N855m Fraud: Court Reserves Judgement In Indian, Bankers’ Appeal
Court of Appeal, Lagos Division has
reserved judgement in an appeal filed by an Indian businessman, Ashok Israni
and two officials of Keystone Bank, Anayo Nwosu and Olajide Oshodi, against
their conviction over an N855 million fraud.
The appellate court had in May
reserved judgement in the appeal after lawyers to all the parties argued and
adopted their processes.
But the appeal suffered a setback
following the death of one of the members of the special panel of the Appeal
Court, Justice Joseph Shagbaor Ikyegh, set up to handle the case.
Based on the development, the case was
reheard by the regular three-person court panel led by Justice Olukayode Bada.
Justice Kudirat Jose of the Lagos
State High Court sitting in Igbosere on December 9, 2019, jailed Israni, Nwosu
and Oshodi on an amended 15-count charge bordering on conspiracy and obtaining
money by false pretence.
The judge had sentenced them to five
years imprisonment each for stealing.
Justice Jose had also convicted NULEC
Industries Limited, belonging to Israni and Keystone Bank Limited, in her judgement.
The company and the bank were also
ordered to pay a fine of N20 million to the federal government on counts one,
10 and 13.
Four months after their conviction,
they were released from prison by officials of the Kirikiri Centre of the
Nigerian Correctional Services (NCoS), allegedly on the directive of the Lagos
State government despite the pendency of their appeals before the upper court.
At the appeal hearing on Thursday,
Rotimi Jacobs (SAN) adopted his brief of argument dated April 27, 2023. He
argued that there are several legal authorities to the effect that pardon
cannot be granted to convicts whose rights of appeal have not been exhausted.
Jacobs submitted that many legal
authorities affirmed that a pardon could not be granted to convicts whose
appeal rights have not been exhausted.
He urged the court to declare the
purported pardon 'illegal' since the appellants' appeals had been filed and
entered since February 13, 2020. However, it could not be heard due to the
outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, which forestalled judicial activities.
The EFCC claimed that immediately
after one of the appellants, Anayo Nwosu was released, he allegedly made many
publications on social media platforms stating that he was wrongly convicted,
jailed and maltreated because of the whims and caprices of the nominal
complainant.
He urged the court to dismiss the
appeal and uphold the lower court's judgement.
Earlier, counsel to the appellants,
Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN) and Abiodun Owonikoko (SAN) had urged the court to set
aside the judgement of the lower court and acquit all the appellants of all the
charges filed against them.
In his submissions, Olanipekun
informed the court that the Appellants had filed an affidavit of facts, which
contained the instrument of the pardon granted to them by the Lagos State
government, stating that the state charged them to court. The state granted
them bail due to the upsurge in COVID-19. After listening to arguments from the
parties, Justice Bada reserved judgement in the appeal.
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