N180M Fraud: Court frees Ogbulaforon October 03, 2014 at 3:20 am
Reprieve
came the way of erstwhile chairman of Peoples Democratic Party, PDP,
Prince Vincent Ogbulafor, yesterday as an Abuja High Court in Maitama
discharged and acquitted him from the 17-count criminal charge preferred
against him by Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences
Commission, ICPC.
In his judgment, Justice Ishaq Bello held that the
anti-graft agency failed to establish its allegation that the former
PDP boss, while in office as the Minister for Special Duties in 2001,
used three fake companies ýto divert funds from the coffers of Federal
Government to the tune of about N180 million.
However, the court
relied on a confessional statement made before ICPC by the 2nd accused
person in the matter, Mr. Emeka Ebilah, and sentenced him to five years
imprisonment without an option of fine.
Ebilah, who was a member of
the National Economic Intelligence Committee, NEIC, which was set up by
the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo to verify debts
owed local contractors, had confessed before ICPC that he supervised
the illegal diversion of funds to the three bogus companies which he
said was partly owned by the ex-PDP chairman.
While under
interrogation, he confessed that Ogbulafor, through one Mr. Chris Nwoke,
collected kickbacks of N2 million and N28 million from him to
facilitate the release of funds to the said fake companies.
He
further admitted that the fake companies, Henrichiko Nig Ltd, DHL
Consultants and Chekwas Industries, used forged documents to collect
N82.6 million, N11.5 million and N6.2 million, respectively, from
Federal Governmentý for executing non-existent contracts.
Nevertheless,
while on trial, the 2nd accused, Ebilah, denied the confessional
statement, insisting that one Bassey Mohammed, an operative of ICPC,
compelled him at gunpoint to indict Ogbulafor.
Though Ogbulafor who
testified for himself, told the court that he was the one that nominated
Ebilah into the NEIC, he, however, denied receiving any money from him
as kickback.
Ogbulafor told the court that the 2nd accused person
only gave him N2 million as a donation for his campaign activities,
stressing that he had already resigned his ministerial position at that
time.
In his judgment, Justice Bello held that there was no evidence
indicating that Ogbulafor at any material time, had a relationship with
any of the three companies involved in the fraud or acted as a director
in any of them.
The judge also noted that the 1st accused was never a
member of NEIC nor participated in the verification of contracts, “and
there is no evidence whatsoever to prove that the 1st accused removed
money whatsoever from any of the companies.”
He described the
allegation that Ogbulafor collected kickbacks through one Mr. Nwoke as
“hearsay evidence,” adding that ICPC failed to establish a link between
the 1st accused and the charge.
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