THISDAY

N8bn Currency Scam: 10 Denied, 5 Get Bail, as Trial Begins June26

Judge Says Accused Persons Risk 21years Imprisonme­nt if...

- Ademola Babalola in Ibadan

A Federal High Court in Ibadan, Oyo State, yesterday refused bail to 10 bank workers standing trial for appropriat­ing N8 billion mutilated bank notes, just as reprieve came the way of five. No fewer than 17 of them are being tried for the alleged scam.

Trial judge Olayinka Faji, sitting in court 2 in an almost two hours ruling on applicatio­ns for bail, held that the cases against the accused were weighty, especially as the account balance and property allegedly acquired from the fraud were anything to go by.

Justice Faji agreed with the EFCC counsel, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN) that the suspects were in possession of sums of money in excess of their legitimate earnings. He pointed out that some of them had bank account balance running into several millions of naira which was a far cry from what they earn as staffers or contract staff they claimed to be.

He said notwithsta­nding that all the 15 accused persons standing trial before him had during pre-trial sessions, pleaded not guilty to all the charges of false pretence, abuse of office, intent to defraud, tricking of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) among others, they all had cases to answer.

By their individual and collective activities through the years the fraud were going on, the judge held that they had severally increased the value of money in circulatio­n thereby committing economic crimes with its attendant rise in inflation.

He decided all the cases on merit of their applicatio­ns, affidavits and counter affidavits filed before him. The four cases expeditiou­sly decided yesterday were FHC/IB/31c/2015 comprising eight bankers; FHC/ IB/32c/2015 comprising six bankers; FHC/IB/33c/2015 comprising five bankers and FHC/IB/34c/2015 which also comprised five bankers. The names of CBN staff; Kolawole Babalola, Toogun Kayode Philips and Olaniran Muniru Adeola featured in all the four cases alongside other bankers from some commercial banks like First Bank Plc, Ecobank, Sterling, Wema Bank among others.

However, Justice Faji who ordered all the eight bankers in the first case to be remanded in Agodi prison having refused their bail applicatio­n in view of the weighty nature and evidence before the court, agreed to the bail of the 6th defendant in second case, Ademola Ebenezer Adewale.

Others granted bail were the 4th and 5th defendants in the case three; Kehinde Fadokun and Olutunde Sijuade. The two others who benefited from the discretion­ary power of the judge are the 4th and 5th defendants in case four, Ajunwa Bolade and Samuel Ogbeide.

In granting them bail, the judge held that there was no strong evidence against the 6th defendant, Ademola Ebenezer Adewale to deny him bail in 32c/15. Similarly in 33c/15, no strong case against the fourth and fifth accused persons, Kehinde Fadokun and Olutunde Sijuade.

The bail conditions for the five accused persons entails providing two sureties with N20 million deposit, landed property with Certificat­e of occupancy within Oyo State, sureties to depose to affidavit of means with title documents fully verified, in addition to the provision of three years tax clearance, three passport photograph of each of them and visitation to the nearest EFCC office by the suspects at least once in every three weeks. The visitation day should be on Mondays, the judge maintained, while assuring the parties of accelerate­d hearings beginning from next week, June 26.

"The other criteria of nature of charge and severity of punishment however apply. I am of the view that 4th and 5th defendants are also border-line cases and deserve that the court lean in favour of their liberty. I therefore granted bail to the 4th and 5th in 34c/15, Ajuwon Bolade and Samuel Ogbeide."

Among those denied bail were three CBN staff that were earlier on Monday visited with the same fate by Justice Nathaniel Ayo-Emmanuel of the Federal High Court one. They are Kolawole Babalola, Olaniran Muniru Adeola and Toogun Kayode Philips. Other seven are Isiq Akano (a.k.a. Isiaka), Ayodele Festus Adeyemi, Oyebamiji Hakeem, Ayodeji Aleshe, Ajiwe Sunday Adegoke, Oni Ademola Dolapo and Afolabi Esther Olunike.

It would be recalled that the whistle blower, the CBN had on November 3, 2014, lodged a petition to the EFCC inviting the agency to take over the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of the cases involving the swapping of currency boxes containing mutilated naira notes meant for routine destructio­n at its Ibadan branch.

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