News
FORMER FIRST LADY! Patience Jonathan knows fate on $8.4m, N7.4bn final forfeiture suit on February 11
A Federal High Court in Lagos will on Feb. 11 deliver judgment in an application seeking final forfeiture of $8.4m and N7.4bn allegedly linked to the immediate past First Lady, Patience Jonathan.
The EFCC filed the application against the former first lady and six others.
The others are Globus Integrated Services Ltd., Finchley Top Homes Ltd., Am-Pm Global Network Ltd., Pagmat Oil and Gas Ltd., Magel Resort Ltd., and Esther Oba, as the second to the seventh respondents, respectively.
The commission had on April 20, 2018, via an ex-parte application, obtained an order for interim forfeiture of the sums
EFCC counsel, Mr Rotimi Oyedepo, on October 29, 2018, filed an application for final forfeiture of the sums.
At the resumed hearing on Wednesday, Oyedepo told the court that the EFCC had filed and served a further affidavit to the respondents’ application to show cause.
Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), counsel to the respondents, however, opposed from paragraphs eight to paragraph 12 of the affidavit and prayed the court to expunge them.
According to Ozekhome, the prosecution raised new issues in an attempt to discredit a video exhibit on the case, instead of responding to existing issues.
Justice Mojisola Olatoregun held that there was no need to expunge the paragraphs, noting that no new issues were raised.
In his submission for final forfeiture, Oyedepo told the court that Jonathan, fraudulently diverted funds from Women for Change Initiative, a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) linked to her.
According to him, most of the funds were fraudulently diverted from the NGO to other accounts of the second to sixth respondents – companies said to be owned by the former first lady.
Oyedepo said:
“Women for Change Initiative is not joined in this suit; we are not asking for forfeiture of its money, the funds have been converted and that is an unlawful act.’’
He further told the court that Jonathan signed some of the fund transfer instructions personally, and also signed using other people’s names and passport photographs.
Oyedepo also said that as regards the $8.4m, the first respondent (Jonathan) had not been able to disclose to the court, the identities of those who made the donations.
He said that the EFCC attached exhibits to show that the former first lady was the sole signatory to the companies’ accounts.
“The funds we are seeking to forfeit from the second to sixth respondents are not funds from their legitimate businesses but those traced from the NGO,” Oyedepo said.
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