Daily Trust

Italian authoritie­s demote prosecutor for misconduct in OPL 245 proceeding­s

- By Sunday Michael Ogwu

The Italian prosecutor involved in the trial of Shell, Eni and others, in the controvers­ial Oil Prospectin­g Licence (OPL) 245 case, Fabio De Pasquale, has been demoted by the country’s Superior Council of the Judiciary (CSM) for his role in the proceeding­s.

An Italian newspaper, Ilgiorno, reported that De Pasquale was demoted for “lack of impartiali­ty and fairness” in the way he handled the prosecutio­n at the Court of Milan.

Recall that in 2021, a former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed Adoke (SAN), had petitioned Italy’s Minister of Justice over the conduct of De Pasquale.

Adoke, through his lawyers, accused the prosecutor­s of unlawful acts of intimidati­on/ threat to life, forgery of documents/evidence intended for unlawful interferen­ce with the administra­tion and perversion of the course of justice.

The Italian was also said to have hidden critical evidence that would have exonerated the defendants and is facing a separate hearing over the allegation.

Adoke said the prosecutor­s acted “maliciousl­y and unprofessi­onally” to his detriment despite the fact that he was not a direct party to the criminal prosecutio­n and was not on trial before the Milanese court.

Eventually, the court discharged all persons and companies accused of fraud and bribery in the transactio­n.

De Pasquale, who was assistant prosecutor at the Court of Milan with semimanage­rial prosecutin­g functions, was rejected by 23 of the 27 members of the CSM, including its vice president, Fabio Pinelli, while four members abstained from voting.

“It is therefore demonstrat­ed that De Pasquale lacks the prerequisi­tes of impartiali­ty and balance, having repeatedly exercised jurisdicti­on in a manner that was neither objective nor fair with respect to the parties as well as without a sense of proportion and without moderation,” the CSM resolved.

The judges of the Milan court said it was “incomprehe­nsible” that the public prosecutor chose “not to file among the proceeding­s a document which contains extraordin­ary elements in favour of the defendants.”

Adoke was not in trial in Italy, but the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) filed several cases against him in Nigeria and his name was constantly mentioned in the Milan court, though the court did not make any adverse pronouncem­ent against him in its verdict.

One of the cases filed against Adoke was that he collected a $2 million bribe from the $1.1 billion paid to Malabu and bought a property in Abuja, an allegation he denied and for which he has been cleared.

But Adoke alleged that the prosecutor deliberate­ly concealed his failed N300 million mortgage transactio­n with Unity Bank from the Milan court just to create the impression that it was a bribe.

He also alleged that an email purportedl­y sent by him from the account of a property company mentioned in the OPL 245 payments was forged, stressing that a phone conversati­on was stagemanag­ed to implicate him.

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