The
owner of the flat in the Ikoyi building where about N15 billion was
found hidden has been revealed by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission.
Director General of the National Intelligence Agency, Amb. Ayo Oke
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission on Friday revealed
that Mrs. Folashade Oke is the the owner of Flat 7B, No. 13, Osborne
Road, Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos, where the sums of $43,449,947,
£27,800 and N23, 218,000 were recently recovered by the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission.
Mrs. Oke is the wife of the suspended Director General of the
National Intelligence Agency, Amb. Ayo Oke, whose agency had laid claim
to the money.
According to a report by Punch, the EFCC said Mrs. Oke made a cash
payment of $1.658m for the purchase of the flat between August 25 and
September 3, 2015.
She was said to have purchased the property in the name of a
company, Chobe Ventures Limited, to which she and her son, Master
Ayodele Oke Junior, were directors. Payment for the purchase of the flat
was said to have been made to one Fine and Country Limited.
The EFCC stated that Mrs. Oke made the cash payment in tranches of
$700,000, $650,000 and $353,700 to a Bureau de Change company, Sulah
Petroleum and Gas Limited, which later converted the sums into
N360,000,000 and subsequently paid it to Fine and Country Limited for
the purchase of the property.
The EFCC on Friday tendered the receipt issued by Fine and Country
Limited to Chobe Ventures Limited as an exhibit before the Federal High
Court in Lagos, where it is seeking an order of final forfeiture of the
recovered money to the Federal Government.
“The circumstances leading to the discovery of the huge sums
stockpiled in Flat 7B, Osborne Towers leaves no one in doubt that the
act was pursuant to an unlawful activity.
“The very act of making cash payment of $1.6m without going
through any financial institution by Mrs. Folashade Oke for the
acquisition of Flat 7B, Osborne Towers, is a criminal act punishable by
the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Amendment Act. I refer My Lord to
sections 1(a), 16(d) and 16(2)(b) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition)
Amendment Act,” a counsel for the EFCC, Mr. Rotimi Oyedepo, told the court on Friday.
In an affidavit filed before the court, a Detective Inspector with
the EFCC, Mohammed Chiroma, stated that “Chobe Ventures Limited is not
into any business but was merely incorporated to retain proceeds of
suspected unlawful activities of Mrs. Folashade Oke.”
While urging the presiding judge, Justice Muslim Hassan, to order
the permanent forfeiture of the funds to the Federal Government, Oyedepo
argued that the fact that Flat 7B, Osborne Towers was purchased in a
criminal manner, made the N13bn recovered therein “extremely suspicious to be proceeds of unlawful acts.”
The lawyer noted that despite the newspaper advertisement of the
initial order of April 13, 2017 temporarily forfeiting the money to the
Federal Government, no one showed up in court on Friday to show cause
why the money should not be permanently forfeited to the Federal
Government.
No comments:
Post a Comment