Justice Gabrael Kolawole of a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja
will on September 20, 2013 deliver judgment on the ownership of the $15
million alleged bribe money of a former Governor of Delta State, Chief
James Ibori, which is the subject of a legal tussle between the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission and the Delta State Government.
The Delta State Government is claiming ownership of the money
allegedly given Ibori as bribe to stave-off arrest by a former Chairman
of the EFCC, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.
The EFCC had in July 2012 approached the court, through an ex- parte
application, requesting for an order forfeiting the Ibori bribe, which
had been lying in the vaults of the Central Bank of Nigeria for more
than five years, to the Federal Government as unclaimed proceeds of
crime.
Following the application, the court on July 24, 2012 ordered the EFCC
to publish an interim order of forfeiture in a national newspaper
(Thisday Newspaper), alerting any one with claim to the said money to
state such claims within 14 days.
Three parties, including the Delta State Government, indicated interest.
While the others have since abandoned their claim to the Ibori bribe,
the Delta State Government has continued to pursue its claim.
At the resumed hearing of the case on Wednesday, the EFCC closed its
case, urging Justice Kolawole to dismiss the claim by the Delta State
Government to the $15 million and order the final forfeiture of the sum
to the Federal Government, in line with the provisions of Section 17 of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Related Offences Act, 2006.
It submitted that the Delta State Government’s claim to the bribe lacked
merit as the same government had in 2007 instituted an action against
the Commission and the Attorney General of the Federation, stating that
Ibori should not be investigated and that the state had lost no money
from its treasury.
“My lord, it is too late for the Delta State Attorney General to lay
claim to this money because of his action where he instituted a case
against the Commission, saying the governor should not be investigate,”
Rotimi Jacobs (SAN) and counsel to the EFCC, stated.
Jacob went on to reveal that in paragraph 10 of the affidavit deposed in
the said case by the Delta State Attorney General, it was stated that
the state’s Accountant General, after a thorough investigation, had
concluded that no money was lost and that they have no complaint of any
missing money.
The EFCC counsel further averred that the Commission, having
unequivocally stated that the money was given as a bribe and that no one
has come up to claim ownership, Section 17 of the Advance Fee Fraud and
Other Related Offences has given the court power to order the final
forfeiture of the money to the Federal Government.
Source: dailypost
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