, according to an EFCC statement.
    “Fayose acquired properties in some parts of Lagos and Abuja from the money, which was released for his 2014 governorship campaign,” EFCC alleges.
    “That you, Mr. Ayodele Fayose and Mr. Abiodun Agbele (now facing another charge) on or about 17th June, 2014 in Lagos, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, took possession of the sum of N1, 219, 000, 000.00 (One Billion, Two Hundred and Nineteen Million Naira) to fund your 2014 gubernatorial campaign in Ekiti State, which sum you reasonably ought to have known formed part of the proceeds of an unlawful act to wit: criminal breach of trust/stealing and you thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 15 (2) (d) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 (as amended) and punishable under Section 15 (3) and (4) of the same Act.”
    “That you, Mr. Ayodele Fayose, on or about 17th June, 2014 in Lagos, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, without going through the financial institution received cash payment in the sum of $5, 000, 000 (Five Million Dollars) from Senator Musiliu Obanikoro, the then Minister of State for Defence, which sum exceeded the amount authorised by law and you thereby committed an offence contrary to Sections 1 and 16 (d) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 (as amended) and punishable under Section 16 (2) (b) of the same Act,” EFCC counts read against Fayose in court on Monday.
    However, the defendant, Fayose pleaded not guilty to the charge when it was read to him.
    In view of his plea, the prosecution counsel, Rotimi Oyedepo, asked the court for a trial date and prayed that the defendant be remanded in prison custody.
    However, counsel to the defendant, Kanu Agabi, SAN, told the court that he had served a bail application on behalf of this client on the prosecution, and pleaded with the court to remand his client in the EFCC custody.
    Consequently, Justice Olatoregun adjourned the case to October 24, 2018 for hearing of the bail application and ordered the defendant to be remanded in EFCC custody pending hearing of the bail application.
     

  • Teacher remanded in prison for allegedly raping 13-year-old student

    Teacher remanded in prison for allegedly raping 13-year-old student

    A 29-year-old teacher, David Ikejiobi, is to cool his heels in prison for allegedly raping one of his students, an Ikeja Chief Magistrates’ Court ruled on Thursday.

    The Chief Magistrate, Mr P. E Nwaka, had refused to take the plea of the accused and remanded him in Kirikiri Prison.

    The accused, who resides at 13, Kekereowo St., Ilasamaja, Lagos, is being tried for rape.

    Earlier, Police Prosecutor Christopher John told the court that the offence was committed sometime in March at 25, Abiola Alao St., Ijeshatedo, Lagos.

    John said the accused always followed the 13 year-old girl to her home after school.

    “The girl’s guardian used to come home in the evening and the girl gets home before them and opens the door with the extra key with her.

    “The accused knew about the arrangement and follows her to her house. He raped the girl on three different occasions and warned the girl not to tell anyone,” he said.

    John added that the girl’s grandmother saw some changes in her behaviour when she went to spend her holidays with her and the woman asked some questions.

    “It was then the girl opened up to the grandmother and told her about the accused.”

    The offence contravened Section 259 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015 which attracts life imprisonment.

    The case has been adjourned until Sept. 3 for mention.

    NAN