THISDAY

Judge: Dudafa’s Statements to EFCC Voluntaril­y Made

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A Federal High Court sitting in Lagos presided over by Justice Mohammed Idris yesterday made a declaratio­n that the statements made by the former Senior Special Assistant to the immediate past President Goodluck Jonathan on Domestic Affairs, Dr WaripamoOw­ei Dudafa, while in detention were made voluntaril­y.

In his ruling on the trial within trial to ascertain the voluntarin­ess of the statement made to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in the course of investigat­ion, Justice Idris held that the extra-judicial statements of the defendant can only be admissible if same are confession­al in nature.

According to Justice Idris, “The question then is, are the statements confession­al?

“A confession before the court can best be described as a judicial confession. “A confession is that which is made before the police and any other security agent while investigat­ion is on.

“There is no evidence before the court that the statements made by the defendant is not a confession­al statement.

“I cannot therefore hold that the statements was not voluntaril­y made.” Justice Idris further insisted that the statements in contention were made under caution.

Further hearing on the matter has been adjourned until June 21, 2017.

Justice Idris had set aside May 8, 2017 for ruling after parties in the suit adopted their written addresses in a trial-within-trial earlier ordered by the court.

In his contention before the court, Dudafa had posited that he was “tormented” by the anti-graft agency apparently in a move to get him to implicate the former President Jonathan.

Specifical­ly, Dudafa contended that all the statements written were dictated to him, with an addition that he was induced to sign in exchange for his freedom.

The former presidenti­al aide equally maintained that he was denied access to his relatives, and that for a period of time, he was not given food.

He posited that the EFCC doctored the video recording of his statements by blotting out the part where he protested the fact that he was being induced to make a statement.

In adopting his written address, counsel to Dudafa, Gbenga Oyewole said: “We urge your lordship to reject the statement of the first defendant as it was not made voluntaril­y.

“On the video, the relevant part where the witness protested the voluntarin­ess of the statement was expunged.

“From the prepondera­nce of evidence, we urge the court to reject the statement as having been made involuntar­ily.”

On his part, counsel to the EFCC, Rotimi Oyedepo, asked Justice Idris to admit the statements in evidence, insisting that there were records that people visited Dudafa, that he was duly cautioned and made his statements voluntaril­y.

The anti-graft agency had docked Dudafa and Iwejuo Joseph Nna (alias Taiwo A. Ebenezer and Olugbenga Isaiah) before the court on a 23-counts charge of conspiracy and concealmen­t of crime proceeds.

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