EFCC RE- ARRAIGN AKINGBOLA, NWOSU ATUCHE
The
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission says the trial of three former
Managing Directors of defunct banks has received a major boost.
The
three bank Managing Directors include Mr. Erastus Akingbola of the defunct
Intercontinental Bank, who is accused of stealing N47.1bn; the MD of the
defunct Bank PHB, Mr. Francis Atuche, who is accused of stealing N25.7bn; and
the MD of the defunct Finbank Plc, Mr. Okey Nwosu, alleged to have stolen
N18bn.
The
commission said this on its official Facebook page while reacting to its
victory against ex-Finbak boss, Nwosu, who failed to stop his trial at the
Supreme Court last week.
The
Central Bank of Nigeria, under the leadership of Mallam Lamido Sanusi (now Emir
of Kano), had, in 2009, petitioned the EFCC, asking the anti-graft agency to
investigate Nwosu, Akingbola, Atuche and a former MD of the defunct Oceanic
Bank, Mrs. Cecilia Ibru, who has since been convicted.
Based
on its findings, the EFCC charged them before the Federal High Court, Lagos, on
money laundering charges.
It
subsequently initiated another charge of stealing against them before a Lagos
High Court, Ikeja, having obtained a fiat from the Lagos State Attorney
General.
Nwosu,
however, challenged the charge at the Lagos High Court on the grounds that it
was an abuse of court process and would expose him to double jeopardy.
He also
questioned the jurisdiction of the state High Court. The Lagos High Court
dismissed his objection. Nwosu then took the matter to the Court of Appeal,
Lagos division and won in November 21, 2014.
Subsequently,
both Akingbola and Atuche argued that since their cases were identical with
that of Nwosu, the charges against them should be struck out on the same
grounds.
The
Court of Appeal therefore struck out the charges against them on the same
grounds.
In a
last attempt, the EFCC took Nwosu’s matter to the Supreme Court and was handed
a victory last week.
The
Supreme Court, in its judgment, upheld the appeal by the EFCC and set aside the
decision of the Court of Appeal, Lagos Division, which earlier quashed the
charge on the grounds that it amounted to an abuse of court process.
The
court, in a unanimous judgment of a seven-man panel, faulted the reasoning of
the Court of Appeal in relation to its finding that the decision by the EFCC to
charge Nwosu and directors in his bank for stealing before the Lagos High
Court, while it simultaneously maintained a charge of money laundering against
them on related facts, would expose them to double jeopardy.
The
court directed Nwosu and directors in his bank to submit themselves for trail
and remitted the case back to the Lagos State Chief Judge for expeditious
trial.
In the
lead judgment on the appeal SC/74/2014, which was used to decide two other
appeals (marked: SC/73/2014 and SC/75/2014) on similar issues, Justice Musa
Muhammad held that it was unreasonable to suggest that the prosecution of the
respondents by the appellant at the trial court was aimed at either irritating
or annoying them or was a bid by the prosecution to stall the effective and
efficient administration of justice.
Last
week, Justice Muhammad, in the lead judgment of the Supreme Court, held,
“Besides, the offence of stealing as created by the Lagos State House of
Assembly, notwithstanding the same or similar facts as constituted under other
offences created by the National Assembly, retains its identity as being not
only dissimilar, but distinctively different.
“It is
wrong, in the light of these characteristic, for the lower court to hold that
the trial court’s jurisdiction has abated on the grounds that the proceedings
before it against the defendants constitute an abuse of the process of that
court.”
The
court further held that the rule of double jeopardy, as contained in Section
36(9) of the1999 Constitution, could not avail for the respondents, having been
unable to prove that they were being prosecuted for the same or substantially
the same offence at the Lagos High Court and the Federal High Court.
“Accordingly,
this meritorious appeal is allowed, and the perverse judgment of the lower court
is set aside. The decision of the trial court in consequence, prevails,” it
said.
Justices
Walter Samuel Onnoghen, Olabode Rhodes-Vivour, Nwali Sylvester Ngwuta, Clara
Bata Ogunbiyi, Chima Centus Nweze and Amiru Sanusi agreed with the lead
judgment.
The EFCC
hailed the judgment of the Supreme Court, describing it as a victory in its
fight against corruption.
It
said, “The EFCC has won a major victory in the war against economic and
financial crimes as the Supreme Court categorically ruled that Okey Nwosu,
former Managing Director of FinBank Plc, who is being prosecuted by the EFCC
over N18bn shares scam, should face his trial.
“Nwosu’s
previous victories at the lower court slowed down the prosecution of other bank
chiefs, who aligned with his victory, to ask that their cases be struck out.
But with this ruling of the apex court, the trial of the likes of Francis
Atuche, formerly of BankPHB, and Erastus Akingbola, formerly of
Intercontinental Bank would receive a major boost.”
EFCC RE- ARRAIGN AKINGBOLA, NWOSU ATUCHE
Reviewed by deewhyhem
on
Thursday, July 07, 2016
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