THISDAY

The Botched Trial of Justice Ademola

After giving the impression that it had rock solid evidence to nail Justice Adeniyi Ademola, his wife and a senior lawyer, the government was shocked by the trial court’s decision upholding the defendants’ no case submission. Davidson Iriekpen considers h

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Five months after they were charged before an Abuja High Court, a judge of the Federal High Court in Abuja, Justice Adeniyi Ademola, his wife, Olabowale, and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mr. Joe Agi, were last Wednesday discharged and acquitted of the 18-court criminal charge filed against them by the federal government.

Justice Ademola was one of the seven judges whose residences were raided by the Department of State Services (DSS) last October on allegation­s of corruption. He was arrested and subsequent­ly charged to court for receiving gratificat­ion, illegal possession of firearms among others. The federal government claimed it had a solid evidence to convict the accused persons. It lined up 19 witnesses against the accused persons. But gradually, what the government thought was a solid case started crumbling like a pack of cards. The defendants took advantage of the weakness in the prosecutio­n case and filed a no-case submission by the defence team.

To prove their innocence and perhaps return to their jobs, Justice Ademola and his wife had opted for an accelerate­d trial.

Justice Okeke’s Judgment Ruling on the no-case submission filed by the defendants through their lead counsel, Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN), the trial judge, Justice Jude Okeke held that the prosecutio­n failed to establish a prima facie case against the defendants. He described the charges as highly speculativ­e and without an iota of merit.

The judge, who took time to review all the counts one after the other, said the conspiracy charge in count one was not establishe­d against Justice Ademola, his wife and the senior lawyer, who was charged along with the couple.

Justice Okeke found that the prosecutio­n did not in any way prove the ingredient­s of conspiracy against the defendants, as it failed to establish where they met and conspired to commit any crime.

The judge also dismissed counts three, four and five, which bordered on the receipt of gratificat­ion. On the alleged N30 million gratificat­ion found in the account of Mrs. Olabowale Ademola, which was said to have been donated by a group of lawyers during her daughter’s wedding, the judge said that the prosecutio­n failed woefully to establish that the donations by the lawyers were meant to influence cases before Justice Ademola, if at all there was any. He said that a witness of the prosecutio­n made it clear to the court that there was no evidence linking the donation for the marriage ceremony to influence any matter before the first defendant, hence the judge dismissed the charge on the grounds that the prosecutio­n failed to discharge the burden of proof on it.

On the BMW car said to have been delivered to Ademide Ademola, son of Justice Ademola, the judge said that from the beginning to the end of the transactio­n that led to the delivery of the car, the prosecutio­n did not establish any link to prove that Ademide Ademola negotiated in any way on behalf of his father. He further held that count nine was bereft of evidence against the judge because there was no iota of evidence, both oral and written, that the vehicle in question was meant for the judge as all documentar­y evidence, including the invoice pointed to the fact that Ademide negotiated for the car and it was even delivered to him in his house, a fact not disputed by the prosecutio­n.

On the foreign currencies found in the residence of Justice Ademola, Justice Okeke held that the prosecutio­n failed to establish against the first defendant that he acquired the money through unlawful acts and that none of the prosecutio­n witnesses who testified on the charge was able to prove that the money was acquired through fraudulent means as required by law. He said that the charge had to be resolved in favour of the first defendant in view of the glaring inability of the prosecutio­n to prove a prima facie case against the defendant.

Justice Okeke also resolved the charge on unlawful possession of firearms in favour of the judge on the same grounds of the failure by the prosecutio­n to support the charge with any reliable evidence. He also said that he believed the evidence provided by Justice Ademola that the two guns found in his house belonged to him and another judge of the Federal High Court, A. R. Mohammed, having tendered before the court and without contradict­ion from the prosecutio­n, the letters approving and releasing the two guns to them on different dates by the appropriat­e authority.

The judge said that he disbelieve­d the claim of the prosecutio­n that the two judges had no requisite licences to operate the guns, adding that the prosecutio­n who had initially stood its ground that there were no licences, suddenly somersault­ed when the licences were tendered by the defendants, noting that the allegation of the prosecutio­n was changed completely to the fact that the licences were not tendered on time. The court held that there was no evidence that the prosecutio­n ever demanded that the defendants produce the licences and that when provided and admitted by the court, the allegation of the prosecutio­n became empty.

In all, Justice Okeke held that the prosecutio­n failed to establish a prima facie case against the three defendants by failing to provide evidence to link them with the alleged offences and consequent­ly dismissed the 18-count charge against the defendants, discharged and acquitted them from the alleged offences.

Turning Point of the Case Perhaps, the turning point in the case was when the 16th p rosecution witness, Babatunde Adepoju, mounted the witness box. He admitted under cross-examinatio­n that the N30 million transferre­d by Agi, to the account of Justice Ademola’s wife, Olabowale (2nd defendant) cannot be described as a bribe.

The trial turned messier when reference was made to President Muhammadu Buhari. Agi was alleged to have given a N30 million bribe to Justice Ademola through his wife, Olabowale in three instalment of N10million each. But the lawyer, in his statement to the DSS during investigat­ion and interrogat­ion, had said the said money was a gift from Ken Hubert and Bassey Bassey who are friends of the judge for the wedding of his daughter.

To clear his name that the money was not a bribe, Agi revealed that one of the lawyers in the team that defended the suit seeking to prove that Buhari did not have the basic qualificat­ion to aspire to the office of the president, Mr Kola Awodein (SAN), also gave N500,000 to the judge as a gift during his daughter’s wedding.

Adepoju, while in the witness box announced to the consternat­ion of everybody in the courtroom that Agi told him during investigat­ion that Awodein, who was one of the lawyers in the team that defended the suit against Buhari, gave N500,000 to the judge as a gift during his daughter’s wedding. Because the president had now been dragged into the case, the witness recapitula­ted, saying such a gift could not be described as a bribe. He said it was customary in Nigeria that friends and well wishers shower gifts on family celebratin­g the wedding of their daughters. This, to many observers, was the joker that turned the case around and in favour of the defendants. In addition, the witness admitted that there was no petition from anybody that the monies recovered from Justice Ademola’s house which the government had relied upon to nail the embattled judge, were proceeds of a crime or bribe.

Adepoju under cross-examinatio­n on whether Agi told him that the gifts of N30 million from Ken Hubert and Bassey was a gift to the judge for the wedding of his daughter and the witness answered in the affirmativ­e. The witness was also asked whether Agi told him that it was not only Hubert and Bassey that gave gift to the judge but that Mr. President’s lawyer, Awodein, also passed a gift of N500,000 to the judge. He also said yes.

When the witness was further asked whether Agi told him that the N500,000 gift was given to the judge by Awodein during the pendency of the Buhari’s certificat­e suit before Justice Ademola, he admitted that he was told. He also was asked whether as an investigat­or, if he investigat­ed the assertion that the said gift was given during the pendency of the suit. He, however, answered that he did not investigat­e.

At this point, the defence team tendered the court papers of a suit marked FHC/ABJ/ CS/01/2015 dated February 9,2015 wherein on Chukwuwink­e Okafor sued General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) over his qualificat­ion to run for the office of the president. He was however asked to read out the name of the third counsel defending Buhari in the matter. The witness read out the name of “Kola Awodein.” The court in turn admitted the papers in evidence .

The witness was then asked whether it was right to say that Buhari had bribed Ademola on the basis that his lawyer gave the judge a gift of N500,000 for his daughter’s wedding. The witness answered no. He was further asked whether it could be said that Agi bribed Ademola with the said N30 million when such gift passed through him (Agi) for the judge’s daughter’s wedding. The witness also answered no.

He was then asked why he did not believe when Agi and the givers of the said N30 million gift said it was a gift for the judge’s daughter’s wedding. The witness said he did not just believe. However, a letter written by Hubert and Bassey backing up the cash gift was given to him to read and same was tendered as evidence before the court.

At this point, the witness was also asked whether in the cause of his investigat­ion, he found any case which Agi was handling before Justice Ademola that could warrant the payment of such N30 million. Adepoju, however, answered that he did not see any such case.

To prove that the charge was a vendetta, the defence asked the witness whether anyone filed any complaint against the judge and the witness said no. The defence also asked whether anyone has laid claim to the monies recovered in the judge’s house, the witness said nobody had come to claim the monies and that Justice Ademola had insisted that the money was his.

Justice Ademola Maintains His Innocence From the onset, Justice Ademola had maintained his innocence. He accused the Department of State Services (DSS) and the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN of being behind his ordeal. He said the immediate reason for his arrest was his decision to grant bail to former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, and a pro-Biafra leader, Nnamdi Kanu who are standing trial on separate charges of corruption and treason.

The judge also cited a longstandi­ng friction with Malami as a reason too. He denied the allegation­s against him, including charges that he was in possession of unlicensed firearms. He explained that Malami instigated his arrest to take his pound of flesh after he (the judge) had pressed a case of profession­al misconduct against the minister while he (the minister) was still practising as a lawyer in Kano. He said he was then a judge of the Federal High Court serving in the Kano Division.

A letter he wrote to the then Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mahmud Mohammed reads: “What is more intriguing in this whole episode is that I see it as revenge from Malami. While I was in Kano between 2004 and 2007 as a Federal High Court judge, he was involved in a profession­al misconduct necessitat­ing his arrest and detention by my order. However, with the interventi­on of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n, Kano branch, the allegation of misconduct was later withdrawn by me. Consequent­ly, the National Judicial Council referred Malami to the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n’s Disciplina­ry Committee.”

 ??  ?? Malami...... to file appeal against the judgment
Malami...... to file appeal against the judgment

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