EFCC/Judicial Reports

Skye Bank: EFCC withdraws Tunde Ayeni’s N25.4bn case

0

Skye Bank: EFCC withdraws Tunde Ayeni’s N25.4bn case

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has withdrawn the N25.4bn corruption case it filed against the Chairman of the defunct Skye Bank (now Polaris), Tunde Ayeni; and the Managing Director, Timothy Oguntayo, after entering into a secret settlement with the businessmen that may have involved the forfeiture of N15bn in cash and assets.

The EFCC under the leadership of Ibrahim Magu, had on March 7, 2019 arraigned Ayeni, Oguntayo and two other companies before Justice Ijeoma Ojukwu of a Federal High Court, Abuja on 10 charges bordering on money laundering to the tune of N25.4bn.

One of the counts reads: “That you, Tunde Ayeni, whilst being the Chairman, Board of Directors of the defunct Skye Bank Plc, between the 1st of January, 2014 and 31st December, 2014 at Abuja within the jurisdiction of this honourable court did commit an offence, to wit: converting the aggregate sum of N17,415,080,000  taken in cash from defunct Skye Bank Plc Suspense Account and delivered to you by the staff of the defunct Skye Bank Plc, which money you reasonably ought to have known forms part of the proceeds of an unlawful act, to wit: fraud and thereby committed an offence contrary to and punishable under Section 15(2)(b) and (3) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 (as amended).”

At the hearing on December 8, 2020, the EFCC lawyer, Samuel Chime, stated, “Parties have made considerable progress. The prosecution has received a property in furtherance of settlement in this matter; a property in Lagos which the defendants relinquished. But we had to rely on AMCON and Skye Bank who are the nominal complainant in this matter.

“AMCON did not accept the value as N15bn. They valued the property at N10bn. As a result of this, the defendants have agreed to provide an additional N5bn.”

The certified true copies of the records of proceedings obtained by our reporter showed that the EFCC decided to withdraw the charges it filed against Ayeni and the ex-MD of the bank, informing the court that a settlement had been reached.

However, the final amount of money Ayeni and his co-defendant reportedly returned was never made public, unlike other cases involving bank executives.

The lawyer of the anti-graft agency, Abba Mohammed, subsequently informed the court that the charges against Ayeni and the ex-bank MD had been withdrawn and asked the court to strike them out in line with Section 108(2a) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act 2015.

Two companies – Control Dredging Company Ltd and Royaltex Paramount Ventures Ltd – which were the co-defendants to Ayeni and Oguntayo, were then re-arraigned and made to plead guilty to the crimes that Ayeni had been accused of committing.

The prosecution stated, “The business of the day is arraignment and we are ready. Before we proceed, the complainant will want to take advantage of Section 108(2a) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act to withdraw the charge against the 1st (Ayeni) and 2nd (Oguntayo) defendants and proceed against only the 3rd (Control Dredging Company) and 4th (Royaltex Paramount Ventures).”

Reacting to the development, activist lawyer, Inibehe Effiong, said although plea bargain has its advantages as it saves cost, it ought not to be abused.

Effiong wondered why the EFCC allowed Ayeni to escape conviction and return only part of the money while Internet fraudsters were usually made to plead guilty and forfeit all their property to the commission.

“There has to be deterrence in the course of plea bargain so that others would not be emboldened to steal and then return a fraction of money and escape sentencing. There should be a guilty plea on record. Without this, the person cannot be said to have committed any offence. If they are saying he should walk free, then why can’t we have a 100 per cent refund of the amount allegedly stolen?” he asked.

Auwal Rafsanjani, the Executive Director, Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre, CISLAC/Transparency International, said the plea bargain system in Nigeria was promoting corruption.

When contacted for comment, the Spokesman for the EFCC, Wilson Uwujaren, said he was not aware of the development.

Uchechi Ojo
Uchechi Ojo, is a Lagos-born and based writer, newscaster and voice-over artist. A versatile and committed journalist with the yearning to make a difference in the industry. She writes balanced, informative and interesting stories. Uchechi has the ability to interact and listen with rapt attention, excellent time management and great communication skills while paying attention to detail. She is very approachable and a good team player. Instagram | LinkedIn
Mike Ojo

Malami marries Buhari’s daughter, Nana Hadiza, as third wife

Previous article

BREAKING: Tinubu picks Shettima as running mate

Next article

You may also like

Comments

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

content-0512

Mix Parlay


yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

rtp yakinjp

yakinjp

Togel Online Resmi

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

news

slot mahjong ways

judi bola online

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

yakinjp

ayowin

mahjong ways

judi bola online

8801

8802

8803

8804

8805

8806

8807

8808

8809

8810

8811

8812

8813

8814

8815

8881

8882

8883

8884

8885

8886

8887

8888

8889

8890

8891

8892

8893

8894

8895

8941

8942

8943

8944

8945

8946

8947

8948

8949

8950

8951

8952

8953

8954

8955

9001

9002

9003

9004

9005

9006

9007

9008

9009

9010

9011

9012

9013

9014

9015

8821

8822

8823

8824

8825

8826

8827

8828

8829

8830

8831

8832

8833

8834

8835

8901

8902

8903

8904

8905

8906

8907

8908

8909

8910

8911

8912

8913

8914

8915

8956

8957

8958

8959

8960

8961

8962

8963

8964

8965

8966

8967

8968

8969

8970

9016

9017

9018

9019

9020

9021

9022

9023

9024

9025

9026

9027

9028

9029

9030

8021

8022

8023

8024

8025

8026

8027

8028

8029

8030

8841

8842

8843

8844

8845

8916

8917

8918

8919

8920

8921

8922

8923

8924

8925

8926

8927

8928

8929

8930

8971

8972

8973

8974

8975

8976

8977

8978

8979

8980

8981

8982

8983

8984

8985

9031

9032

9033

9034

9035

9036

9037

9038

9039

9040

9041

9042

9043

9044

9045

8036

8037

8038

8039

8040

8846

8847

8848

8849

8850

8931

8932

8933

8934

8935

8936

8937

8938

8939

8940

8986

8987

8988

8989

8990

8991

8992

8993

8994

8995

8851

8852

8853

8854

8855

8856

8857

8858

8859

8860

8861

8862

8863

8864

8865

8866

8867

8868

8869

8870

8871

8872

8873

8874

8875

8876

8877

8878

8879

8880

8996

8997

8998

8999

9000

9046

9047

9048

9049

9050

9051

9052

9053

9054

9055

10001

10002

10003

10004

10005

10006

10007

10008

10009

10010

10011

10012

10013

10014

10015

10016

10017

10018

10019

10020

10021

10022

10023

10024

10025

10026

10027

10028

10029

10030

content-0512