A 34-year-old man, Mr. James Ayoola,
has narrated how some policemen from Edo State came to Lagos State to arrest
and collect N1.273 million from him and his mum, after accusing him of buying a
stolen phone.
Ayoola, who said that he was shocked
when the policemen arrested him, said he later found out that his alleged crime
was fabricated, just as he also found out that the policemen were working with
some civilians and policemen attached to a police station in Ikorodu.
But before Ayoola found out the
truth, he and his mum had been extorted. He also found out that one of his
parents’ tenants, identified as Danjuma aka Adam, was behind his ordeal.
It was further alleged that Danjuma
told everyone in the community that he was a policeman, working with the
Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).
Ayoola said that his ordeal started
on August 26, 2020, when the policemen knocked on his door and arrested him,
accusing him of stealing a phone and jewellery. Ayoola didn’t want to argue,
because he had just bought a phone some weeks back. He thought the policemen
were from Ikotun Police Station, which was the nearest police station to his
home.
He said: “They claimed to have come from
Ikotun Police Station. They didn’t show their identification cards and they
were armed with guns and handcuffs. When I opened my door, they asked me if my
name was Emma, I said no, but Emma squats with me. One of them said, ‘arrest
him.’ I asked him my offence; he then asked if I knew one Azubuike, I said no.
They told me that my phone belonged to Azubuike and was stolen. I told them I
bought it from a phone dealer, who is even our church member. These policemen
came in a Toyota Sienna. I thought they were taking me to Ikotun
Police Station, but they drove past Ikotun Division, passed Area M and Ikeja Police
Station, and then headed for Berger. I became disturbed. I asked where they
were taking me; they said I was pretending I didn’t know where I robbed Azubuike.
They said they were taking me to Auchi.”
When the team got to Auchi, the
policemen called Azuibuike. “He turned out to be someone I had never seen in my
life. I have never even been to Auchi. I’m a businessman, selling Shawarma. How
can I leave Lagos State and go to Auchi to rob someone of phone and jewellery?”
When Azubuike was questioned in the
presence of Ayoola, he said that he saw Ayoola at Love Garden, in Ikotun,
playing snooker.
“He said that he had a sick son, he
met two men at Ikotun, who claimed they could heal his son. They took him to
Love Garden, where he saw me. He told the two men he was a car dealer in Auchi.
The two men said they would take him to Auchi, on the way, one of them brought
out a calabash filled with powdery stuff and blew it into his face. He fell
asleep and woke up to discover his phone and Cuban necklace were gone. He said
the men used his phone to move N400,000 from his account. When he went to
report, the police started tracking his phone and tracked it to me,” Ayoola
said.
He also alleged that it was later he
discovered Danjuma was working with the policemen and had given information
about him.
Ayoola said that he bought his phone
four months earlier and his close buddy, Danajuma, knew about it. When the
police started interrogating Ayoola, they told him that Azubuike’s phone was
stolen four months ago.
He added: “The policemen told me
that if I wanted the case to go away, I should give Azubuike N1.8 million. I
started crying. I was returned to the cell.”
Meanwhile, his family members and friends
in Lagos had started frantically searching for him. Danjuma also joined in the
search party. At a stage, Danjuma, allegedly showing that he was a policeman,
told the searchers he had a colleague, Inspector Gabriel, who would be able to
track Ayoola’s phone and tell them his location. Some minutes later, Gabriel
called Danjuma to state that Ayoola had been tracked to Auchi. He further urged
the family to hurry because “Auchi Police Station is notorious for killing
suspects”.
The family mobilised and sent N30,000
to Danjuma’s bank account, so that he could book a bus to Edo State. Danjuma
went with Ayoola’s mum.
The following day, Ayoola was
allowed out of cell to see his mum and Danjuma. The third day, he was released.
He said: “I later discovered that
the policemen and Danjuma used a Point of Sale (POS) to withdraw N744,000 from
my account and also collected N256,000 from my mum for my bail. After
collecting the money, they asked her to bring a surety for my bail, but she
didn’t know anyone in Auchi. Danjuma told my mum that he would run around to
look for a surety. He returned to say that the surety wanted N500,000. My mum
promised to transfer the money later.”
Ayoola explained that 15 days after
his return from Edo State, Danjuma started harassing his mother for N500,000,
insisting that the surety was disturbing him. The woman was compelled to raise
N270,000, which she transferred to Danjuma, promising to pay the balance.
Ayoola decided to drag the phone
dealer into the matter. According to him, he didn’t want to pay N1.8 million
alone.
He said: “Danjuma advised we should
call the police team at Auchi to arrest the phone dealer since they were the
ones handling the investigation. The policemen asked for N120,000 in order to
come down to Lagos, but I sent N110,000. I also paid two days for their lodging
in a hotel. The phone dealer and another worker were arrested and taken to
Auchi Police Station. The Investigating Police Officer (IPO) is called
Inspector Aro. I can’t recollect his other name. I went with them to Auchi. The
policeman said we should share the money N500,000 each, I felt it was a good
deal and accepted. I was shocked to see the same Azubuike at the police
station, accusing another man of stealing his phone. When I asked Aro why
Azubuike was accusing another person of phone theft again, he tried to explain,
but his story didn’t make an iota of sense.”
Ayoola left the phone dealer and the
third suspect in detention at Auchi and returned to Lagos. He was, however,
shocked to see the dealer in Lagos. The dealer told him that the police
collected N300,000 cash and made him transfer N200,000 to Danjuma.
The puzzle in the game allegedly
began to fall into place, when Danjuma went to charge his phone in the family
house of Ayoola and left his phone. One Shola, who thought the phone belonged
to a lady, Zainab, in the compound, picked and saw strange messages. The
messages were chats between Danjuma and the police.
Zainab, on the other hand, said that
Danjuma gave her his phone and that a certain Aro would call, she shouldn’t
pick. But she could use the phone for other things. He also told her that he
needed her to go to Auchi with him, to assist in doing a case that had to do
with his elder sister’s car. He said the sister was in Dubai and someone
defrauded her through a car. The sister, claimed Danjuma, needed a female to
represent her in Nigeria and handle the case for her. He promised to pay Zainab
for her troubles.
Zainab became scared when she saw a
gun with Danjuma on their way to Auchi. At the station, he told her to go and
complain that the phone he gave her had been stolen. Zainab became confused.
She said: “When I argued, he
threatened to shoot me. He gave me the empty carton of the phone and N50,000. I
also saw Azubuike at the police station. Danjuma had shown us his picture on
his phone, so when I saw him, I knew it was the same Azubuike. I became uneasy
and called my elder sister. She asked me to tell Danjuma that my mum wanted me to
come home immediately. While returning to Lagos, Danjuma noticed I was not myself
and threatened to shoot me if I did ‘anyhow.’”
Just as the clues were piling up
against Danjuma, he went and stole two phones belonging to two neighbours.
Everyone started looking for the phones. Danjuma was said to have told the
owners that he could assist them to speak with his colleague, Inspector
Gabriel, to track both phones. After a month, he came to the owners to say the
phones had been tracked to Port Harcourt, but that he needed N100,000 to go to
Port Harcourt to get the phones. Both victims refused, stressing that the
prices of the phones were not even up to N100,000.
Unfortunately for Danjuma, his
girlfriend, while cleaning his apartment, discovered the two phones inside his
bag. When she confronted him, he said he took them to teach the owners, who
were his friends, to stop being careless. After that incident, he was said to
have left the compound. Till date, he is yet to return the two phones.
The matter since then has been
reported at the Ikotun Police Station. But Danjuma is yet to be arrested.
When our reporter reached out to
Danjuma, he said that the matter was not something to discuss on the phone,
insinuating that the allegations against him were lies.
He said Ayoola and others attacked
and broke his leg and since then he had been going to hospital. He promised to
tell his story on Friday.
Our reporter also called Inspector
Aro and just like Danjuma, he denied the allegations. He told his own side of
the story.
To be continued.