The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC, is charging them with a 37-count charge bordering on criminal
conspiracy, stealing, abuse of office and money laundering.
They are alleged to have used five
companies – Blue Opal Nigeria limited, Serore Farms & Extension Limited,
Pagoda Fortunes Limited, Towers Assets Management Limited and Crust Energy
Limited, among other companies to commit the fraud.
Justice Okon Abang had at the last
sitting of January 25, 2017 adjourned to today due to the absence of third
prosecution witness, Olabode Farinuola, a staff of Zenith Bank, through
whom the documents were supposed to have been presented in court.
At the resumed sitting, prosecution
counsel, Rotimi Jacobs, SAN, told the court that Farinuola had resigned
from the bank and had traveled out of the country to the United States.
"This is the new development,
after we made inquiry with Zenith Bank and so they have provided us with
another witness," he said, urging the court to "set aside Farinuola's
evidence".
No objections were raised by Kanu
Agabi, SAN, counsel to Nyako, his son and Serore Farms & Extension Limited;
Y.C Maikyau, SAN, counsel to Abubakar Aliyu; Ibrahim Isiyaku, counsel to
Zulkifikk Abba and Towers Assets; counsel to Blue Opal Nigeria limited, Olumide
Olujimi; and counsel to Crust Energy Limited, O. A. Dada.
Justice Okon Abang, thus ruled that
"since prosecution witness 3, PW3 is not in court to complete his evidence
in-chief, it is hereby set aside and expunged".
Ugwu Remigius, compliance officer
with the Maitama branch of Zenith Bank, who replaced Farinuola thereafter took
the witness box.
While being led in evidence by
Jacobs, he said, "I worked with Farinuola at the compliance department we
printed and compiled the documents as regards to the request of the EFCC for
the statement of accounts, account opening packages and certificate of
identification with regards to companies they were investigating."
He thereafter identified the
documents linked to the defendants, which the EFCC alleged to have been used to
perpetrate the fraud.
The defence raised no objections to
the admissibility of the documents.
Justice Okon, while adjourning
to February 21, 2017 for "continuation of trial", admitted the
documents in evidence and marked them as exhibits C1-C63, D1-D274, E1-E60,
F1-F235, G1-G154, H1-H42, I1-I203, J1-J35, K1-K16, L1-55, LB1-53, M1-38, N1-37,
O1-34, P1-66, Q1-34, R1-28, S1-54, T1-27, V1-33, W1-60, X1-28, Y1-40, Z1-31,
ZA1-250 and ZB1-82.
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