Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia of the Federal High Court is in fresh trouble for allegedly receiving N5m from a Senior Advocate of Nigeria.
Sources within the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission said that the SAN had been
invited to explain what the money was meant for.
A detective in the EFCC said, “We have
evidence that Justice Ofili-Ajumogobia collected N5m from a senior
advocate. We have invited him (the SAN) and he is supposed to appear
this week.”
Ofili-Ajumogobia, who acquitted a former
Minister of Aviation, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode, last year is believed to
own properties worth almost a billion naira in Lekki, Ikoyi and London.
Earlier in the year, the National Judicial Council barred her from getting any promotion for the remainder of her career.
No fewer than 10 SANs and five other lawyers are in the soup for allegedly bribing some judges.
Impeccable sources within the EFCC told
our correspondent that some of the senior advocates paid money into the
bank accounts of the judges while some others sent cash to the judges
via proxies.
A source specifically told The PUNCH that some of the SANs had pending cases before the judges when the money was given to the judges.
Some of the senior advocates who had
been quizzed by the EFCC include the National Legal Adviser of the All
Progressives Congress, Dr. Muiz Banire; Norrison Quakers, Rickey Tarfa,
Chief Felix Fagbohun, Paul Usoro, Joseph Nwobike and Valentine Obi.
Four lawyers, who are not senior
advocates, were also quizzed. They are Lai Arikewuyo, Titus Orimijupa,
Bayo Onitubora and Iniebong Etek.
It was learnt that three other SANs –
Joe Gadzama, who contested the Presidency of the Nigerian Bar
Association; Chief Adeniyi Akintola and Godwin Obla – had also been
invited by the commission as well as another lawyer, Mr. Kola Olateru.
It was learnt that the senior advocates, who had been quizzed, had made useful statements while their passports had been seized.
A source at the commission said, “We
quizzed them because they had at one time or the other deposited money
into the bank accounts of judges. Many of them claimed the money was not
a bribe but the troubling element there is that some of them had cases
before the judges.
“For instance, Justice Terseer Fishim of
the Industrial Court was handling the cases of some of the SANs in
question and yet he received N550, 000 and N200,000 from two SANs.”
Apart from Fishim and Ofili-Ajumogobia,
other judges interrogated by the EFCC included Uwani Abba-Aji of the
Court of Appeal; Mohammed Yunusa of the Federal High Court; Nganjiwa
Hyledzira of the Federal High Court; and Musa Kurya of the Federal High
Court.
A Federal High Court Registrar, Helen Ogunleye, was also arrested and quizzed by the EFCC.
The commission alleged that her modus operandi was to refer lawyers to judges willing to cooperate for a fee.
“We have evidence that she gave one of
the judges money at the Federal High Court in Jos. We are still
investigating the matter,” the source said.
However, some of the lawyers, who were
quizzed, denied any wrongdoing, insisting that the money they gave to
the judges was not a bribe but financial assistance.
In a statement, Banire said he never
bribed anybody, adding that he only gave money to a friend, who
coincidentally happened to be a judge, who needed money for the burial
of his mother
All attempts to get other senior
advocates – Obi, Obla, Fagbohun and Usoro – proved abortive as their
telephones indicated that they were switched off.
Another SAN, Quakers, said he did not
give a bribe to any judge, stating that he was at the EFCC to assist the
commission with investigations.
In a terse text message he sent to our
correspondent in response to a question on if the EFCC quizzed him for
alleged bribery, he said, “No, it (EFCC) did not. I merely assisted them
in their investigation. Many thanks.”
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