Agent
of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) currently
investigating cases of judicial corruption have told SaharaReporters
that their review of banking and other financial documents discovered
that Muiz Banire, the National Legal Adviser of the All Progressives
Congress (APC), paid N500, 000 to one of the judges under investigation.
EFCC
agents said their forensic scrutiny of some judges’ bank accounts
revealed suspicious payments made to numerous federal judges, including
the one made by Mr. Banire.
The agents disclosed that several of
the judges have been questioned by the anti-corruption agency. They
added that some of the answers provided by the judges were at odds with
bank statements where investigators detected a series of suspicious
transactions involving senior lawyers.
Yesterday EFCC agents
invited three of the lawyers to the agency’s offices for questioning.
Our sources revealed that the agency has scheduled at least 25 more
lawyers to come in for interrogation in relation to the active
investigation.
Among Federal justices who have so far been
questioned are Uwani Abba-Aji of the Appeals Court, James Agbadu-Fishim
of the Industrial Court, Mohammed Yunusa of the Federal High Court,
Nganjiwa Hyledzira of the Federal High Court, and Musa Kurya of the
Federal High Court. Another Federal High Court judge, Rita
Ofili-Ajumogobia, was traced to a Lagos clinic where she falsely claimed
she was admitted before she turned herself in last weekend.
Mr.
Banire has not been invited by the EFCC and SaharaReporters could not
confirm if and when he would be summoned. However, three senior lawyers
grilled yesterday included Paul Usoro, a lawyer to Senate President
Bukola Saraki, Gani Adetola-Kaseem, and Felix Fagbohungbe. Mr. Usoro
allegedly made five deposits into the account of the James Agbadu-Fishim
of the Industrial Court.
EFCC agents disclosed that, when asked
why he made the deposits, Mr. Usoro claimed they were for four burials
in the judge’s family, naming the deceased as the judge’s father,
mother, mother-in-law, and father-in-law. He reportedly told EFCC agents
that the fifth payment was to support the judge in any future funeral
activity in the judge’s family.
Investigators told
SaharaReporters that Mr. Fagbohungbe cooperated with the investigators
until he was asked to read his statement before its formal adoption by
investigators. He reportedly requested for more paper, and while
investigators went to fetch the paper, he reportedly crossed out his
initial statement and attempted to destroy it before it was wrested from
him.
EFCC investigators say they would likely arraign three of
the judges next Wednesday. They revealed that the case files of Justices
Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia, Mohammed Yunusa, and James Agbadu-Fishim were
ready for trial.
Meanwhile, a senior lawyer, Niyi Akintola, has
denied information circulating in the media that he was summoned by the
EFCC regarding allegations that he bribed some judges. He denied
involvement in any cases of bribery of judges, and insisted that EFCC
agents had yet to invite him. He added that he was not involved in
defending any judges before the National Judicial Council.
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