Court Dismisses N22.8bn Fraud Case Against Ex-Air Force Chief, Others
Justice Chukwujekwu Aneke of the
Federal High Court in Lagos, has struck out a N22.8 billion fraud charge
against former chief of air staff, Air Marshall Adesola Amosu, and two other
air force chiefs.
Justice Aneke set the military
officers free while delivering rulings on their separate preliminary objections
challenging the court's jurisdiction to try them for the alleged crime.
The court held that Amosu and his
co-defendants, Air Vice Marshal Jacob Bola Adigun and Air Commodore Gbadebo
Owodunni Olugbenga, could not be tried by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) because they were serving military officers at the time the
alleged crime was committed.
Air Marshal
Amosu was appointed Chief of Air Staff (CAS) on January 16, 2014, and he
was removed from the post on July 13, 2015, 12 months before his arraignment in
court.
The defendants were first arraigned
before Justice Mohammed Idris on June 29, 2016, by the EFCC and seven
companies.
Companies named in the charge are
Delfina Oil and Gas Ltd, Mcallan Oil and Gas Ltd, Hebron Housing and Properties
Company Ltd, Trapezites BDC, Fonds and Pricey Ltd, Deegee Oil and Gas Ltd,
Timsegg Investment Ltd and Solomon Health Care Ltd.
The EFCC accused them of conspiracy,
stealing, money laundering, concealing of crime proceeds and converting funds
belonging to the Nigerian Airforce to their personal use around March 5, 2014,
in Lagos.
They were also accused of concealing
“proceeds of crime” and thereby committing an offence contrary to Section 18(a)
of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) (Amendment) Act, 2012 and punishable
under Section 17(a).
They, however, had pleaded not guilty
to the charge.
The case was later transferred to
Justice Aneke after Justice Idris, now a Justice of the Supreme Court, was
elevated to the Court of Appeal in 2019.
EFCC had on January 16, 2919, obtained
a court order forfeiting N2.2 billion allegedly recovered from Amosu to the
federal government.
Also forfeited was N101 million
recovered from Solomon Enterprises, a company linked to him.
After the forfeiture proceedings were
concluded, the EFCC amended the charge, reducing the number of defendants from
11 to three removing the eight companies previously named in it.
Also, attempts made by the defendants
to hold plea bargain talks with the EFCC on two occasions failed due to the
insistence of the anti-graft agency that the agreement must include a custodial
sentence and other stringent terms.
The defence counsel, Bolaji Ayorinde
(SAN), while moving the application, had argued that the defendants were
serving military officers at the time when the EFCC investigated them.
Therefore, they are only subject to trial by a court-martial.
Ayorinde had also contended that
sections 16 and 18(a) of the Money Laundering Act 2011 (as amended) did not
create the offence of criminal breach of trust for which the defendants were
charged.
The EFCC filed a counter affidavit
against the defendants' objection and raised an issue for determining whether
the defence was entitled to the reliefs sought.
Delivering his ruling yesterday,
Justice Aneke held that the prosecution neither admitted nor denied the
depositions of the defendants.
The court held that as of June 23,
2016, when the original charge was filed, "one was not sure whether the
first defendant was still a serving officer of the Armed forces, since his
exact date of retirement was not stated."
The judge also held that the proof of
evidence filed by the prosecution in paragraphs 1688 and 1695 contained letters
written by the trial to First City Monument Bank dated January 30, 2015.
The court held that the letters showed
that investigations into the instant charge had already begun as of January 30,
2015. By that time, the affidavit evidence proved that the first defendant was
still in service of the armed forces.
Relying on the judgment of the Supreme
Court in the case of Ja'faru Mohammed and the federal government, the court
held that the investigation of the first defendant was null and void.
He held, "Therefore, the
investigation of the defendant, the original charge, the amended charge and the
arraignment, all based on the illegality, is null and void, are equally null
and void.
"Accordingly, prayers one, two
and three sought by the first defendant in his motion on notice dated May 21,
2023, and filed June 1, 2023, are at this moment granted," he held.
The court also reached a similar
decision for the second and third defendants and, accordingly, quashed the
charges.
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