A Federal High Court in Abuja presided
over by Justice A. Y. Mohammed, on Wednesday, May 27, 2015 adjourned the
N19.2bn fraud case brought by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
EFCC, against a former governor of Bayelsa State, Timipre Sylva till June 8,
2015.
Sylva along with Francis Okokwo, Gbenga
Balogun, and Samuel Ogbuku, are allegedly to have used three companies – Marlin
Maritime Limited, Eat Catering Services Limited, and Haloween-Blue Construction
and Logistics Limited to move about N19.2 billion from Bayelsa State coffers
between 2009 and 2012, under false pretence of using the withdrawn money to
augment salaries of the state government workers.
At the resumption of proceedings on
Wednesday, the court heard the two pending applications brought before it
challenging the case. Counsel to Sylva, L. O. Fagbemi (SAN) had brought an
application before the court praying that the charges be quashed, as “there is
nothing cogent enough to connect Sylva to the charges.” Counsel to the fourth
accused person, Ajayi Olowo, in his own application, challenged the
jurisdiction of the court, arguing that since the case involved money belonging
to the Bayelsa State government, “it amounts to abuse of court processes for
the court to sit on the matter.”
Responding, Jacobs, told the court that
there was indeed a prima facie case against Sylva and his co-accused,
adding that because the money involved in the fraud case belonged to the
Bayelsa State Government, was not a point to posit that the prosecution was
abusing court process.
“It is not ownership of the money, in
this case Bayelsa, that confers jurisdiction, but where the offences took
place, which in this case was Abuja,” he said, adding that there were serious
allegations involving the accused persons.
According to Jacobs, investigations
revealed that: “The state’s Accountant General, received instructions from
Sylva to withdraw several billions of Naira from the state’s account, which was
given to Murtala Bashir who deals in the business of Bureau De Change.”
The Bureau De Change operator, Jacobs
added, would in turn pay the dollar equivalent to the Accountant General and
other aides of the government, who then handed over same to Sylva.
“In this process, over N6,781,000,000 was
paid into the accounts of Murtala Bashir and his various companies, which were
mostly exchanged for dollars and handed over to Sylva,” Jacobs said.
Justice Mohammed, after listening to
arguments from both counsel, adjourned till June 8, 2015 to deliver his ruling
on the applications and counter-affidavits.
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