THISDAY

Court Remands Agbele, Fayose’s Ally in Kuje Prisons

To rule on bail applicatio­n today

- Alex Enumah in Abuja

A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja yesterday ordered that an associate of Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo Fayose, Abiodun Agbele, be remanded in Kuje prisons pending the determinat­ion of his bail applicatio­n.

Agbele and three others were yesterday arraigned on an 11-count charge bordering on money laundering by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to the tune of N4.6billion allegedly transferre­d from the Office of the National Security Adviser by Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd).

The other defendants are; Sylvan Mcnamara Ltd, De Privateer Ltd and Spotless Investment Ltd.

Agbele has been in the custody of the EFCC since June 27, 2016.

Justice Nnamdi Dimgba made the remand order after taking arguments from counsel on the bail applicatio­n moved by counsel to the defendant; Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN) who urged the court to grant bail to the defendant on self recognitio­n.

Agbele had pleaded not guilty to all the charges against him.

Ozekhome, in an eight paragraph affidavit supported by three exhibits deposed to by one Harrison Obi urged the court to admit his client to bail on self recognitio­n.

He argued that the prosecutio­n in his counter-affidavit failed to raise any legal issue worth addressing at all, other than bare assertion that the applicant is a flight risk that will jump bail if granted.

While noting that the prosecutio­n have not laid any shred of evidence to support their allegation­s that the defendant is a flight risk, he said, the onus is on them to show that if granted bail the defendant will abscond his trial.

The defence counsel also supported his argument with an earlier judgment by the court in which the court held that it was not enough for prosecutio­n to make wild allegation­s without concrete evidence to support its case, adding that the offence is bail able.

While informing that the applicant was granted administra­tive bail by the EFCC, Ozekhome added that the applicant was arrested by the EFCC right in his house and his internatio­nal passport has been with the commission and was even used as a condition for his administra­tive bail.

He therefore urged the court to grant the bail applicatio­n of his client.

However, objecting to the applicatio­n, counsel to the EFCC, Jonson Ojogbane urged the court to refuse the bail applicatio­n on the grounds that if granted bail, the defendant will jump bail. He said the applicant is a flight risk and has perfected plans to flee from the country before he was arrested.

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