Justice Lateef Lawal Akapo of a Lagos State High Court sitting in Ikeja, on
Monday convicted and sentenced a former court registrar, Mrs Rosulu Idowu Oluronke,
to 10 years Imprisonment.
Oluronke, a former registrar to Justice Joseph Oyewole, was prosecuted
on a
two- count charge of conspiracy and obtaining money under false
pretence,
preferred against her by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
EFCC.
She was initially charged alongside a Lagos socialite, Fred Ajudua
before
Justice Oluwatoyin Ipaye for defrauding a former Chief of Army Staff,
General
Ishaya Bamaiyi ( retd), the sum of $8.4Million ( Eight Million, Four
Hundred Thousand United States Dollars), while he was being detained in
Kirikiri Maximum Prison over his trial for the attempted murder of the
late publisher of
Guardian Newspapers, Chief Alex Ibru.
Specifically
Oluronke aided Ajudua to defraud Bamaiyi of the said sum
under the false pretence that it was a part payment for the professional fees
purportedly charged by Chief Afe Babalola (SAN) to handle his case, while both
of them were being remanded at Kirikiri Maximum Prison between November 2004
and June 2005.
However, Oluronke opted for a
separate trial and was arraigned before Justice Lawal Akapo on April 20,
2015. Delivering his judgment today, Justice Lawal Akakpo held that some
incriminating documents linking her with Ajudua were found in Oluronke's
house, when a house search was conducted there and that there was no
doubt that there was conspiracy between her and Ajudua in the matter. “I hold
that the accused visited Kirikiri prison on three occasions; with this, there
is no doubt on the intention to defraud", he said.
It will be recalled that the EFCC had insisted that Oluronke was an accomplice in the case and called six witnesses. One of the witnesses was General Bamaiyi (retd), who told the court that Oluronke actually came to see him several times in prison.
It will be recalled that the EFCC had insisted that Oluronke was an accomplice in the case and called six witnesses. One of the witnesses was General Bamaiyi (retd), who told the court that Oluronke actually came to see him several times in prison.
But the turning point in the trial
was when the Commission presented evidence of polygraph test administered on
the convict by polygraph experts from the Commission’s Internal Affairs Department.
It was the first time polygraph evidence would be admitted in criminal trial in
Nigeria.
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