Posted by Samuel on Sat 28th Sep, 2024 - tori.ng
The adjournment followed the testimony of Abubakar Umar, the Sixth Prosecution Witness, PW6, in the trial of the former governor, alongside his then Commissioner of Finance, Omodachi Okolobia on the 11-count amended charges of money laundering to the tune of N3.1billion by Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
Justice Peter Lifu of the Federal High Court in Maitama, Abuja, has postponed the hearing in the N3.1 billion fraud case against former Benue State Governor Gabriel Suswam to October 4.
The adjournment followed the testimony of Abubakar Umar, the Sixth Prosecution Witness, PW6, in the trial of the former governor, alongside his then Commissioner of Finance, Omodachi Okolobia on the 11-count amended charges of money laundering to the tune of N3.1billion by Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
A statement on Saturday by EFCC's Head Media and Publicity, Dele Oyewale, stated that Umar during his testimony on Friday, gave a vivid account of how he converted the sum of N3.1billion, wired to him by Suswam as governor and delivered its equivalent of $15.8m in cash to him at his Maitama, Abuja residence.
During the court’s proceedings, Oyewale said the witness, a bureau de change operator and CEO of Fanffash Resources, who has been testifying on the matter since 2018, first, before Justice A. R Mohammed and later Justice Okon Abang, disclosed that the total sum of N3.1billion was transferred to him by Suswam, through a proxy in tranches with the first tranche of N413 million hitting his account on August 8, 2014 and the remaining, coming in subsequently to sum up to N3.1billion.
Umar, while being led in evidence by prosecution counsel, Rotimi Jacobs, SAN, affirmed that the proxy who did the naira transfers to him was a woman. According to the witness, he had to change a total sum of N3.1billion to dollars, which he said amounted to $15.8 million at the rate of N197 to a dollar and delivered it to Suswam in his Maitama, Abuja residence.
“One day in 2014, when I was in the office, the former governor of Benue State asked me to meet him in his house in Maitama, Abuja. I went and met him in the house together with one fair woman. He asked me to give the woman my account number. I gave the woman my Zenith Bank account number. The woman said she’ll send money into that account.
“On the 8th of August 2014, N413 million was transferred to my account. Based on this, I called the former governor and he told me to change the money to dollars and I asked him to give me time to do that. Three days after I bought the dollar equivalent, I called the former governor and informed him that the money was ready. He now asked me to take the money to his house in Maitama, near Jumat Mosque. I now told him that he should inform the security at the gate that I was coming, if not they’ll not allow me access into the gate.
"I took a cab to the house, and after I arrived at the house, I knocked at the gate and they opened. I told them my name. They opened the first and second gates and I sat in the waiting room where he came and met me. I now brought out the money which we both confirmed to be the equivalent of the N413 million. The exchange rate then was N197,” the statement quoted him to have said.
Testifying further, he said, “On the 12th of September 2014, N637 million was transferred to my account. After N637million was transferred to my account, after like 40 minutes N363million was also transferred into my account. On 13th October 2014, N630,008,050, (Six Hundred and Thirty Million, Eight Thousand and Fifty Naira) was also transferred to my account. On 17th October 2014 N1,068,000,000 (One Billion, Sixty-eight Million) was transferred to my account. It is the woman that was directed by the former governor to do the transfers. The total money transferred to my account was N3billion."
The witness who stated that he was neither arrested by the EFCC for giving any testimony in favour of the defendant, nor threatened by the Commission to give evidence against the defendant, further disclosed that he did not have receipts for the transactions, so also no record book for them, stating that he buys dollars from his fellow retailers and only records based on discretion.
EFCC is prosecuting Suswam and Okolobia on 11-count amended charges of money laundering to the tune of N3.1 billion, being part of the proceeds from the sales of the state government’s shares held on its behalf by the Benue Investment and Property Company Limited, sold through Elixir Securities Limited and Elixir Investment Partners Limited.